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“He lit the night he brought with the fire that puts out the planets when time ends.”
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
“She had lost her heart the moment she set eyes on him: it was this prince she had always dreamed of and waited for. She knew him from long ago, from countless lives before. They had belonged together since time began.”
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
“Brahma emerged from the right side of Mahesa, Vishnu from the left and Nilarudra from his heart. In the beginning, intoning AUM, Sadasiva created the universe. Siva is Pranava and Pranava is Siva.”
― SIVA PURANA
― SIVA PURANA
“Great gifts are not given easily and I waited years before I had you.”
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
“Whatever a man does, good or evil, comes back to him someday. And he pays for everything.”
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
“Those that say the kali yuga is an age of evil forget that this wonderful age is the yuga when moksha is nearest. I say to you, Bhakti, this is the most wonderful of all the ages of men!”
― Bhagavata Purana
― Bhagavata Purana
“Don’t grieve too much. This hour of parting is the hardest; the years will pass before you know they have come and gone. They will pass as night does in sleep, and I will return to you.”
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
“Calm yourself. Think with your intellect, not your burning heart, and you will see what I must do.”
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
“One's longing is not so much there for sense-gratification, profit and self-preservation, instead one's karma is there for no other purpose than inquiring after the Absolute Truth.”
― Bhagavata Purana
― Bhagavata Purana
“I want you to remember, always, that no man who sits upon a throne likes to hear another man being praised. Never praise me in Bharata’s presence or show how much you miss me. Don’t speak of me at all before him.”
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
“To whom does this body belong? To the one that feeds it, the mother and father who bring it into being, to the master that buys its services, to the fire that consumes it finally, or to the dogs that gnaw its bones after the fire has done its work?”
― Bhagavata Purana
― Bhagavata Purana
“The sources of great rivers, like those of great men, are often obscure – some hidden crevice high on a mountain. But in the fullness of time, the world sees their glory. So, too, shall it be with us.”
― The Mahabharata: a Modern Rendering
― The Mahabharata: a Modern Rendering
“It is not that mother Kaikeyi is evil, or that she hates me; only that destiny uses her, even against her own nature.”
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
“The Shastras say that a son who does not obey his father has no place in heaven.”
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
“Rud’ means misery and ‘dravayati’ means to root out. Rudra is the destroyer of our misery.”
― SIVA PURANA
― SIVA PURANA
“every being loves ther own self more than anything else, for this is only natural. We love our children and our wealth only because we think of them as parts of ourselves, as belonging to us. Thus men never love their children, the homes or their gold as much as they do their own bodies, their selves. For these are never entirely identified with the self, but only perceived as belonging to the self.”
― Bhagavata Purana
― Bhagavata Purana
“waters. When he was full-grown, Heti had him married to Sandhya Devi’s daughter, Salakatankata, and Vidyutkesa enjoyed his bride as Indra does Paulomi.”
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
“Siva who is known as Kaalatman, the Soul of Time. Kaala is inscrutable; only Siva is beyond Prakriti, Purusha and Kaala.”
― SIVA PURANA
― SIVA PURANA
“Dharma is a subtle thing. One can be true to it only if one’s mind is entirely without desire”
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
“Until a bhakta has not abandoned himself and his life to you, so that he is yours and you his, the passions of his heart are his enemies, his home is a prison, and all his attachments are bondage. Once the surrender is effected, and all these old enemies turned over to you, they transform themselves into the most potent gifts for the life of devotion. When the Lord becomes one’s own! With such bhakti, a man becomes a natural Sannyasi.”
― Bhagavata Purana
― Bhagavata Purana
“Valmiki sat in the lotus posture with his eyes shut, to listen to the tale of a human prince who was as immaculate as the stars.”
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
“Siva laughed, and said, ‘Let any man who enters this forest be turned into a woman,”
― DEVI: THE DEVI BHAGAVATAM RETOLD
― DEVI: THE DEVI BHAGAVATAM RETOLD
“But, Narada, this Purana can save a lost man, fetch him back to the path of light and truth: because it has deep enchantment in it, for the Lord Vishnu dwells in this arcane Purana, he speaks through it. He who describes the maya of the Lord Vishnu, the Antaryamin, transcends that maya. Why, even he who listens with devotion to the Bhagavatam is purified of his sins, and finds his way back to the Lord,’ said Brahma,” Suka said to the king.”
― Bhagavata Purana
― Bhagavata Purana
“Karma once done is never wasted in a crore of kalpas and one must enjoy or suffer the fruit of every deed. Evil karma gets one to hell, karma that is only good, to heaven. Mixed karma results in a human birth and the birth is good or evil according to the proportion of the mixture.”
― SIVA PURANA
― SIVA PURANA
“But then, he was a wise prince and realized that kingship was always more a burden than a privilege. But he had been raised to be a king since he was born, and it was not only this thought that now worried him. Another, deeper anxiety stirred in his heart, for no reason he could name. Something malignant seemed to mock him, from far away, but quite clearly.”
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
“Weaving his tale into the river’s drift, Narada began the legend of Rama, prince of Ayodhya, who was as noble as the sea is deep, as powerful as Mahavishnu, whose Avatara he was when the treta yuga was upon the world, as steadfast as the Himalaya, handsome as Soma the Moon God, patient as the Earth, generous as Kubera, just as Dharma; but his rage if roused like the fire at the end of time.”
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
― The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic
“Parikshita asked, “I have heard there are a great many regions that souls of the earth attain after they die. Is this true, my lord?’ Suka said, “There are, O Kshatriya, as many hells as there heavens, and those that sin surely do find these narakas for themselves, until they are purified and rise to the higher realms again. The hells, like all conditions are states of mind, too, resulting from ignorance, avidya, and from violence.” Parikshita wanted to know, “Where are these hells situated?” “They are deep inside the three worlds, in the southern direction, below the earth and above the waters. Here, the manes called the Agnisvattas dwell. They worship the great Gods with deep bhakti and ask them to bless their descendants. Here, too, Surya Deva’s son, Yama, the Lord Death, dwells with his retinue. And those souls that his dutas bring to him, he punishes according to their crimes,”
― Bhagavata Purana
― Bhagavata Purana
“The wise never harbor hostility. The good man forgets the faults of others; the best man forgives them, even when he himself has borne their brunt. In the purity of his heart, the virtuous man only sees the virtue in everyone else.”
― The Mahabharata: a Modern Rendering
― The Mahabharata: a Modern Rendering
“The basic unit of life is the nimesha, the duration of a blink- Fifteen nimeshas make one kastha, thirty kasthas one kaala, thirty kaalas one muhurta; thirty muhurtas make one day. Thirty days is a maasa, a month, one day of the gods and the ancestors. Six maasas make one ayana; two ayanas, solstices, make one year. One human year is one day and night for the devas, uttarayana being the day and dakshinayana the night. Three hundred and sixty human years make a divine one.”
― Shiva: The Siva Purana Retold
― Shiva: The Siva Purana Retold
“You are like an autumn cloud, Bhoorisravas, full of thunder but never bringing rain.”
― The Mahabharata: a Modern Rendering
― The Mahabharata: a Modern Rendering




