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—json {

  "name":"Cc. Ādi 16.52",
  "h1":"Cc. Ādi 16.52",
  "label":"Text 52",
  "title":"Śrī Caitanya-caritāmṛta, Ādi-līlā 16.52",
  "description":"\"Certainly I have not studied the art of literary embellishments. But I have heard about it from higher circles, and thus I can review this verse and find in it many faults and many good qualities.\""

} —

Cc. Ādi 16.52

Text

nāhi paḍi alaṅkāra, kariyāchi śravaṇa
tāte ei śloke dekhi bahu doṣa-guna

Synonyms

nāhi paḍi—I do not study; alaṅkāra—the art of literary embellishment; kariyāchi—I have done; śravaṇa—hearing; tāte—by that; ei śloke—in this verse; dekhi—I see; bahu—many; doṣa—faults; guṇa—good qualities.

Translation

“Certainly I have not studied the art of literary embellishments. But I have heard about it from higher circles, and thus I can review this verse and find in it many faults and many good qualities.”

Purport

The statement kariyāchi śravaṇa (“I have heard it”) is very important in the sense that hearing is more important than directly studying or perceiving. If one is expert in hearing and hears from the right source, his knowledge is immediately perfect. This process is called śrauta-panthā, or the acquisition of knowledge by hearing from authorities. All Vedic knowledge is based on the principle that one must approach a bona fide spiritual master and hear from the authoritative statements of the Vedas. It is not necessary for one to be a highly polished literary man to receive knowledge; to receive perfect knowledge from a perfect person, one must be expert in hearing. This is called the descending process of deductive knowledge, or avaroha-panthā.

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