SECTION 5
(Lokapala Sabhakhayana
Parva)
"Vaisampayana said,--"While the Kauntheyas
were seated in that Sabha along with the principal Gandharvas, there came, unto
that assembly the celestial Rishi Narada,
well-versed in all that occurred in ancient kalpas (cycles), conversant
with Nyaya (logic) and the truth of moral science, possessing a complete
knowledge of the six Angas (viz., pronunciation, grammar, prosody, explanation
of basic terms, description of religious rites, and astronomy). He was a
perfect master in reconciling contradictory texts and differentiating in
applying general principles to particular cases, as also in interpreting
contraries by reference to differences in situation, eloquent, resolute,
intelligent, possessed of powerful memory. He was capable of answering
successively Brihaspati himself while arguing, with definite conclusions
properly framed about religion, wealth, pleasure and salvation, of great soul
and beholding He was master of both the Sankhya and Yoga systems of philosophy,
ever desirous of humbling the celestials and Asuras by fomenting quarrels among
them, conversant with the sciences of war and treaty, proficient in drawing
conclusions by judging of things not within direct ken, as also in the six
sciences of treaty, war, military campaigns, maintenance of posts against the
enemy and stratagems by ambuscades and reserves. He was a thorough master of
every branch of learning, fond of war and music, incapable of being repulsed by
any science or any course, of action, and possessed of these and numberless
other accomplishments. The Rishi, having wandered over the different worlds,
came into that Sabha. And the celestial Rishi was accompanied, by Parijata and
the intelligent Raivata and Saumya and Sumukha. The Brahmana, on arriving
there, paid homage unto Yudhishthira by uttering blessings on him and wishing
him victory. Beholding the Rishi arrive, the eldest of Kauntheyas, quickly
stood up with his younger brothers. Bending low with humility, the monarch
cheerfully saluted the Rishi, and gave with due ceremonies a befitting seat
unto him. The king also gave him kine and the usual offerings of the Arghya
including honey and the other ingredients. Receiving that worship from Yudhishthira
in proper form, the Rishi became gratified. Thus worshipped by the Kauntheyas
and the Rishis, Narada, said unto Yudhishthira the following words.
"Narada said--'Is the wealth thou art
earning being spent on proper objects? Doth thy mind take pleasure in virtue? Art
thou enjoying the pleasures of life? Doth not thy mind sink under their weight?
Continuest thou in the asily seduces? O thou ever devoted to the good of all,
conversant as thou art with tnoble conduct consistent with religion and wealth
practised by thy ancestors towards the three classes of subjects, (viz., good,
indifferent, and bad)? Never injurest thou religion for the sake of wealth, or
both religion and wealth for the sake of pleasure that ehe timeliness of
everything, followest thou religion, wealth, pleasure and salvation dividing
thy time judiciously? With the six attributes of kings (viz., cleverness of
speech, readiness in providing means, intelligence in dealing with the foe,
memory, and acquaintance with morals and politics), dost thou attend to the
seven means (viz., sowing dissensions, chastisement, conciliation, gifts,
incantations, medicine and magic)? Examinest thou also, after a survey of thy
own strength and weakness, the fourteen possessions of thy foes? These are the
country, forts, cars, elephants, cavalry, foot-soldiers, the principal
officials of state, the zenana, food supply, computations of the army and
income, the religious treatises in force, the accounts of state, the revenue,
wine-shops and other secret enemies. Attendest thou to the eight occupations
(of agriculture, trade, &c), having examined, thy own and thy enemy's
means, and having made peace with thy enemies? Thy seven principal officers of state
(viz., the governor of the citadel, the commander of forces, the chief judge,
the general in interior command, the chief priest, the chief physician, and the
chief astrologer), have not, I hope, succumbed to the influence of thy foes,
nor have they, I hope, become idle in consequence of the wealth they have
earned? They are, I hope, all obedient to thee. Thy counsels, I hope, are never
divulged by thy trusted spies in disguise, by thyself or by thy ministers? Thou
ascertainest, I hope, what thy friends, foes and strangers are about? Makest
thou peace and makest thou war at proper times? Observest thou neutrality
towards strangers and persons that are neutral towards thee? And, hast thou
made persons like thyself, persons that are old, continent in behaviour, capable
of understanding what should be done and what should not, pure as regards birth
and blood, and devoted to thee, thy ministers? The victories of kings can be
attributed to good counsels. Is thy kingdom protected by ministers learned in
Sastras, keeping their counsels close? Are thy foes unable to injure it? Thou
hast not become the slave of sleep? Wakest thou at the proper time? Conversant
with pursuits yielding profit, thinkest thou, during the small hours of night, as
to what thou shouldst do and what thou shouldst not do the next day? Thou
settlest nothing alone, nor takest counsels with many? The counsels thou hast
resolved upon, do not become known all over thy kingdom? Commencest thou soon
to accomplish measures of great utility that are easy of accomplishment? Such
measures are never obstructed? Keepest thou the agriculturists not out of thy
sight? They do not fear to approach thee? Achievest thou thy measures through
persons that are trusted incorruptible, and possessed of practical experience?
I hope, people only know the measures already accomplished by thee and those
that have been partially accomplished and are awaiting completion, but not
those that are only in contemplation and uncommenced? Have experienced teachers
capable of explaining the causes of things and learned in the science of morals
and every branch of learning, been appointed to instruct the princes and the
chiefs of the army? Buyest thou a single learned man by giving in exchange a
thousand ignorant individuals? The man that is learned conferreth the greatest
benefit in seasons of distress. Are thy forts always filled with treasure,
food, weapons, water, engines and instruments, as also with engineers and bowmen?
Even a single minister that is intelligent, brave, with his passions under
complete control, and possessed of wisdom and judgment, is capable of
conferring the highest prosperity on a king or a king's son. I ask thee,
therefore, whether there is even one such minister with thee? Seekest thou to
know everything about the eighteen Tirthas of the foe and fifteen of thy own by
means of three and three spies all unacquainted with one another? Watchest thou
all thy enemies with care and attention, and unknown to them? Is the priest
thou honourest, possessed of humility, and purity of blood, and renown, and without
jealousy and illiberality? Hath any well-behaved, intelligent, and guileless
Brahmana, well-up in the ordinance, been employed by thee in the performance of
thy daily rites before the sacred fire, and doth he remind thee in proper time
as to when thy homa should be performed? Is the astrologer thou hast employed
skilled in reading physiognomy, capable of interpreting omens, and competent to
neutralise the effect of the disturbances of nature? Have respectable servants
been employed by thee in offices that are respectable, indifferent ones in
indifferent offices, and low ones in offices that are low? Hast thou appointed
to high offices ministers that are guileless and of well conduct for
generations and above the common run? Oppressest thou not thy people with cruel
and severe punishment? And, do thy ministers rule thy kingdom under thy orders?
Do thy ministers ever slight thee like sacrificial priests slighting men that
are fallen (and incapable of performing any more sacrifices) or like wives
slighting husbands that are proud and incontinent in their behaviour? Is the
commander of thy forces possessed of sufficient confidence, brave, intelligent,
patient, well-conducted, of good birth, devoted to thee, and competent?
Treatest thou with consideration and regard the chief officers of thy army that
are skilled in every kind of welfare, are forward, well-behaved, and endued
with prowess? Givest thou to thy troops their sanctioned rations and pay in the
appointed time? Thou dost not oppress them by withholding these? Knowest thou
that the misery caused by arrears of pay and irregularity in the distribution
of rations driveth the troops to mutiny, and that is called by the learned to
be one of the greatest of mischiefs? Are all the principal high-born men
devoted to thee, and ready with cheerfulness to lay down their lives in battle
for thy sake? I hope no single individual of passions uncontrolled is ever
permitted by thee to rule as he likes a number of concerns at the same time
appertaining to the army? Is any servant of thine, who hath accomplished well a
particular business by the employment of special ability, disappointed in obtaining
from thee a little more regard, and an increase of food and pay? I hope thou
rewardest persons of learning and humility, and skill in every kind of
knowledge with gifts of wealth and honour proportionate to their
qualifications. Dost thou support the wives and children of men that have given
their lives for thee and have been distressed on thy account? Cherishest thou,
with paternal affection the foe that hath been weakened, or him also that hath sought
thy shelter, having been vanquished in battle? Art thou equal unto all men, and
can every one approach thee without fear, as if thou wert their mother and
father? And marchest thou, without loss of time, and reflecting well upon three
kinds of forces, against thy foe when thou hearest that he is in distress? Beginnest
thou thy march when the time cometh, having taken into consideration all the
omens you might see, the resolutions thou hast made, and that the ultimate victory
depends upon the twelve mandalas (such as reserves, ambuscades, &c, and
payment of pay to the troops in advance)? And, givest thou gems and jewels,
unto the principal officers of enemy, as they deserve, without thy enemy's
knowledge? Seekest thou to conquer thy incensed foes that are slaves to their
passions, having first conquered thy own soul and obtained the mastery over thy
own senses? Before thou marchest out against thy foes, dost thou properly
employ the four arts of reconciliation, gift (of wealth) producing disunion,
and application of force? Goest thou out against thy enemies, having first
strengthened thy own kingdom? And having gone out against them, exertest thou
to the utmost to obtain victory over them? And having conquered them, seekest
thou to protect them with care? Are thy army consisting of four kinds of
forces, the regular troops, the allies, the mercenaries, and the irregulars,
each furnished with the eight ingredients - cars, elephants, horses, offices,
infantry, camp-followers, spies possessing a thorough knowledge of the country,
and ensigns led out against thy enemies after having been well trained by superior
officers? I hope thou slayest thy foes without regarding their seasons of
reaping and of famine? O king, I hope thy servants and agents in thy own
kingdom and in the kingdoms of thy foes continue to look after their respective
duties and to protect one another. I hope trusted servants have been employed
by thee to look after thy food, the robes thou wearest and the perfumes thou
usest. I hope, O king, thy treasury, barns, stables arsenals, and women's
apartments, are all protected by servants devoted to thee and ever seeking thy
welfare. I hope, thou protectest first thyself from thy domestic and public
servants, then from those servants of thy relatives and from one another. Do
thy servants, O king, ever speak to thee in the forenoon regarding thy
extravagant expenditure in respect of thy drinks, sports, and women? Is thy
expenditure always covered by a fourth, a third or a half of thy income?
Cherishest thou always, with food and wealth, relatives, superiors, merchants,
the aged, and other proteges, and the distressed? Do the accountants and clerks
employed by thee in looking after thy income and expenditure, always appraise
thee every day in the forenoon of thy income and expenditure? Dismissest thou
without fault servants accomplished in business and popular and devoted to thy
welfare? Dost thou employ superior, indifferent, and low men, after examining
them well in offices they deserve? Employest thou in thy business persons that
are thievish or open to temptation, or hostile, or minors? Persecutest thou thy
kingdom by the help of thievish or covetous men, or minors, or women? Are the
agriculturists in thy kingdom contented. Are large tanks and lakes constructed
all over thy kingdom at proper distances, without agriculture being in thy
realm entirely dependent on the showers of heaven? Are the agriculturists in
thy kingdom wanting in either seed or food? Grantest thou with kindness loans
(of seed-grains) unto the tillers, taking only a fourth in excess of every
measure by the hundred? Are the four professions of agriculture, trade,
cattle-rearing, and lending at interest, carried on by honest men? Upon these, depends
the happiness of thy people. O king, do the five brave and wise men, employed
in the five offices of protecting the city, the citadel, the merchants, and the
agriculturists, and punishing the criminals, always benefit thy kingdom by
working in union with one another? For the protection of thy city, have the
villages been made like towns, and the hamlets and outskirts of villages like
villages? Are all these entirely under thy supervision and sway? Are thieves
and robbers that sack thy town pursued by thy police over the even and uneven
parts of thy kingdom? Consolest thou women and are they protected in thy realm?
I hope thou placest not any confidence in them, nor divulgest any secret before
any of them? Having heard of any danger and having reflected on it also, liest
thou in the inner apartments enjoying every agreeable object? Having slept
during the second and the third divisions of the night, thinkest thou of
religion and profit in the fourth division wakefully. Rising from bed at the
proper time and dressing thyself well, showest thou thyself to thy people,
accompanied by ministers conversant with the auspiciousness or otherwise of
moments? Do men dressed in red and armed with swords and adorned with ornaments
stand by thy side to protect thy person? Behaves thou like the god of justice
himself unto those that deserve punishment and those that deserve worship, unto
those that are dear to thee and those that thou likest not? Seekest thou to
cure bodily diseases by medicines and fasts, and mental illness with the advice
of the aged? I hope that the physicians engaged in looking after thy health are
well conversant with the eight kinds of treatment and are all attached and
devoted to thee. Happeneth it ever, that from covetousness or folly or pride
thou failest to decide between the plaintiff and the defendant who have come to
thee? Deprivest thou, through covetousness or folly, of their pensions the
proteges who have sought thy shelter from trustfulness or love? Do the people
that inhabit thy realm, bought by thy foes, ever seek to raise disputes with
thee, uniting themselves with one another? Are those amongst thy foes that are feeble
always repressed by the help of troops that are strong, by the help of both
counsels and troops? Are all the principal chieftains (of thy empire) all
devoted to thee? Are they ready to lay down their lives for thy sake, commanded
by thee? Dost thou worship Brahmanas and wise men according to their merits in
respect of various branches of learning? I tell thee, such worship is without doubt,
highly beneficial to thee. Hast thou faith in the religion based on the three
Vedas and practised by men who have gone before thee? Dost thou carefully
follow the practices that were followed by them? Are accomplished Brahmanas
entertained in thy house and in thy presence with nutritive and excellent food,
and do they also obtain pecuniary gifts at the conclusion of those feasts? Dost
thou, with passions under complete control and with singleness of mind, strive to
perform the sacrifices called Vajapeya and Pundarika with their full complement
of rites? Bowest thou unto thy relatives and superiors, the aged, the gods, the
ascetics, the Brahmanas, and the tall trees (banian) in villages, that are of
so much benefit to people? Causest thou
ever grief or anger in any one? Do priests capable of granting thee auspicious
fruits ever stand by thy side? Are thy inclinations and practices such as I
have described them, and as always enhance the duration of life and spread
one's renown and as always help the cause of religion, pleasure, and profit? He
who conducteth himself according to this way, never findeth his kingdom
distressed or afflicted; and that monarch, subjugating the whole earth,
enjoyeth a high degree of felicity. I hope, no well-behaved, pure-souled, and respected
person is ever ruined and his life taken, on a false charge or theft, by thy
ministers ignorant of Sastras and acting from greed? And, I hope thy ministers
never from covetousness set free a real thief, knowing him to be such and
having apprehended him with the booty about him? I hope, thy ministers are
never won over by bribes, nor do they wrongly decide the disputes that arise
between the rich and the poor. Dost thou keep thyself free from the fourteen
vices of kings, viz., atheism, untruthfulness, anger, incautiousness, procrastination,
non-visit to the wise, idleness, restlessness of mind, taking counsels with
only one man, consultation with persons unacquainted with the science of
profit, abandonment of a settled plan, divulgence of counsels,
non-accomplishment of beneficial projects, and undertaking everything without
reflection? By these, O king, even monarchs firmly seated on their thrones are
ruined. Hath thy study of the Vedas, thy wealth and knowledge of the Sastras
and marriage been fruitful?
"Vaisampayana continued,--After the
Rishi had finished, Yudhishthira asked,--"How, O Rishi, do the Vedas,
wealth, wife, and knowledge of the Sastras bear fruit?"
"The Rishi answered,--"The Vedas
are said to bear fruit when he that hath studied them performeth the Agnihotra
and other sacrifices. Wealth is said to bear fruit when he that hath it
enjoyeth it himself and giveth it away in charity. A wife is said to bear fruit
when she is useful and when she beareth children. Knowledge of the Sastras is
said to bear fruit when it resulteth in humility and good behaviour."
"Vaisampayana continued,--The great
ascetic Narada, having answered Yudhishthira thus, again asked him,-"Do
the officers of thy government, O king, that are paid from the taxes levied on
the community, take only their just dues from the merchants that come to thy
territories from distant lands impelled by the desire of gain? Are the
merchants, O king, treated with consideration in thy capital and kingdom,
capable of bringing their goods thither without being deceived by the false
pretexts of (both the buyers and the officers of government)?
Listenest thou always, to the words, fraught
with instructions in religion and wealth, of old men acquainted with economic
doctrines? Are gifts of honey and clarified butter made to the Brahmanas
intended for the increase of agricultural produce, of kine, of fruits and
flowers, and for the sake of virtue? Givest thou always, O king, regularly unto
all the artisans and artists employed by thee the materials of their works and
their wages for periods not more than four months? Examinest thou the works
executed by those that are employed by thee, and applaudest thou them before
good men, and rewardest thou them, having shewn them proper respect? Followest
thou the aphorisms of the sage in respect of every concern particularly those relating
to elephants, horses, and cars? Are the aphorisms relating to the science of
arms, as also those that relate to the practice of engines in warfare--so
useful to towns and fortified places, studied in thy court? Art thou acquainted
with all
mysterious incantations, and with the secrets
of poisons destructive of all foes? Protectest thou thy kingdom from the fear
of fire, of snakes and other animals destructive of life, of disease, and
Rakshasas? As acquainted thou art with every duty, cherishest thou like a
father, the blind, the dumb, the lame, the deformed, the friendless, and
ascetics that have no homes. Hast thou banished these six evils, viz., sleep,
idleness, fear, anger, weakness of mind, and procrastination?'
"Vaisampayana continued,-- Yudhishthira,
having heard these words of Narada, bowed down unto him and worshipped his
feet. And gratified with everything he heard, the monarch said unto Narada of
celestial form,--"I shall do all that thou hast directed, for my knowledge
hath expanded under thy advice!' Having said the king acted conformably to that
advice, and gained in time the whole Earth bounded by her belt of seas. Narada
again spoke, saying,--"That king who is thus employed in the protection of
four orders, Brahmanas, Kshatriyas, Vaishyas, and Sudras, passeth his days here
happily and attaineth hereafter to the region heaven.'"
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