SECTION 25
(Astika Parva continued)
"Sauti said, 'Then that bird of great strength and energy and
capable of going at will to every place repaired to his mother's side on the
other shore of the great ocean. Thither lived Vinata in affliction, defeated in
wager and put into a state of slavery. Once Kadru calling Vinata who had prostrated
herself before the former, addressed her these words in the presence of her
son, 'O gentle Vinata, there is in the midst of the ocean, in a remote quarter,
a delightful and fair region inhabited by the Nagas. Bear me thither!' At this
that mother of the bird of fair feathers bore (on her shoulders) the mother of
the snakes. And Garuda also, directed by his mother's words, carried (on his
back) the snakes. And that ranger of the skies born of Vinata began to ascend
towards the Sun. And thereupon the snakes, scorched by the rays of the Sun,
swooned away. And Kadru seeing her sons in that state prayed to Indra, saying,
'I bow to thee, thou Lord of all the gods! I bow to thee, thou slayer of
Vritra! I bow to thee, thou slayer of Namuchi! Consort of Sachi! By thy
showers, be thou the protector of the snakes scorched by the Sun. Thou art our
great protector. O Purandara, thou art able to grant rain in torrents. Thou art
Vayu (the air), the clouds, fire, and the lightning of the skies. Thou art the propeller
of the clouds, and hast been called the great cloud (i.e., that which will
darken the universe at the end of Yuga). Thou art the fierce and incomparable
thunder, and the roaring clouds. Thou art the Creator of the worlds and their
Destroyer. Thou art unconquered. Thou art the light of all creatures, Aditya,
Vibhavasu, and the wonderful elements. Thou art the ruler of all the gods. Thou
art Vishnu. Thou hast a thousand eyes. Thou art a god, and the final resource.
Thou art, O deity, all amrita, and the most adored Soma. Thou art the moment,
the lunar day, the bala (minute), thou art the kshana (4 minutes). Thou art the
lighted fortnight, and also the dark fortnight. Thou art kala, thou kashtha,
and thou Truti.[1] Thou art the year, the seasons, the months, the nights, and
the days. Thou art the fair Earth with her mountains and forests. Thou art also
the firmament, resplendent with the Sun. Thou art the great Ocean with heaving
billows and abounding with whales, swallowers of whales, and makaras, and
various fishes. Thou art of great renown, always adored by the wise and by the
great Rishis with minds rapt in contemplation. Thou drinkest, for the good of
all creatures, the Soma juice in sacrifices and the clarified butter offered
with sacred invocation. Thou art always worshipped at sacrifices by Brahmanas
moved by desire of fruit. Thou art sung in the Vedas and Vedangas. It is for
that reason that learned Brahmanas bent upon performing sacrifices, study the
Vedas with every care.'"
And so ends the twenty-fifth section in the Astika Parva of the
Adi Parva.
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