SECTION
2
"Vaisampayana
said, 'When that night passed away and day broke in, those Brahmamas who
supported themselves by mendicancy, stood before the Pandavas Kauntheyas, who
were about to enter the forest. Then king Yudhishthira, addressed them, saying,
"Robbed of our prosperity and kingdom, robbed of everything, we are about
to enter the deep woods in sorrow, depending for our food on fruits and roots,
and the produce of the chase. The forest too is full of dangers, and abounds
with reptiles and beasts of prey. It appeareth to me that ye will certainly have
to suffer much privation and misery there. The sufferings of the Brahmanas
might overpower even the gods. That they would overwhelm me is too certain. Therefore,
go ye back whithersoever ye list!'
"The
Brahmanas replied, 'O king, our path is even that on which ye are for setting
out! It behoveth thee not, therefore, to forsake us who are thy devoted
admirers practising the true religion! The very gods have compassion upon their
worshippers,--specially upon Brahmanas of regulated lives!'
"Yudhishthira
said, 'We regenerate ones, I too am devoted to the Brahmanas! But this
destitution that hath overtaken me overwhelmed me with confusion! These my
brothers that are to procure fruits and roots and the deer of the forest are
stupefied with grief arising from their afflictions and on account of the
distress of Draupadi and the loss of our kingdom! Alas, as they are distressed,
I cannot employ them in painful tasks!'
"The
Brahmanas said, 'Let no anxiety, in respect of our maintenance, find a place in
thy heart! Ourselves providing our own food, we shall follow thee, and by
meditation and saying our prayers we shall compass thy welfare while by
pleasant converse we shall entertain thee
and be
cheered ourselves.'
"Yudhishthira
said, 'Without doubt, it must be as ye say, for I am ever pleased with the
company of the regenerate ones! But my fallen condition maketh me behold in
myself an object of reproach! How shall I behold you all, that do not deserve
to bear trouble, out of love for me painfully subsisting upon food procured by
your own toil? Oh, fie upon the wicked
sons
of Dhritarashtra!'
"Vaisampayana
continued. 'Saying this, the weeping king sat himself down upon the ground.
Then a Brahmana, Saunaka by name, addressed the king, saying, 'Causes of grief
by thousands, and causes of fear by hundreds, day after day, overwhelm the
ignorant but not the wise. Surely, sensible men like thee never suffer
themselves to be deluded by acts that are opposed to true knowledge, fraught
with every kind of evil, and destructive of salvation. In thee dwelleth that
understanding furnished with the eight attributes which is said to be capable
of providing against all evils and which resulteth from a study of the Sruti (Vedas)
and scriptures! And men like unto thee are never stupefied, on the accession of
poverty or an affliction overtaking their friends, through bodily or mental
uneasiness! Listen, I shall tell the slokas which were chanted of old by the
illustrious Janaka touching the subject of
controlling the self! This world is afflicted with both bodily and mental
suffering. Listen now to the means of allaying it as I indicate them both
briefly and in detail. Disease, contact with painful things, toil and want of
objects desired.--these are the four causes that induce bodily suffering. And
as regards disease, it may be allayed by the application of medicine, while
mental ailments are cured by seeking to forget them yoga-meditation. For this
reason, sensible physicians first seek to allay the mental sufferings of their
patients by agreeable converse and the offer of desirable objects And as a hot
iron bar thrust into a jar maketh the water therein hot, even so doth mental
grief bring on bodily agony. And as water quencheth fire, so doth true
knowledge allay mental disquietude. And the mind attaining ease, the body
findeth ease also. It seemeth that affection is the root of all mental sorrow.
It is affection that maketh every creature miserable and bringeth on every kind
of woe. Verily affection is the root of all misery and of all fear, of joy and
grief of every kind of pain. From affection spring all purposes, and it is from
affection that spring the love of worldly goods! Both of these (latter) are
sources of evil, though the first our purposes is worse than the second. And as
a small portion of fire thrust into the hollow of a tree consumeth the tree
itself to its roots, even so affection, ever so little, destroyeth both virtue
and profit. He cannot be regarded to have renounced the world who hath merely
withdrawn from worldly possessions. He, however, who though in actual contact
with the world regardeth its faults, may be said to have truly renounced the world.
Freed from every evil passion, soul dependent on nothing with such a one hath
truly renounced the world. Therefore, should no one seek to place his
affections on either friends or the wealth he hath earned. And so should
affection for one's own person be extinguished by knowledge. Like the
lotus-leaf that is never drenched by water, the souls of men capable of
distinguishing between the ephemeral and the everlasting, of men devoted to the
pursuit of the eternal, conversant with the scriptures and purified by
knowledge, can never be moved by affection. The man that is influenced by
affection is tortured by desire; and from the desire that springeth up in his
heart his thirst for worldly possessions increaseth. Verily, this thirst is
sinful and is regarded as the source of all anxieties. It is this terrible
thirst, fraught with sin that leaneth unto unrighteous acts. Those find
happiness that can renounce this thirst, which can never be renounced by the
wicked, which decayeth not with the decay of the body, and which is truly a fatal
disease! It hath neither beginning nor end. Dwelling within the heart, it
destroyeth creatures, like a fire of incorporeal origin. And as a faggot of
wood is consumed by the fire that is fed by itself, even so doth a person of impure
soul find destruction from the covetousness born of his heart. And as creatures
endued with life have ever a dread of death, so men of wealth are in constant
apprehension of the king and the thief, of water and fire and even of their
relatives. And as a morsel of meat, if in air, may be devoured by birds; if on
ground by beasts of prey; and if in water by the fishes; even so is the man of
wealth exposed to dangers wherever he may be. To many the wealth they own is
their bane, and he that beholding happiness in wealth becometh wedded to it,
knoweth not true happiness. And hence accession of wealth is viewed as that
which increaseth covetousness and folly. Wealth alone is the root of niggardliness
and boastfulness, pride and fear and anxiety! These are the miseries of men that
the wise see in riches! Men undergo infinite miseries in the acquisition and
retention of wealth. Its expenditure also is fraught with grief. Nay,
sometimes, life itself is lost for the sake of wealth! The abandonment of
wealth produces misery, and even they that are cherished by one's wealth become
enemies for the sake of that wealth! When, therefore, the possession of wealth
is fraught with such misery, one should not mind its loss. It is the ignorant
alone who are discontented. The wise, however, are always content. The thirst
of wealth can never be assuaged. Contentment is the highest happiness;
therefore, it is, that the wise regard contentment as the highest object of
pursuit. The wise knowing the instability of youth and beauty, of life and treasure-hoards,
of prosperity and the company of the loved ones, never covet them. Therefore,
one should refrain from the acquisition of wealth, bearing the pain incident to
it. None that is rich free from trouble, and it is for this that the virtuous
applaud them that are free from the desire of wealth. And as regards those that
pursue wealth for purposes of virtue, it is better for them to refrain
altogether from such pursuit, for, surely, it is better not to touch mire at
all than to wash it off after having been besmeared with it. And, O
Yudhishthira, it behoveth thee not to covet anything! And if thou wouldst have
virtue, emancipate thyself from desire of worldly possessions!'
"Yudhishthira
said, 'O Brahmana, this my desire of wealth is not for enjoying it when
obtained. It is only for the support of the Brahmanas that I desire it and not
because I am actuated by avarice! For what purpose, doth one like us lead a
domestic life, if he cannot cherish and support those that follow him? All
creatures are seen to divide the food they procure amongst those that depend on
them. So should a person leading a domestic life give a share of his food to
Yatis and Brahmacharins that have renounced cooking for themselves. The houses of
the good men can never be in want of grass for seat, space for
rest,
water to wash and assuage thirst, and fourthly, sweet words. To the weary a
bed,--to one fatigued with standing, a seat,--to the thirsty, water,--and to
the hungry, food should ever be given. To a guest are due pleasant looks and a
cheerful heart and sweet words. The host, rising up, should advance towards the
guest, offer him a seat, and duly worship him. Even this is eternal morality.
They that perform not the Agnihotra not wait upon bulls, nor cherish their
kinsmen and guests and friends and sons and wives and servants, are consumed
with sin for such neglect. None should cook his food for himself alone and none
should slay an animal without dedicating it to the gods, the pitris, and
guests. Nor should one
eat of
that food which hath not been duly dedicated to the gods and pitris. By
scattering food on the earth, morning and evening, for the behoof of dogs and
Chandalas and birds, should a person perform the Viswedeva sacrifice. He that
eateth the Vighasa, is regarded as eating ambrosia. What remaineth in a
sacrifice after dedication to the gods and the pitris is regarded as ambrosia;
and what remaineth after feeding the guest is called Vighasa and is equivalent
to ambrosia itself. Feeding a guest is equivalent to a sacrifice, and the
pleasant looks the host casteth upon the guest, the attention he devoteth to
him, the sweet words in which he addresseth him, the respect he payeth by
following him, and the food and drink with which he treateth him, are the five
Dakshinas in that sacrifice. He who giveth without stint food to a fatigued wayfarer
never seen before, obtaineth merit that is great, and he who leading a domestic
life, followeth such practices, acquireth religious merit that is said to be
very great. O Brahmana, what is thy opinion on this?"
"Saunaka
said, 'Alas, this world is full of contradictions! That which shameth the good,
gratifieth the wicked! Alas, moved by ignorance and passion and slaves of their
own senses, even fools perform many acts of apparent merit to gratify in
after-life their appetites! With eyes open are these men led astray by their
seducing senses, even as a charioteer, who hath lost his senses, by restive and
wicked steeds! When any of the six senses findeth its particular object, the
desire springeth up in the heart to enjoy that particular object. And thus when
one's heart proceedeth to enjoy the objects of any particular sense a wish is entertained
which in its turn giveth birth to a resolve. And finally, like unto an insect
falling into a flame from love of light, the man falleth into the fire of
temptation, pierced by the shafts of the object of enjoyment discharged by the
desire constituting the seed of the resolve! And thenceforth blinded by sensual
pleasure which he seeketh without stint, and steeped in dark ignorance and
folly which he mistaketh for a state of happiness, he knoweth not himself! And
like unto a wheel that is incessantly rolling, every creature, from ignorance
and deed and desire, falleth into various states in this world, wandering from
one birth to another, and rangeth the entire circle of existences from a Brahma
to the point of a blade of grass, now in water, now on land, and now against in
the air!
'This
then is the career of those that are without knowledge. Listen now to the
course of the wise they that are intent on profitable virtue, and are desirous
of emancipation! The Vedas enjoin act but renounce interest in action.
Therefore, shouldst thou act, renouncing Abhimana, performance of sacrifices,
study of the Vedas, gifts, penance, truth in both speech and act, forgiveness,
subduing the senses, and renunciation of desire,--these have been declared to
be the eight cardinal duties constituting the true path. Of these, the four
first pave the way to the world of the pitris. And these should be practised without
Abhimana. The four last are always observed by the pious, to attain the heaven
of the gods. And the pure in spirit should ever follow these eight paths. Those
who wish to subdue the world for purpose of salvation, should ever act fully
renouncing motives, effectually subduing their senses, rigidly observing
particular vows, devotedly serving their preceptors, austerely regulating their
fare, diligently studying the Vedas, renouncing action as mean and restraining
their hearts. By renouncing desire and aversion the gods have attained
prosperity. It is by virtue of their wealth of yoga[6] that the Rudras, and the
Sadhyas, and the Adityas and the Vasus, and the twin Aswins, rule the
creatures. Therefore, like unto them, do thou, entirely refraining from action
with motive, strive to attain success in yoga and by ascetic austerities. Thou
hast already achieved such success so far as thy debts to thy ancestors, both
male and female concerned, and that success also which is derived from action
sacrifices. Do thou, for serving the regenerate ones endeavour to attain
success in penances. Those that are crowned with ascetic success, can, by
virtue of that success, do whatever they list; do thou, therefore, practising
asceticism realise all thy wishes."
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