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rājarṣir malayadhvajaḥ
Содержание книги
- Fond of hunting, giving up his wife who was difficult to give up, full of pride, he took his bow and arrow and went to hunt in the forest.
- ya evaṁ karma niyataṁ
- tataḥ kṣut-tṛṭ-pariśrānto
- antaḥpura-striyo 'pṛcchad
- tvat-priyā yad vyavasyati
- ikṣā-daṇḍaṁ na yuñjate
- vrīḍā-vilamba-vilasad-dhasitāvalokam
- vaktraṁ na te vitilakaṁ malinaṁ viharṣaṁ
- Chapter Twenty-seven. Purañjana Enjoys Life. nārada uvāca. itthaṁ purañjanaṁ sadhryag. vaśamānīya vibhramaiḥ. purañjanī mahārāja. reme ramayatī patim. Nārada said: O
- raho 'numantrair apakṛṣṭa-cetanaḥ
- kṣaṇārdham iva rājendra
- teṣu tad-riktha-hāreṣu
- purañjana-puraṁ yadā
- tri-lokīṁ varam icchatī
- tato vihata-saṅkalpā
- atho bhajasva māṁ bhadra
- prajvāro 'yaṁ mama bhrātā
- purañjana-purīṁ nṛpa
- tmānaṁ kanyayā grastaṁ
- When the city was being attacked by old age, the protector of the city, seeing his abode attacked by Yavanas, and himself touched by Prajvāra, became most distressed.
- lokāntaraṁ gatavati
- paśuvad yavanair eṣa
- rāja-siṁhasya veśmani
- tasyāṁ sa janayāṁ cakra
- agastyaḥ prāg duhitaram
- rājarṣir malayadhvajaḥ
- kṣut-pipāse priyāpriye
- sākṣād bhagavatoktena
- patiṁ parama-dharma-jñaṁ
- uttiṣṭhottiṣṭha rājarṣe
- api smarasi cātmānam
- O noble one! I and you were two swans, friends in Mānasa Lake. Previously, for a thousand years, we were without a house.
- The five sense objects are the gardens. The gates are nine openings of the body. The storerooms are fire, water and earth. The communities are the senses and mind combined.
- yat pumāṁsaṁ striyaṁ satīm
- haṁsena pratibodhitaḥ
- Prācīnabarhi said: O great devotee! I cannot completely understand your words. The wise understand, but I cannot, since I am bewildered by karma.
- jñānaṁ karma ca yat-kṛtam
- nalinī nālinī nāse. gandhaḥ saurabha ucyate. ghrāṇo 'vadhūto mukhyāsyaṁ. vipaṇo vāg rasavid rasaḥ. The gates called Nalinī and Nālinī are the two nostrils. The place call
- vaiśasaṁ narakaṁ pāyur
- pañca-sūnā-vinoda-kṛt
- lokas tāṁ nābhinandati
- bhagavantaṁ paraṁ gurum
- daiva-bhūtātma-hetuṣu
- arthe hy avidyamāne 'pi. saṁsṛtir na nivartate. manasā liṅga-rūpeṇa. svapne vicarato yathā. Though suffering does not really exist, saṁsāra will never cease, as long as the conception of suffering con
- syād acyuta-kathāśrayaḥ
- jīva-lokaḥ svabhāvajaiḥ
- abda-brahmaṇi duṣpāre
- yatra devo janārdanaḥ
- svayaṁ prakṛtir īśvaraḥ
- kṣudraṁ caraṁ sumanasāṁ śaraṇe mithitvā
rājarṣir malayadhvajaḥ
ārirādhayiṣuḥ kṛṣṇaṁ
sa jagāma kulācalam
The saintly king Malayadhvaja, desiring to worship Kṛṣṇa after dividing the earth among his sons, departed to Kulācala.
Dividing the earth means after dividing up the types of bhakti. Kulācalam means a place for concentration, a place giving bhakti or Veṅkaṭa hill.
|| 4.28.34 ||
hitvā gṛhān sutān bhogān
vaidarbhī madirekṣaṇā
anvadhāvata pāṇḍyeśaṁ
jyotsneva rajanī-karam
Giving up he house, sons and enjoyments, the daughter of King Vidarbha with attractive eyes followed her husband, just as moon light follows the moon.
Just as the wife serves the husband by rejecting enjoyment, the disciple engages in service to guru by hearing and chanting, giving no regard even to solitary places (grhān) which could give rise to the bliss of prema (bhogān), in order to attain with ease the perfection of all goals by serving guru. This is the teaching in this verse. Mad means exciting. Irā means message or the Vedas. Her glance was always in the Veda, which gave joy, since the Vedas say that service to guru is the highest. Jīva Gosvāmī says that madira means the Lord who gives joy. She had a glance always in the form of the Lord who gives joy. The meaning according to the story is that she had ever-youthful glances in her eyes.
|| 4.28.35-36 ||
tatra candravasā nāma
tāmraparṇī vaṭodakā
tat-puṇya-salilair nityam
ubhayatrātmano mṛjan
kandāṣṭibhir mūla-phalaiḥ
puṣpa-parṇais tṛṇodakaiḥ
vartamānaḥ śanair gātra-
karśanaṁ tapa āsthitaḥ
At Kulācala the King bathed daily internally and externally in the Candravaṣa, Tāmraparṇī and Vaṭodakā Rivers. Undergoing austerities, subsisting on roots, seeds, bulbs, fruits, flowers, leaves, grass and water, his body eventually became thin.
Internally and externally (ubhayatra) he washed away impurities. As in the case of Pṛthu, his intense austerity arose from his great eagerness for the Lord.
|| 4.28.37 ||
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