vimukta-dṛṣṭa-śruta-saṅga-bandhaḥ
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- Hearing the censuring words of their master, the carriers became afraid of punishment and informed him as follows.
- tvayoditaṁ vyaktam avipralabdhaṁ
- bhartuḥ sa me syād yadi vīra bhāraḥ
- dyantavad yad vikṛtasya dṛṣṭam
- gatasya me vīra cikitsitena
- kas tvaṁ nigūḍhaś carasi dvijānāṁ
- vijñāna-vīryo vicarasy apāraḥ
- bhartur gantur bhavataś cānumanye
- stābhigoptā nṛpatiḥ prajānāṁ
- na vikriyā viśva-suhṛt-sakhasya
- vitāna-vidyoru-vijṛmbhiteṣu
- yāvan mano rajasā pūruṣasya
- kālopapannaṁ phalam āvyanakti
- kṣemāya nairguṇyam atho manaḥ syāt
- gandhākṛti-sparśa-rasa-śravāṁsi
- kṣetrajña etā manaso vibhūtīr
- sva-māyayātmany avadhīyamānaḥ
- vidhūya māyāṁ vayunodayena
- upekṣayādhyedhitam apramattaḥ
- Jaḍa Bharata Refutes the King’s Arguments
- I will later tell you my topics of doubt. Now please explain what you have said about adhyātma-yoga, making it easy to understand, since I am inquisitive.
- ocyān imāṁs tvam adhikaṣṭa-dīnān
- evaṁ niruktaṁ kṣiti-śabda-vṛttam
- pratyak praśāntaṁ bhagavac-chabda-saṁjñaṁ
- rahūgaṇaitat tapasā na yāti
- vimukta-dṛṣṭa-śruta-saṅga-bandhaḥ
- The Forest of the Material Enjoyment
- prabhūta-vīrut-tṛṇa-gulma-gahvare
- kvacid vitoyāḥ sarito 'bhiyāti
- kvacin nigīrṇo 'jagarāhinā jano
- ayyāsana-sthāna-vihāra-hīnaḥ
- mṛdhe śayīran na tu tad vrajanti
- tair vañcito haṁsa-kulaṁ samāviśann
- punaś ca sārthaṁ praviśaty arindama
- hatāṁhaso bhaktir adhokṣaje 'malā
- Explanation of the Forest of Enjoyment
- tatra ca kvacid ātapodaka-nibhān viṣayān upadhāvati pāna-bhojana-vyavāyādi-vyasana-lolupaḥ.
- In that city, full of desire, addicted to drinking eating, and sex life, he chases after sense objects, like a mirage of water.
- ekadāsat-prasaṅgān nikṛta-matir vyudaka-srotaḥ-skhalanavad ubhayato 'pi duḥkhadaṁ pākhaṇḍam abhiyāti.
- yadā tu para-bādhayāndha ātmane nopanamati tadā hi pitṛ-putra-barhiṣmataḥ pitṛ-putrān vā sa khalu bhakṣayati.
- Sometimes he experiences the happiness of a dream out of strong desire, thinking that his dead father or grandfather has appeared.
- atha ca tasmād ubhayathāpi hi karmāsminn ātmanaḥ saṁsārāvapanam udāharanti.
- Unable to counteract the conditions of suffering arising from body, mind, other beings, cold and wind, he becomes depressed by severe anxieties.
- kvacid drumavad aihikārtheṣu gṛheṣu raṁsyan yathā vānaraḥ suta-dāra-vatsalo vyavāya-kṣaṇaḥ.
- evam adhvany avarundhāno mṛtyu-gaja-bhayāt tamasi giri-kandara-prāye.
- evaṁ vitta-vyatiṣaṅga-vivṛddha-vairānubandho 'pi pūrva-vāsanayā mitha udvahaty athāpavahati.
- rṣabhasyeha rājarṣer
- yo dustyajān dāra-sutān
- yajñāya dharma-pataye vidhi-naipuṇāya
- The Dynasty from Ṛṣabha
vimukta-dṛṣṭa-śruta-saṅga-bandhaḥ
ārādhanaṁ bhagavata īhamāno
mṛgo 'bhavaṁ mṛga-saṅgād dhatārthaḥ
Previously I was a king named Bharata, who was free of attachment to all material dealings seen or heard. I worshiped the Lord, but from association with a deer, I was thwarted in my goal, and became a deer.
“Who are you, so merciful to give teachings on knowledge to a great offender like me?” This verse answers. I was freed from the bondage of attachment to dealings of this world seen and heard. By misfortune, I became inattentive.
|| 5.12.15 ||
sā māṁ smṛtir mṛga-dehe 'pi vīra
kṛṣṇārcana-prabhavā no jahāti
atho ahaṁ jana-saṅgād asaṅgo
viśaṅkamāno 'vivṛtaś carāmi
O King Rahūgana! In the body of a deer, my memory, by the power of my previous worship of Kṛṣṇa, did not leave me. Fearing material association, I wander about alone incognito.
His worship of Kṛṣṇa, though failing in the last life, saves him. Fearing material association, I wander about unknown (avivṛtaḥ)
|| 5.12.16 ||
tasmān naro 'saṅga-susaṅga-jāta-
jñānāsinehaiva vivṛkṇa-mohaḥ
hariṁ tad-īhā-kathana-śrutābhyāṁ
labdha-smṛtir yāty atipāram adhvanaḥ
Cutting up illusion by the sword of knowledge arising from detachment from matter and attachment to devotees, and gaining remembrance of the Lord by speaking about and hearing the pastimes of the Lord, a person attains the Lord at the end of saṁsāra.
Asaṅga means detachment from material things. Susaṅga means attachment to devotees. By these two, one gains knowledge, which is a sword. With the sword a person cuts illusion in the form of an elephant and attains the Lord, at the end (atipāram) of saṁsāra (adhvanaḥ).
Thus ends the commentary on the Twelfth Chapter of the Fifth Canto of the Bhāgavatam for the pleasure of the devotees, in accordance with the previous ācāryas.
Chapter Thirteen
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