Page:The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa (Volume 1).pdf/73

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ADI PARVA
59

ascetic, I well knew the power of his penances; therefore with an agitated heart, I addressed him thus, bending low with joined hands, 'Friend, I did this by way of joke, to excite thy laughter. It behoveth thee to forgive me and revoke thy curse...And seeing me sorely troubled, the ascetic was moved, and he replied, breathing hot and hard.

-'What I have said, must come to pass. Listen to what I say and lay it to thy heart. O pious one! When Ruru, the pure son of Pramati, will appear, thou shalt be delivered from the curse the moment thou seest bim.--Thou art the very Ruru and the son of Pramati. On regaining my native form, I will tell thee something for thy good.'

"And that illustrious man and best of Brahmanas then left his snake body, and attained his owo form and original brightness. He then addressed the following words to Ruru of incomparable power, 'O thou first cf created beings, verily the highest virtue of man is sparing life of others. Therefore a Brahmana should never take the life of any creature. A Brahmana should ever be mild, This is the most sacred injunction of the Vedas. A Brahmana should be versed in the Vedas and Vedangas, and should inspire all creatures with belief in God. He should be benevolent to all creatures, truthful, and forgiving, even as it is his paramount duty to retain the Vedas in his memory. The duties of the Kshatriya are not thine. To be stern, to wield the sceptre and to rule the subjects properly are the duties of the Kshatriya. Listen, O Ruru, to the account of the destruction of snakes at the sacrifice of Janamejaya in days of yore, and the deliverance of the terrified repriles by that best of Dwijas, Astika, profound in Vedic lore and mighty in spiritual energy."

And so ends the eleventh section of the Pauloma Parva of the Adi Parva.


SECTION XII

(Pauloma Parva continued)

Sauti continued :-"Ruru then asked. O best of Dwijas, why was the king Janamejaya bent upon destroying the serpents ?—And why and how were they saved by the wise Astika? I am anxious to hear all this in detail,

"The Rishi replied. 'o Ruru, the important history of Astika you will learn from the lips of Brahmanas.' Saying this, he vanished." /

Sauti continued.--"Ruru ran about in search of the missing Rishi, and having failed to find him in all the woods, fell down on the ground,