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| Keeping in mind the nature of time, came from there to the forest. That one, I, entered this auspicious forest, hard to enter and devoid of beasts and birds, in the vicinity of the lake, to king, I came near this lake and practised three types of austerities for several thousand years; having (thus) practised the austerities I earned the unparalleled world of Brahman, which is hard to obtain.<ref name=":6" /> | | Keeping in mind the nature of time, came from there to the forest. That one, I, entered this auspicious forest, hard to enter and devoid of beasts and birds, in the vicinity of the lake, to king, I came near this lake and practised three types of austerities for several thousand years; having (thus) practised the austerities I earned the unparalleled world of Brahman, which is hard to obtain.<ref name=":6" /> |
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| + | Excessively long life; Kshatriya's Vanaprastha; Making way for younger generation. (1.81.10-16) The Points to be noted are: |
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| + | Yayati, a king, became a Vanaprastha. He was staying with brahmanas. He subsisted on fruits and roots. He was danta (self-controlled). The phrase प्रवव्राज वनं तदा has been used in his case. He was offering oblations in the fire as per the rites. He honoured the guests. He ascended to the heaven. |
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| + | In Yayati-Ashtaka dialogue, quite a few points are made. These are, |
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| + | In 1.86.1, Astaka asks how they reach the gods - as a householder, as a mendicant, as an acharyakarman (naishthika brahmacarin) and Vanaprastha. He states that there were many views on this nowadays. The farest hermit attains the highest perfection. A mendicant is of no special trade whereas, a forest hermit lives on his own strength. The very night when the worlds are won and desires are conquered one should try to become a forest-dweller. There are two kinds of hermits, (a) a forest hermit and (b) a village-dwelling hermit whose description tallies with that of a bhikshu. Giving up desires, giving up rites, mastering the senses leads a hermit to fulfilment in this world. Apparently, Yayati's picture of a hermit is of respectable appearance, cleaned teeth, clipped nails, and well groomed (Perhaps this is applicable to the village hermit only). Why should he be dark in complexion ? Probably because of being tanned on account of exposure to the sunlight. Apparently, Yayati believed that a bhikshu made it faster to union with Gods, compared to Vanaprastha (1.87.2). This seems like becoming one of the gods.<ref name=":6" /> |
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| + | Pandu's Vanaprastha (1.110,111): Asceticism, Continence; Wives accompanied. |
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| + | Pandu said: Renouncing the pleasant life of a civilian and performing great austerities, I shall live in the forest, clothe myself in bark, and eat of fruit and roots. Both mornings and evenings, I shall make offerings in the fire and do my abulations; lean, eating little, wearing hides, and matting my hair. I shall dry out this body, suffering cold wind and heat, hunger, thirst, and fatigue, with difficult mortifications, seeking solitude, living on that which is ripe and green, and contenting Gods and ancestors with forest fare, words and water. The sight of a man who has departed for the woods has never offended family men, let alone the villagers. So, I shall be looking forwards to the harsh and ever-harsher rules of the precepts of the forest, until my body is finished. |
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| + | 1.110.42-45 (Vaishampayana said) But Prince Pandu Kaurava, henceforth living on roots and fruit, went with his wives to mount Nagasabha. He journeyed to Chaitraratha, crossed the Varisena and passed beyond the Himalayas to Gandhamadana. Watched over by the Mahabhutas, Siddhas and great seer, the king dwealt there in smoothe and rough country. He went on to Lake Indradyumna and beyond Mount Hamsakuta, until the ascetic king arrived at the Shatashrnga - the hundred peaked mountain. |
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| + | 1.111.1-4 Vaishampayana said, there the powerful man, bent upon sublime austerities, became the apple of the eye of the hosts of Siddhas and Charanas. Obedient, unselfish, disciplined and the master of his senses, he soon won the road to heaven by his own power, O Bharata. To some he was brother, to others friend amd other seers watched over him like a son. After a long time Pandu reached such pure austerity that he become like a brahmana seer, O bull of the Bharatas. |
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| + | Pandu's case might be regarded as a classic example to illustrate the point that starving the senses of their objects may not necessarily quench their inherent desire.<ref name=":6" /> |
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| ==Vanaprastha for Women== | | ==Vanaprastha for Women== |