Previous Verse
Next Verse

Shloka 57

उपवासफलात्मकविधिः — Upavāsa as Yajña-Equivalent Merit

Angiras Teaching

स गत्वा स्त्रीशताकीर्णे रमते भरतर्षभ

sa gatvā strī-śatākīrṇe ramate bharatarṣabha | bharataśreṣṭha! sa svargaṁ gatvā śataśo ramaṇībhiḥ paripūrṇe prāsāde ramate | asmin loke durbalaṁ manuṣyaṁ hṛṣṭa-puṣṭaṁ bhūtaṁ dṛṣṭam | yasya vraṇo jātaḥ tasya vraṇo 'pi rūḍhaḥ bhavati | rogī roga-nivṛtty-arthaṁ auṣadha-samūhaṁ prāpnoti | krodha-pūrṇaṁ puruṣaṁ prasādayituṁ upāyo 'pi labhyate | artha-māna-kṛte duḥkhita-puruṣasya duḥkha-nivṛttiś ca dṛśyate | kintu svarga-kāṅkṣiṇaṁ divya-sukha-kāṅkṣiṇaṁ puruṣaṁ etāni iha-loka-sukhāni na rocante |

Dijo Aṅgirā: «Oh toro entre los Bharatas, oh el mejor de los Bharatas: tras llegar al cielo, se deleita en un palacio colmado de cientos de mujeres. En este mundo se ve que aun un hombre débil llega a estar alegre y robusto; se ve también que una herida infligida sana; el enfermo obtiene conjuntos de medicinas para la remoción de su mal; se hallan medios para apaciguar al hombre hinchado de ira; y se ve alivio para quien sufre por riqueza y honor. Pero para quien anhela el cielo y desea la dicha divina, tales palabras sobre placeres mundanos no resultan atractivas.»

सःhe
सः:
Karta
TypePronoun
Rootतद्
FormMasculine, Nominative, Singular
गत्वाhaving gone
गत्वा:
TypeVerb
Rootगम्
Formक्त्वा (absolutive/gerund), Parasmaipada (usage-neutral), Prior action
स्त्रीशताकीर्णेin (a place) filled with hundreds of women
स्त्रीशताकीर्णे:
Adhikarana
TypeAdjective
Rootस्त्रीशताकीर्ण
FormNeuter, Locative, Singular
रमतेenjoys/sports
रमते:
TypeVerb
Rootरम्
FormLat, Present, Third, Singular, Atmanepada
भरतर्षभO bull among the Bharatas
भरतर्षभ:
TypeNoun
Rootभरतर्षभ
FormMasculine, Vocative, Singular
भरतश्रेष्ठO best of the Bharatas
भरतश्रेष्ठ:
TypeNoun
Rootभरतश्रेष्ठ
FormMasculine, Vocative, Singular

अंगियरा उवाच

A
Aṅgirā (Angiras)
S
Svarga (heaven)
B
Bharata lineage (address: Bharatarṣabha/Bharataśreṣṭha)

Educational Q&A

The verse contrasts ordinary worldly consolations (healing, medicine, appeasing anger, relief from distress over wealth and honor) with the mindset of one intent on heaven: for a person whose aim is divine happiness, merely worldly pleasures and remedies feel insufficient and unappealing.

Aṅgirā addresses a Bharata prince/king and describes the reward of reaching heaven—enjoyment in a palace filled with many women—then argues that although this world offers many forms of relief and pleasure, a person yearning for svarga and divine bliss does not value such worldly talk.