Parīkṣit’s Final Absorption, Takṣaka’s Bite, Janamejaya’s Snake Sacrifice, and the Vedic Sound-Lineage
भगवंस्तक्षकादिभ्यो मृत्युभ्यो न बिभेम्यहम् । प्रविष्टो ब्रह्म निर्वाणमभयं दर्शितं त्वया ॥ ५ ॥
bhagavaṁs takṣakādibhyo mṛtyubhyo na bibhemy aham praviṣṭo brahma nirvāṇam abhayaṁ darśitaṁ tvayā
Ô Bhagavān, je ne crains plus Takṣaka ni aucun être, ni même les morts répétées, car je suis entré dans le Brahman-nirvāṇa pur et sans peur que tu as révélé.
In this verse, King Parīkṣit declares he does not fear death—even if it comes as Takṣaka—because realization of brahma-nirvāṇa (the fearless spiritual state) has been revealed to him by Śukadeva.
Parīkṣit had heard Śukadeva Gosvāmī’s Bhagavata teachings and became spiritually established; thus the external cause of death (Takṣaka) no longer disturbed him.
By deepening spiritual hearing and remembrance (śravaṇa and smaraṇa) so identity shifts from the perishable body to the soul—reducing anxiety and bringing steadiness even amid uncertainty.