Bharata Mahārāja’s Attachment to a Deer and His Fall from Yoga
तमुपश्रुत्य सा मृगवधू: प्रकृतिविक्लवा चकितनिरीक्षणा सुतरामपिहरिभयाभिनिवेशव्यग्रहृदया पारिप्लवदृष्टिरगततृषा भयात् सहसैवोच्चक्राम ॥ ४ ॥
tam upaśrutya sā mṛga-vadhūḥ prakṛti-viklavā cakita-nirīkṣaṇā sutarām api hari-bhayābhiniveśa-vyagra-hṛdayā pāriplava-dṛṣṭir agata-tṛṣā bhayāt sahasaivoccakrāma.
その咆哮を聞くや、もともと殺されることを恐れる雌鹿は動揺し、驚いて周囲を疑い深く見回した。獅子への恐れが胸をかき乱し、視線はさまよい、渇きも癒えぬまま恐怖に駆られて一気に川を跳び越えた。
This verse describes how the doe, driven by instinct, becomes overwhelmed by fear of a predator and flees immediately—showing how powerful material nature’s impulses can be.
The frightened doe is part of the scene that leads to the fawn’s vulnerability, which later awakens Bharata Mahārāja’s compassion and gradually develops into attachment—central to the chapter’s moral.
Fear can hijack attention and judgment; the Bhagavatam’s broader lesson here is to cultivate steady awareness and detachment so compassion does not turn into binding attachment.