Adhyaya 4 — Jaimini Meets the Dharmapakshis: Four Doubts on the Mahabharata and the Opening of Narayana Doctrine
एतत्सर्वं कथ्यतां मे सन्दिग्धं भारतं प्रति ।
कृतार्थोऽहं सुखं येन गच्छेयं निजमाश्रमम् ॥
etat sarvaṃ kathyatāṃ me sandigdhaṃ bhārataṃ prati /
kṛtārtho ’haṃ sukhaṃ yena gaccheyaṃ nijam āśramam //
ഇതെല്ലാം എനിക്ക് പറയുക; കാരണം ഈ ഭാരതവിഷയത്തിൽ എനിക്ക് സംശയമുണ്ട്. ഇതിലൂടെ ഞാൻ കൃതാർത്ഥനാകും; പിന്നെ സുഖത്തോടെ എന്റെ ആശ്രമത്തിലേക്ക് മടങ്ങും.
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The verse models śiṣya-dharma: one should openly state doubts and request complete instruction. Knowledge that resolves uncertainty is portrayed as ‘kṛtārthatā’ (fulfillment), enabling one to return to disciplined life (āśrama) with clarity and peace.
Indirectly supportive rather than a direct pancalakṣaṇa item: it functions as a framing-dialogue transition that sets up narration. Such verses typically serve as nidāna (occasion) for sarga/manvantara/vaṃśa narratives to be taught, rather than constituting sarga, pratisarga, vaṃśa, manvantara, or vaṃśānucarita themselves.
‘Returning to one’s āśrama’ symbolizes re-entry into the inner discipline of the self after receiving right discernment. The movement is from saṃśaya (doubt) to niścaya (certainty), and from mental agitation to sukha (settledness), implying that true comfort arises from aligned understanding rather than external circumstance.