Parīkṣit’s Final Absorption, Takṣaka’s Bite, Janamejaya’s Snake Sacrifice, and the Vedic Sound-Lineage
सुकर्मा चापि तच्छिष्य: सामवेदतरोर्महान् । सहस्रसंहिताभेदं चक्रे साम्नां ततो द्विज ॥ ७६ ॥ हिरण्यनाभ: कौशल्य: पौष्यञ्जिश्च सुकर्मण: । शिष्यौ जगृहतुश्चान्य आवन्त्यो ब्रह्मवित्तम: ॥ ७७ ॥
sukarmā cāpi tac-chiṣyaḥ sāma-veda-taror mahān sahasra-saṁhitā-bhedaṁ cakre sāmnāṁ tato dvija
جَیمِنی کے شاگرد سُکَرما ایک عظیم عالم تھے۔ اے دْوِج! انہوں نے ساما وید کے عظیم درخت کو ایک ہزار سنہتاؤں میں تقسیم کر دیا۔ پھر سُکَرما کے شاگرد—کُشَل کے بیٹے ہِرَنیَنابھ، پَوشیَنجی، اور برہمتتّو میں نہایت بلند آونتیہ—ساما منتروں کے نگہبان بنے۔
It states that Sukarmā, in the Sama Veda lineage, organized the Sāman chants into a thousand distinct saṁhitā divisions, showing careful preservation through structured recensions.
Śukadeva is summarizing the post-Vyāsa transmission of Vedic knowledge—who carried which Veda and how it was subdivided—so Parīkṣit understands the historical continuity of śruti-paramparā.
It encourages systematic study and faithful transmission of sacred teachings—learning in an authentic lineage, keeping texts organized, and sharing knowledge without distortion.