Adhyaya 4 — Jaimini Meets the Dharmapakshis: Four Doubts on the Mahabharata and the Opening of Narayana Doctrine
वियोनिमपि सम्प्राप्तानेतान् मुनिकुमारकान् ।
चित्रमेतदहं मन्ये न जहाति सरस्वती ॥
viyonim api samprāptān etān munikumārakān | citram etad ahaṃ manye na jahāti sarasvatī ||
“纵然这些年轻圣仙已成无(寻常)生者,我仍以此为奇:萨拉斯瓦蒂女神并不离弃他们。”
Learning and spiritual clarity are portrayed as gifts of Sarasvatī that can persist independent of conventional social or biological origins. The verse highlights reverence for knowledge as a divine endowment rather than merely a product of lineage or circumstance.
This verse belongs primarily to the Purāṇic frame-narrative and ethical-philosophical instruction rather than the core pañcalakṣaṇa categories. It most closely supports ‘Vaṃśānucarita/Carita’ in a broad sense (characterization within narrative), but it is not a direct sarga/pratisarga/manvantara/vaṃśa account.
‘Viyoni’ can symbolically indicate a birth beyond ordinary causation—knowledge arising from saṃskāra, tapas, or divine favor rather than from external pedagogy alone. Sarasvatī ‘not abandoning’ suggests the continuity of vāk-śakti: when the inner instrument (antaḥkaraṇa) is purified, speech and insight remain luminous regardless of outer conditions.