the desire of enjoyment then seizes him, taking its
rise from heedlessness, O king. Thinking that
person to be blessed who has the largest share of
enjoyments in this world, the man devoted to enjoyment
does not, in consequence of his attachment thereto,
see that there is any other happiness besides what
waits upon the gratification of the senses. Overwhelmed
with cupidity that results from such attachment, he
then seeks to increase the number of his relatives
and attendants, and for gratifying these latter he
seeks to increase his wealth by every means in his
power. Filled with affection for children, such
a person commits, for the sake of acquiring wealth,
acts that he knows to be evil, and gives way to grief
if his wealth be lost. Having earned honours and
always guarding against the defeat of his plans, he
betakes himself to such means as would gratify his
desire of enjoyment. At last he meets with destruction
as the inevitable consequence of the conduct he pursues.
It is well-known, however, that true felicity is theirs
that a e endued with intelligence, that are utterers
of the eternal Brahma, that seek to accomplish only
acts that are auspicious and beneficial, and that abstain
from all acts that are optional and spring from desire
alone.[1532] From loss of all such objects in which
are centred our affections, from loss of wealth, O
king, and from the tyranny of physical diseases add
mental anguish, a person falls into despair.
From this despair arises art awakening of the soul.
From such awakening proceeds study of the Scriptures.
From contemplation of the import of the scriptures,
O king, one sees the value of penance. A person
possessed of the knowledge of what is essential and
what accidental, O king, is very rare,—he,
that is, who seeks to undergo penances, impressed
with the truth that the happiness one derives from
the possession of such agreeable objects as spouses
and children leads ultimately to misery.[1533] Penances,
O child, are for all. They are ordained for even
the lowest order of men (viz., Sudras). Penances
set the self-restrained man having the mastery over
all his senses on the way to heaven. It was through
penances that the puissant Lord of all creatures,
O, king, observing vows at particular intervals created
all existent objects. The Adityas, the Vasus,
the Rudras, Agni, the Aswins, the Maruts, the Viswedevas,
the Saddhyas, the Pitris, the Maruts, the Yakshas,
the Rakshasas, the Gandharvas, the Siddhas and the
other denizens of heaven, and, indeed, all other celestials
whatever, O child, have all been crowned with success
through their penances. Those Brahmanas whom
Brahmana created at the outset, succeeded through
their penances in honouring not the Earth alone but
the heaven also in which they roved at pleasure.
In this world of mortals, they that are kings, and
those others that are householders born in high families,
have all become what they are only in consequence of
their penances.[1534] The silken robes they wear,