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| {{first|11Sep10}} | | {{first|11Sep10}} |
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| {{totals_by_section|BG=0|SB=49|CC=0|OB=0|Lec=0|Con=0|Let=0}} | | {{totals_by_section|BG=0|SB=225|CC=0|OB=0|Lec=0|Con=0|Let=0}} |
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| <div id="SB1162630_47" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_1" book="SB" index="643" link="SB 1.16.26-30" link_text="SB 1.16.26-30"> | | <div id="SB1162630_47" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_1" book="SB" index="643" link="SB 1.16.26-30" link_text="SB 1.16.26-30"> |
| <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 1.16.26-30|SB 1.16.26-30, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The fourteenth quality, knowledge, can be further extended into five subheadings, namely (1) intelligence, (2) gratefulness, (3) power of understanding the circumstantial environments of place, object and time, (4) perfect knowledge of everything, and (5) knowledge of the self. Only fools are ungrateful to their benefactors.</p> | | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 1.16.26-30|SB 1.16.26-30, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The fourteenth quality, knowledge, can be further extended into five subheadings, namely (1) intelligence, (2) gratefulness, (3) power of understanding the circumstantial environments of place, object and time, (4) perfect knowledge of everything, and (5) knowledge of the self. Only fools are ungrateful to their benefactors.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB11740_48" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_1" book="SB" index="687" link="SB 1.17.40" link_text="SB 1.17.40"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 1.17.40|SB 1.17.40, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">Thus the personality of Kali, by the directions of Mahārāja Parīkṣit, the son of Uttarā, was allowed to live in those five places.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB11939_49" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_1" book="SB" index="778" link="SB 1.19.39" link_text="SB 1.19.39"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 1.19.39|SB 1.19.39, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">It is the duty of householders to maintain the saints and sages, like the children. So a saint like Śukadeva Gosvāmī would hardly stay at the house of a householder for more than five minutes in the morning.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB_Canto_2" class="sub_section" sec_index="2" parent="Srimad-Bhagavatam" text="SB Canto 2"><h3>SB Canto 2</h3> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB2212_0" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_2" book="SB" index="52" link="SB 2.2.12" link_text="SB 2.2.12"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 2.2.12|SB 2.2.12, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The smiling face of the Lord is the Tenth Canto of Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam, and there are many upstarts who at once try to begin with the Tenth Canto and especially with the five chapters which delineate the rāsa-līlā of the Lord. This is certainly improper. By such improper study or hearing of Bhāgavatam, the material opportunists have played havoc by indulgence in sex life in the name of Bhāgavatam.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB2219_1" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_2" book="SB" index="59" link="SB 2.2.19" link_text="SB 2.2.19"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 2.2.19|SB 2.2.19, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Material desires are based on the false ego of the living being and are exhibited by his childish and useless activities to conquer the laws of material nature and by his desire to lord it over the resources of the five elements.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB2235_2" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_2" book="SB" index="75" link="SB 2.2.35" link_text="SB 2.2.35"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 2.2.35|SB 2.2.35, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Our senses of perception and of action, that is to say, our five perceptive senses of (1) hearing, (2) touch, (3) sight, (4) taste and (5) smell, as well as our five senses of action, namely (1) hands, (2) legs, (3) speech, (4) evacuation organs and (5) reproductive organs, and also our three subtle senses, namely (1) mind, (2) intelligence and (3) ego (thirteen senses in all), are supplied to us by various arrangements of gross or subtle forms of natural energy.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB2324_3" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_2" book="SB" index="96" link="SB 2.3.24" link_text="SB 2.3.24"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 2.3.24|SB 2.3.24, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The system of pañca-upāsanā, recommending five mental attitudes for the common man, is also enacted for this purpose, namely gradual development, worship of the superior that may be in the form of fire, electricity, the sun, the mass of living beings, Lord Śiva and, at last, the impersonal Supersoul, the partial representation of Lord Viṣṇu.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB2514_4" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_2" book="SB" index="135" link="SB 2.5.14" link_text="SB 2.5.14"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 2.5.14|SB 2.5.14, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">The five elementary ingredients of creation, the interaction thereof set up by eternal time, and the intuition or nature of the individual living beings are all differentiated parts and parcels of the Personality of Godhead, Vāsudeva, and in truth there is no other value in them.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB2525_5" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_2" book="SB" index="146" link="SB 2.5.25" link_text="SB 2.5.25"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 2.5.25|SB 2.5.25, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">From the darkness of false ego, the first of the five elements, namely the sky, is generated. Its subtle form is the quality of sound, exactly as the seer is in relationship with the seen.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB2525_6" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_2" book="SB" index="146" link="SB 2.5.25" link_text="SB 2.5.25"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 2.5.25|SB 2.5.25, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The five elements, namely sky, air, fire, water and earth, are all but different qualities of the darkness of false ego. This means that the false ego in the sum total form of mahat-tattva is generated from the marginal potency of the Lord, and due to this false ego of lording it over the material creation, ingredients are generated for the false enjoyment of the living being.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB2618_7" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_2" book="SB" index="174" link="SB 2.6.18" link_text="SB 2.6.18"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 2.6.18|SB 2.6.18, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The inhabitants of those planets are liberated from birth, death, old age and diseases and have full knowledge of everything; they are all godly and free from all sorts of material hankerings. They have nothing to do there except to render transcendental loving service to the Supreme Lord Nārāyaṇa, who is the predominating Deity of such Vaikuṇṭha planets. Those liberated souls are engaged incessantly in singing songs mentioned in the Sāma Veda (vedaiḥ sāṅga-pada-kramopaniṣadair gāyanti yaṁ sāmagāḥ). All of them are personifications of the five Upaniṣads.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB2635_8" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_2" book="SB" index="191" link="SB 2.6.35" link_text="SB 2.6.35"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 2.6.35|SB 2.6.35, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">There are five types of liberation, one of which is called sāyujya-mukti, or being merged into the existence or body of the Lord. The other forms of liberation maintain the individuality of the particle soul and involve being always engaged in the transcendental loving service of the Lord.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB274_9" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_2" book="SB" index="203" link="SB 2.7.4" link_text="SB 2.7.4"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 2.7.4|SB 2.7.4, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Transcendental relations between the Personality of Godhead and the living entities are eternally established in five different affectionate humors, which are known as śānta, dāsya, sakhya, vātsalya and mādhurya.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB276_10" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_2" book="SB" index="205" link="SB 2.7.6" link_text="SB 2.7.6"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 2.7.6|SB 2.7.6, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The brahmacāri, or a boy from the age of five years, especially from the higher castes, namely from the scholarly parents (the brāhmaṇas), the administrative parents (the kṣatriyas), or the mercantile or productive parents (the vaiśyas), is trained until twenty-five years of age under the care of a bona fide guru or teacher, and under strict observance of discipline he comes to understand the values of life along with taking specific training for a livelihood.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB278_11" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_2" book="SB" index="207" link="SB 2.7.8" link_text="SB 2.7.8"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 2.7.8|SB 2.7.8, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">When he was only five years old, Prince Dhruva, a great devotee and the son of Mahārāja Uttānapāda, was sitting on the lap of his father. His stepmother did not like the King's patting her stepson, so she dragged him out, saying that he could not claim to sit on the lap of the King because he was not born out of her womb.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB2749_12" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_2" book="SB" index="245" link="SB 2.7.49" link_text="SB 2.7.49"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 2.7.49|SB 2.7.49, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">As long as the living entity is in material existence, actions performed by him are rewarded in the next life, or even in the present life. Similarly, in his spiritual life also actions are rewarded by the Lord by the five kinds of liberation.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB299_13" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_2" book="SB" index="287" link="SB 2.9.9" link_text="SB 2.9.9"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 2.9.9|SB 2.9.9, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The Personality of Godhead and the personalities of devotees of the Lord are all transcendental; they do not have material bodies. The material body is overcast with five kinds of miserable conditions, namely ignorance, material conception, attachment, hatred and absorption. As long as one is overwhelmed by those five kinds of material miseries, there is no question of entering into the Vaikuṇṭhalokas.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB2917_14" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_2" book="SB" index="295" link="SB 2.9.17" link_text="SB 2.9.17"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 2.9.17|SB 2.9.17, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">The Lord was seated on His throne and was surrounded by different energies like the four, the sixteen, the five, and the six natural opulences, along with other insignificant energies of the temporary character. But He was the factual Supreme Lord, enjoying His own abode.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB2917_15" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_2" book="SB" index="295" link="SB 2.9.17" link_text="SB 2.9.17"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 2.9.17|SB 2.9.17, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The Lord is naturally endowed with His six opulences. Specifically, He is the richest, He is the most powerful, He is the most famous, He is the most beautiful, He is the greatest in knowledge, and He is the greatest renouncer as well. And for His material creative energies, He is served by four, namely the principles of prakṛti, puruṣa, mahat-tattva and ego. He is also served by the sixteen, namely the five elements (earth, water, air, fire and sky), the five perceptive sense organs (the eye, ear, nose, tongue and skin), and the five working sense organs (the hand, the leg, the stomach, the evacuation outlet and the genitals), and the mind. The five includes the sense objects, namely form, taste, smell, sound and touch.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB2930_16" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_2" book="SB" index="308" link="SB 2.9.30" link_text="SB 2.9.30"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 2.9.30|SB 2.9.30, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Lord Brahmā is definitely situated in the humor of friendship with the Lord. Every living being is eternally related with the Personality of Godhead in one of five different transcendental humors, namely śānta, dāsya, sakhya, vātsalya and mādhurya. We have already discussed these five kinds of humors in relationship with the Personality of Godhead.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB2931_17" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_2" book="SB" index="309" link="SB 2.9.31" link_text="SB 2.9.31"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 2.9.31|SB 2.9.31, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The regulative principles are called vidhi-bhakti, or the devotional service of the Lord, and they can be practiced by a neophyte with his present senses. Such regulative principles are mainly based on hearing and chanting of the glories of the Lord. And such hearing and chanting of the glories of the Lord can be made possible in the association of devotees only. Lord Caitanya therefore recommended five main principles for attaining perfection in the devotional service of the Lord. The first is association with devotees (hearing); second is chanting the glories of the Lord; third, hearing Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam from the pure devotee; fourth, residing in a holy place connected with the Lord; and fifth, worshiping the Deity of the Lord with devotion.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB2936_18" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_2" book="SB" index="314" link="SB 2.9.36" link_text="SB 2.9.36"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 2.9.36|SB 2.9.36, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The Lord can be worshiped in all stages of life. For instance, even in the wombs of their mothers Mahārāja Prahlāda and Mahārāja Parīkṣit worshiped the Lord; even in his very childhood, at the age of only five years, Dhruva Mahārāja worshiped the Lord; even in full youth, Mahārāja Ambarīṣa worshiped the Lord; and even at the last stage of his frustration and old age Mahārāja Dhṛtarāṣṭra worshiped the Lord.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB2936_19" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_2" book="SB" index="314" link="SB 2.9.36" link_text="SB 2.9.36"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 2.9.36|SB 2.9.36, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">6. The pure devotee refuses to accept all the five different types of liberation in order to be engaged in the service of the Lord.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB2103_20" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_2" book="SB" index="327" link="SB 2.10.3" link_text="SB 2.10.3"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 2.10.3|SB 2.10.3, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">The elementary creation of sixteen items of matter—namely the five elements (fire, water, land, air and sky), sound, form, taste, smell, touch, and the eyes, ears, nose, tongue, skin and mind—is known as sarga, whereas subsequent resultant interaction of the modes of material nature is called visarga.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB21031_21" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_2" book="SB" index="355" link="SB 2.10.31" link_text="SB 2.10.31"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 2.10.31|SB 2.10.31, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">So water is the common element in both the gross and subtle forms of all material creation, and it should be noted herewith that due to necessity, water, being most prominent in the material creation, is the principal element of all the five. This material body is thus an embodiment of the five elements, and the gross manifestation is perceived because of three, namely earth, water, and fire.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB21046_22" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_2" book="SB" index="367" link="SB 2.10.46" link_text="SB 2.10.46"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 2.10.46|SB 2.10.46, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The creative instruments are eleven, the ingredients are five, and all of them are products of mahat, or materialistic ego. These creations by the Lord in His feature of Kāraṇodakaśāyī Viṣṇu are called mahā-kalpa.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB_Canto_3" class="sub_section" sec_index="3" parent="Srimad-Bhagavatam" text="SB Canto 3"><h3>SB Canto 3</h3> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB318_0" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="8" link="SB 3.1.8" link_text="SB 3.1.8"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.1.8|SB 3.1.8, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Mahārāja Yudhiṣṭhira was the rightful heir to his father's kingdom. But just to favor his own sons, headed by Duryodhana, Dhṛtarāṣṭra, Mahārāja Yudhiṣṭhira's uncle, adopted various unfair means to cheat his nephews of their rightful share of the kingdom. At last the Pāṇḍavas demanded only five villages, one for each of the five brothers, but that was also refused by the usurpers. This incident led to the War of Kurukṣetra. The Battle of Kurukṣetra, therefore, was induced by the Kurus, and not the Pāṇḍavas.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB3139_1" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="39" link="SB 3.1.39" link_text="SB 3.1.39"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.1.39|SB 3.1.39, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Vidura's inquiry was about the youngest brothers of the Pāṇḍavas, namely Nakula and Sahadeva. These twin brothers were sons of Mādrī, the stepmother of the other Pāṇḍavas. But although they were stepbrothers, because Kuntī took charge of them after the departure of Mādrī with her husband Mahārāja Pāṇḍu, Nakula and Sahadeva were as good as the other three Pāṇḍavas, Yudhiṣṭhira, Bhīma and Arjuna. The five brothers are known in the world as regular brothers. The three elder Pāṇḍavas took care of the younger brothers, just as the eyelid takes care of the eye.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB3140_2" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="40" link="SB 3.1.40" link_text="SB 3.1.40"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.1.40|SB 3.1.40, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">When Mahārāja Pāṇḍu died, both his wives, namely Kuntī and Mādrī, were prepared to embrace the fire, but Mādrī requested Kuntī to live for the sake of the younger children, the five Pāṇḍavas.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB3140_3" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="40" link="SB 3.1.40" link_text="SB 3.1.40"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.1.40|SB 3.1.40, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">It is understood that Mahārāja Pāṇḍu was a great warrior and that he alone, with the help of bow and arrow, could conquer the world's four directions. In the absence of such a husband, it was almost impossible for Kuntī to live on even as a widow, but she had to do it for the sake of the five children.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB322_4" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="47" link="SB 3.2.2" link_text="SB 3.2.2"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.2.2|SB 3.2.2, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">He was one who even in his childhood, at the age of five years, was so absorbed in the service of Lord Kṛṣṇa that when he was called by his mother for morning breakfast, he did not wish to have it.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB3314_5" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="93" link="SB 3.3.14" link_text="SB 3.3.14"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.3.14|SB 3.3.14, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">If a census were taken of all the living beings on the surface of the earth, certainly it would be found that the number of humans is not even five percent of the total number of living beings. If the birthrate of human beings is increasing, then the birthrate of other living beings is increasing proportionately.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB348_6" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="115" link="SB 3.4.8" link_text="SB 3.4.8"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.4.8|SB 3.4.8, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">According to Śrīla Viśvanātha Cakravartī Ṭhākura, the Lord's sitting posture—keeping His back against the newly grown banyan tree—is also meaningful. Aśvattha, the banyan tree, is so called because the tree does not die very quickly; it continues to live for many, many years. His legs and their energies are the material ingredients, which are five in all: earth, water, fire, air and sky.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB3415_7" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="122" link="SB 3.4.15" link_text="SB 3.4.15"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.4.15|SB 3.4.15, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Those who are associated with the Lord in the Vaikuṇṭha planets achieve all the bodily features of the Lord and appear to be the same as Lord Viṣṇu. Such liberation is called sārūpya-mukti, which is one of the five kinds of liberation. The devotees engaged in the transcendental loving service of the Lord never accept the sāyujya-mukti, or merging in the rays of the Lord called the brahmajyoti.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB3536_8" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="179" link="SB 3.5.36" link_text="SB 3.5.36"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.5.36|SB 3.5.36, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">In the final stage of sky there is one quality, namely sound; in the air two qualities, sound and touch; in the electricity three qualities, namely sound, touch and form; in the water four qualities, sound, touch, form and taste; and in the last stage of physical development the result is earth, which has all five qualities—sound, touch, form, taste and smell.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB3541_9" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="184" link="SB 3.5.41" link_text="SB 3.5.41"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.5.41|SB 3.5.41, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">There are many rivers in the world which are able to evoke one's sense of God consciousness simply by one's bathing in them, and the River Ganges is chief amongst them. In India there are five sacred rivers, but the Ganges is the most sacred.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB369_10" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="203" link="SB 3.6.9" link_text="SB 3.6.9"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.6.9|SB 3.6.9, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The air which passes through the throat and the stoppage of which constitutes suffocation is called the udāna air. And the total air which circulates throughout the entire body is called the vyāna air. Subtler than these five airs, there are others also. That which facilitates the opening of the eyes, mouth, etc., is called nāga air.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB3833_11" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="309" link="SB 3.8.33" link_text="SB 3.8.33"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.8.33|SB 3.8.33, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">Lord Brahmā, thus being surcharged with the mode of passion, became inclined to create, and after seeing the five causes of creation indicated by the Personality of Godhead, he began to offer his respectful prayers on the path of the creative mentality.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB3936_12" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="344" link="SB 3.9.36" link_text="SB 3.9.36"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.9.36|SB 3.9.36, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">Although I am not easily knowable by the conditioned soul, you have known Me today because you know that My personality is not constituted of anything material, and specifically not of the five gross and three subtle elements.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB31017_13" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="369" link="SB 3.10.17" link_text="SB 3.10.17"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.10.17|SB 3.10.17, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">By the influence of darkness, the conditioned soul forgets his relationship with the Supreme Lord and is overwhelmed by attachment, hatred, pride, ignorance and false identification, the five kinds of illusion that cause material bondage.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB31023_14" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="375" link="SB 3.10.23" link_text="SB 3.10.23"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.10.23|SB 3.10.23, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">The horse, mule, ass, gaura, śarabha bison and wild cow all have only one hoof. Now you may hear from me about the animals who have five nails.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB31024_15" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="376" link="SB 3.10.24" link_text="SB 3.10.24"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.10.24|SB 3.10.24, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">The dog, jackal, tiger, fox, cat, rabbit, sajāru, lion, monkey, elephant, tortoise, alligator, gosāpa, etc., all have five nails in their claws. They are known as pañca-nakhas, or animals having five nails.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB3117_16" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="388" link="SB 3.11.7" link_text="SB 3.11.7"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.11.7|SB 3.11.7, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">The duration of time of three lavas is equal to one nimeṣa, the combination of three nimeṣas makes one kṣaṇa, five kṣaṇas combined together make one kāṣṭhā, and fifteen kāṣṭhās make one laghu.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB31114_17" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="395" link="SB 3.11.14" link_text="SB 3.11.14"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.11.14|SB 3.11.14, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">There are five different names for the orbits of the sun, moon, stars and luminaries in the firmament, and they each have their own saṁvatsara.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB31115_18" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="396" link="SB 3.11.15" link_text="SB 3.11.15"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.11.15|SB 3.11.15, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">O Vidura, the sun enlivens all living entities with his unlimited heat and light. He diminishes the duration of life of all living entities in order to release them from their illusion of material attachment, and he enlarges the path of elevation to the heavenly kingdom. He thus moves in the firmament with great velocity, and therefore everyone should offer him respects once every five years with all ingredients of worship.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB31140_19" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="421" link="SB 3.11.40" link_text="SB 3.11.40"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.11.40|SB 3.11.40, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The analytical studies of the material world are the subject matter of Sāṅkhya philosophy. The first sixteen diversities are the eleven senses and five sense objects, and the eight elements are the gross and subtle matter, namely earth, water, fire, air, sky, mind, intelligence and ego.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB3122_20" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="425" link="SB 3.12.2" link_text="SB 3.12.2"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.12.2|SB 3.12.2, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">It is evident from this verse that Brahmā himself is a creation of the Supreme Lord, and the five kinds of nescience which condition the living entities in material existence are creations of Brahmā. It is simply ludicrous to think the living entity to be equal with the Supreme Being when one can understand that the conditioned souls are under the influence of Brahmā's magic wand. Patañjali also accepts that there are five kinds of nescience, as mentioned herein.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB3123_21" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="426" link="SB 3.12.3" link_text="SB 3.12.3"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.12.3|SB 3.12.3, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Almost all the conditioned souls who are rotting in the material world are misusing their independence, and therefore five kinds of nescience are imposed upon them</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB31256_22" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="479" link="SB 3.12.56" link_text="SB 3.12.56"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.12.56|SB 3.12.56, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">O son of Bharata, in due course of time he (Manu) begot in Śatarūpā five children—two sons, Priyavrata and Uttānapāda, and three daughters, Ākūti, Devahūti and Prasūti.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB31419_23" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="549" link="SB 3.14.19" link_text="SB 3.14.19"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.14.19|SB 3.14.19, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">A family man has a responsibility to perform five kinds of sacrifices, called pañca-yajña, in order to get relief from all kinds of unavoidable sinful reaction incurred in the course of his affairs.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB31530_24" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="610" link="SB 3.15.30" link_text="SB 3.15.30"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.15.30|SB 3.15.30, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">The four boy-sages, who had nothing to cover their bodies but the atmosphere, looked only five years old, even though they were the oldest of all living creatures and had realized the truth of the self. But when the porters, who happened to possess a disposition quite unpalatable to the Lord, saw the sages, they blocked their way with their staffs, despising their glories, although the sages did not deserve such treatment at their hands.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB31530_25" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="610" link="SB 3.15.30" link_text="SB 3.15.30"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.15.30|SB 3.15.30, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The four sages were the first-born sons of Brahmā. Therefore all other living entities, including Lord Śiva, are born later and are therefore younger than the four Kumāras. Although they looked like five-year-old boys and traveled naked, the Kumāras were older than all other living creatures and had realized the truth of the self.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB31548_26" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="628" link="SB 3.15.48" link_text="SB 3.15.48"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.15.48|SB 3.15.48, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">There are five kinds of liberation, the least important of which is called sāyujya, to become one with the Supreme. Devotees don't care for such liberation because they are actually intelligent. Nor are they inclined to accept any of the other four kinds of liberation, namely to live on the same planet as the Lord, to live with Him side by side as an associate, to have the same opulence, and to attain the same bodily features.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB31548_27" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="628" link="SB 3.15.48" link_text="SB 3.15.48"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.15.48|SB 3.15.48, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Pure devotees, who take transcendental pleasure in hearing and chanting the glories of the Lord, do not care for any kind of liberation; even if they are offered the five liberations, they refuse to accept them, as stated in the Bhāgavatam in the Third Canto.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB31610_28" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="640" link="SB 3.16.10" link_text="SB 3.16.10"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.16.10|SB 3.16.10, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The defenseless creatures, according to Brahma-saṁhitā, are the cows, brāhmaṇas, women, children and old men. Of these five, the brāhmaṇas and cows are especially mentioned in this verse because the Lord is always anxious about the benefit of the brāhmaṇas and the cows and is prayed to in this way. The Lord especially instructs, therefore, that no one should be envious of these five, especially the cows and brāhmaṇas. In some of the Bhāgavatam readings, the word duhitṟḥ is used instead of duhatīḥ. But in either case, the meaning is the same.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB31631_29" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="661" link="SB 3.16.31" link_text="SB 3.16.31"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.16.31|SB 3.16.31, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">One can practice bhakti-yoga in many rasas. There are twelve rasas, five primary and seven secondary. The five primary rasas constitute direct bhakti-yoga, but although the seven secondary rasas are indirect, they are also counted within bhakti-yoga if they are used in the service of the Lord.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB31731_30" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="698" link="SB 3.17.31" link_text="SB 3.17.31"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.17.31|SB 3.17.31, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Asuras do not know that their bodies consist of the five elements of material nature and that when they fall they become objects of pastimes for dogs and vultures. Varuṇa advised Hiraṇyākṣa to meet Viṣṇu in His boar incarnation so that his hankering for aggressive war would be satisfied and his powerful body would be vanquished.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB31938_31" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="763" link="SB 3.19.38" link_text="SB 3.19.38"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.19.38|SB 3.19.38, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The beginning of devotional service is to spare some time and listen to Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam from the right source. Lord Caitanya Mahāprabhu also recommended five items of devotional service, namely to serve the devotees of the Lord, to chant Hare Kṛṣṇa, to hear Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam, to worship the Deity of the Lord and to live in a place of pilgrimage. Just performing these five activities can deliver one from the miserable condition of material life.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB32013_32" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="776" link="SB 3.20.13" link_text="SB 3.20.13"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.20.13|SB 3.20.13, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">As impelled by the destiny of the jīva, the false ego, which is of three kinds, evolved from the mahat-tattva, in which the element of rajas predominates. From the ego, in turn, evolved many groups of five principles.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB32013_33" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="776" link="SB 3.20.13" link_text="SB 3.20.13"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.20.13|SB 3.20.13, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The primordial matter, or prakṛti, material nature, consisting of three modes, generates four groups of five. The first group is called elementary and consists of earth, water, fire, air and ether. The second group of five is called tan-mātra, referring to the subtle elements (sense objects): sound, touch, form, taste and smell. The third group is the five sense organs for acquiring knowledge: eyes, ears, nose, tongue and skin. The fourth group is the five working senses: speech, hands, feet, anus and genitals. Some say that there are five groups of five. One group is the sense objects, one is the five elements, one is the five sense organs for acquiring knowledge, another is the senses for working, and the fifth group is the five deities who control these divisions.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB32018_34" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="781" link="SB 3.20.18" link_text="SB 3.20.18"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.20.18|SB 3.20.18, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">First of all, Brahmā created from his shadow the coverings of ignorance of the conditioned souls. They are five in number and are called tāmisra, andha-tāmisra, tamas, moha and mahā-moha.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB32018_35" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="781" link="SB 3.20.18" link_text="SB 3.20.18"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.20.18|SB 3.20.18, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The conditioned souls, or living entities who come to the material world to enjoy sense gratification, are covered in the beginning by five different conditions. The first condition is a covering of tāmisra, or anger.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB32534_36" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="1037" link="SB 3.25.34" link_text="SB 3.25.34"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.25.34|SB 3.25.34, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">There are five kinds of liberation stated in the scriptures. One is to become one with the Supreme Personality of Godhead, or to forsake one's individuality and merge into the Supreme Spirit. This is called ekātmatām. A devotee never accepts this kind of liberation. The other four liberations are: to be promoted to the same planet as God (Vaikuṇṭha), to associate personally with the Supreme Lord, to achieve the same opulence as the Lord and to attain the same bodily features as the Supreme Lord. A pure devotee, as will be explained by Kapila Muni, does not aspire for any of the five liberations.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB32536_37" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="1039" link="SB 3.25.36" link_text="SB 3.25.36"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.25.36|SB 3.25.36, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Even third-class devotees who have no literary knowledge or no time to read Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam or Bhagavad-gītā get the opportunity to hear about the pastimes of the Lord. In this way their minds may remain always absorbed in the thought of the Lord—His form, His activities and His transcendental nature. This state of Kṛṣṇa consciousness is a liberated stage. Lord Caitanya, therefore, recommended five important processes in the discharge of devotional service: (1) to chant the holy names of the Lord, Hare Kṛṣṇa, Hare Kṛṣṇa, Kṛṣṇa Kṛṣṇa, Hare Hare/ Hare Rāma, Hare Rāma, Rāma Rāma, Hare Hare, (2) to associate with devotees and serve them as far as possible, (3) to hear Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam, (4) to see the decorated temple and the Deity and, if possible, (5) to live in a place like Vṛndāvana or Mathurā. These five items alone can help a devotee achieve the highest perfectional stage. This is confirmed in Bhagavad-gītā and here in the Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam. That third-class devotees can also imperceptibly achieve liberation is accepted in all Vedic literatures.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB32611_38" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="1057" link="SB 3.26.11" link_text="SB 3.26.11"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.26.11|SB 3.26.11, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">The aggregate elements, namely the five gross elements, the five subtle elements, the four internal senses, the five senses for gathering knowledge and the five outward organs of action, are known as the pradhāna.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB32612_39" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="1058" link="SB 3.26.12" link_text="SB 3.26.12"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.26.12|SB 3.26.12, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">There are five gross elements, namely earth, water, fire, air and ether. There are also five subtle elements: smell, taste, color, touch and sound.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB32649_40" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="1094" link="SB 3.26.49" link_text="SB 3.26.49"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.26.49|SB 3.26.49, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Sound is the cause of the sky, sky is the cause of the air, air is the cause of fire, fire is the cause of water, and water is the cause of earth. In the sky there is only sound; in the air there are sound and touch; in the fire there are sound, touch and form; in water there are sound, touch, form and taste; and in the earth there are sound, touch, form, taste and smell. Therefore earth is the reservoir of all the qualities of the other elements. Earth is the sum total of all other elements. The earth has all five qualities of the elements, water has four qualities, fire has three, air has two, and the sky has only one quality, sound.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB32650_41" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="1095" link="SB 3.26.50" link_text="SB 3.26.50"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.26.50|SB 3.26.50, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">After stating the generation of the causes, Kapiladeva speaks about the generation of the effects. At that time when the causes were unmixed, the Supreme Personality of Godhead, in His feature of Garbhodakaśāyī Viṣṇu, entered within each universe. Accompanying Him were all of the seven primary elements—the five material elements, the total energy (mahat-tattva) and the false ego. This entrance of the Supreme Personality of Godhead involves His entering even the atoms of the material world.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB32714_42" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="1131" link="SB 3.27.14" link_text="SB 3.27.14"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.27.14|SB 3.27.14, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">Although a devotee appears to be merged in the five material elements, the objects of material enjoyment, the material senses and material mind and intelligence, he is understood to be awake and to be freed from the false ego.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB32714_43" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="1131" link="SB 3.27.14" link_text="SB 3.27.14"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.27.14|SB 3.27.14, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The living entity who has become satya-dṛk, who realizes his position in relationship with the Supreme Personality of Godhead, may remain apparently merged in the five elements of matter, the five material sense objects, the ten senses and the mind and intelligence, but still he is considered to be awake and to be freed from the reaction of false ego. Here the word līna is very significant.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB32714_44" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="1131" link="SB 3.27.14" link_text="SB 3.27.14"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.27.14|SB 3.27.14, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Kṛṣṇa also confirms in Bhagavad-gītā that the living entity is eternally His part and parcel. The part and parcel is meant to serve the whole. This is individuality. It is so even in this material existence, when the living entity apparently merges in matter. His gross body is made up of five elements, his subtle body is made of mind, intelligence, false ego and contaminated consciousness, and he has five active senses and five knowledge-acquiring senses. In this way he merges in matter.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB3272829_45" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="1145" link="SB 3.27.28-29" link_text="SB 3.27.28-29"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.27.28-29|SB 3.27.28-29, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The subtle body is made of mind, intelligence, false ego and contaminated consciousness, and the gross body is made of five elements—earth, water, fire, air and ether. When one is transferred to the spiritual world, he gives up both the subtle and gross bodies of this material world.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB32841_46" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="1187" link="SB 3.28.41" link_text="SB 3.28.41"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.28.41|SB 3.28.41, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">The Supreme Personality of Godhead, who is known as Parambrahma, is the seer. He is different from the jīva soul, or individual living entity, who is combined with the senses, the five elements and consciousness.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB32913_47" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="1201" link="SB 3.29.13" link_text="SB 3.29.13"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.29.13|SB 3.29.13, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The devotee is so fond of rendering service to the Supreme Lord that the five kinds of liberation are not important to him. If one is engaged in pure transcendental loving service to the Lord, it is understood that he has already achieved the five kinds of liberation.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB32913_48" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="1201" link="SB 3.29.13" link_text="SB 3.29.13"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.29.13|SB 3.29.13, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">A pure devotee does not accept these five kinds of spiritual existence, even if they are offered, and he certainly does not hanker after material benefits, which are all insignificant in comparison with spiritual benefits.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB32943_49" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="1231" link="SB 3.29.43" link_text="SB 3.29.43"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.29.43|SB 3.29.43, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Every planet is a residence for innumerable living entities, and the necessary space is provided in the sky by the supreme order of the Lord. It is also stated here that the total universal body is increasing. It is covered by seven layers, and as there are five elements within the universe, so the total elements, in layers, cover the outside of the universal body. The first layer is of earth, and it is ten times greater in size than the space within the universe; the second layer is water, and that is ten times greater than the earthly layer; the third covering is fire, which is ten times greater than the water covering. In this way each layer is ten times greater than the previous one.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB3314_50" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="1271" link="SB 3.31.4" link_text="SB 3.31.4"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.31.4|SB 3.31.4, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">Within four months from the date of conception, the seven essential ingredients of the body, namely chyle, blood, flesh, fat, bone, marrow and semen, come into existence. At the end of five months, hunger and thirst make themselves felt, and at the end of six months, the fetus, enclosed by the amnion, begins to move on the right side of the abdomen.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB33114_51" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="1281" link="SB 3.31.14" link_text="SB 3.31.14"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.31.14|SB 3.31.14, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">I am separated from the Supreme Lord because of my being in this material body, which is made of five elements, and therefore my qualities and senses are being misused, although I am essentially spiritual. Because the Supreme Personality of Godhead is transcendental to material nature and the living entities, because He is devoid of such a material body, and because He is always glorious in His spiritual qualities, I offer my obeisances unto Him.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB33128_52" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="1295" link="SB 3.31.28" link_text="SB 3.31.28"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.31.28|SB 3.31.28, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">From birth to the end of five years of age is called childhood. After five years up to the end of the fifteenth year is called paugaṇḍa. At sixteen years of age, youth begins. The distresses of childhood are already explained, but when the child attains boyhood he is enrolled in a school which he does not like. He wants to play, but he is forced to go to school and study and take responsibility for passing examinations.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB33130_53" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="1297" link="SB 3.31.30" link_text="SB 3.31.30"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.31.30|SB 3.31.30, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">By such ignorance the living entity accepts the material body, which is made of five elements, as himself. With this misunderstanding, he accepts nonpermanent things as his own and increases his ignorance in the darkest region.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB33130_54" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="1297" link="SB 3.31.30" link_text="SB 3.31.30"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.31.30|SB 3.31.30, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The expansion of ignorance is explained in this verse. The first ignorance is to identify one's material body, which is made of five elements, as the self, and the second is to accept something as one's own due to a bodily connection. In this way, ignorance expands. The living entity is eternal, but because of his accepting nonpermanent things, misidentifying his interest, he is put into ignorance, and therefore he suffers material pangs.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB33229_55" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="1340" link="SB 3.32.29" link_text="SB 3.32.29"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.32.29|SB 3.32.29, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">From the total energy, the mahat-tattva, I have manifested the false ego, the three modes of material nature, the five material elements, the individual consciousness, the eleven senses and the material body. Similarly, the entire universe has come from the Supreme Personality of Godhead.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB33229_56" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="1340" link="SB 3.32.29" link_text="SB 3.32.29"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.32.29|SB 3.32.29, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The Supreme Lord is described as mahat-pada, which means that the total material energy, known as the mahat-tattva, is lying at His lotus feet. The origin or the total energy of the cosmic manifestation is the mahat-tattva. From the mahat-tattva all the other twenty-four divisions have sprung, namely the eleven senses (including the mind), the five sense objects, the five material elements, and then consciousness, intelligence and false ego.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB33229_57" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="1340" link="SB 3.32.29" link_text="SB 3.32.29"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.32.29|SB 3.32.29, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">As the individual soul has a material body made of five elements and the senses, the supreme independent Lord similarly has the gigantic body of the universe. The individual body is temporary; similarly, the entire universe, which is considered to be the body of the Supreme Lord, is also temporary, and both the individual and universal bodies are products of the mahat-tattva. One has to understand the differences with intelligence.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB33242_58" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_3" book="SB" index="1351" link="SB 3.32.42" link_text="SB 3.32.42"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 3.32.42|SB 3.32.42, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">To serve a devotee, to chant the holy name according to a certain counting method, to worship the Deity, to hear Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam or Bhagavad-gītā from a realized person and to live in a sacred place where devotional service is not disturbed are the first out of sixty-four devotional activities for making progress in devotional service. One who has accepted these five chief activities is called a devotee.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB_Canto_4" class="sub_section" sec_index="4" parent="Srimad-Bhagavatam" text="SB Canto 4"><h3>SB Canto 4</h3> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB411_0" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1" link="SB 4.1.1" link_text="SB 4.1.1"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.1.1|SB 4.1.1, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The next six chapters describe the sacrifice performed by King Dakṣa and how it was spoiled. Thereafter the activities of Mahārāja Dhruva are described in five chapters. Then, in eleven chapters, the activities of King Pṛthu are described, and the next eight chapters are devoted to the activities of the Pracetā kings.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4737_1" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="264" link="SB 4.7.37" link_text="SB 4.7.37"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.7.37|SB 4.7.37, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">The governors of various planets spoke as follows: Dear Lord, we believe only in our direct perception, but under the circumstances we do not know whether we have actually seen You with our material senses. By our material senses we can simply perceive the cosmic manifestation, but You are beyond the five elements. You are the sixth. We see You, therefore, as a creation of the material world.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4741_2" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="268" link="SB 4.7.41" link_text="SB 4.7.41"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.7.41|SB 4.7.41, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">The fire-god said: My dear Lord, I offer my respectful obeisances unto You because by Your favor I am as luminous as blazing fire and I accept the offerings mixed with butter and offered in sacrifice. The five kinds of offerings according to the Yajur Veda are all Your different energies, and You are worshiped by five kinds of Vedic hymns. Sacrifice means Your Supreme Personality of Godhead.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4822_3" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="310" link="SB 4.8.22" link_text="SB 4.8.22"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.8.22|SB 4.8.22, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Queen Sunīti also indicated by her instruction that Dhruva Mahārāja was only a small child, five years old, and it was not possible for him to purify himself by the way of karma-kāṇḍa. But by the process of bhakti-yoga, even a child less than five years old, or anyone of any age, can be purified. That is the special significance of bhakti-yoga.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4842_4" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="330" link="SB 4.8.42" link_text="SB 4.8.42"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.8.42|SB 4.8.42, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">There are twelve forests in the area of Vṛndāvana, and Madhuvana is one of them. Pilgrims from all parts of India assemble together and visit all twelve of these forests. There are five forests on the eastern bank of the Yamunā: Bhadravana, Bilvavana, Lauhavana, Bhāṇḍīravana and Mahāvana.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4865_5" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="352" link="SB 4.8.65" link_text="SB 4.8.65"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.8.65|SB 4.8.65, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">The King replied: O best of the brāhmaṇas, I am very much addicted to my wife, and I am so fallen that I have abandoned all merciful behavior, even to my son, who is only five years old. I have banished him and his mother, even though he is a great soul and a great devotee.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4865_6" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="352" link="SB 4.8.65" link_text="SB 4.8.65"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.8.65|SB 4.8.65, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Dhruva Mahārāja went to the forest, and since his mother was being neglected by the King, she was therefore almost banished also. The King repented having banished his boy, for Dhruva was only five years old and a father should not banish his wife and children or neglect their maintenance. Repentant over his neglect of both Sunīti and her son, he was morose, and his face appeared withered.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4868_7" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="355" link="SB 4.8.68" link_text="SB 4.8.68"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.8.68|SB 4.8.68, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Dhruva Mahārāja's affectionate father thought his young boy, only five years old, to be in a very precarious position in the jungle, but Nārada Muni assured him, "You do not have sufficient information about the influence of your son." Anyone who engages in devotional service, anywhere within this universe, is never unprotected.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4919_8" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="388" link="SB 4.9.19" link_text="SB 4.9.19"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.9.19|SB 4.9.19, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">It was true that at heart Dhruva Mahārāja wanted a kingdom that would be far better than Brahmaloka. This was a natural desire for a kṣatriya. He was also only five years old, and in his childish way he desired to have a kingdom far greater than his father's, grandfather's or great-grandfather's.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4929_9" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="397" link="SB 4.9.29" link_text="SB 4.9.29"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.9.29|SB 4.9.29, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Kṛṣṇa, the Supreme Personality of Godhead, is so affectionate and kind towards His devotee, especially to a devotee like Dhruva Mahārāja, who went to render devotional service in the forest alone at the age of only five years, that although the motive might be impure, the Lord does not consider the motive; He is concerned with the service.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4929_10" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="397" link="SB 4.9.29" link_text="SB 4.9.29"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.9.29|SB 4.9.29, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Here in this verse the Lord is described as mukti-pati, which means "one under whose lotus feet there are all kinds of mukti." There are five kinds of mukti-sāyujya, sārūpya, sālokya, sāmīpya and sārṣṭi. Out of these five muktis, which can be achieved by any person engaged in devotional service to the Lord, the one which is known as sāyujya is generally demanded by Māyāvādī philosophers; they demand to become one with the impersonal Brahman effulgence of the Lord. In the opinion of many scholars, this sāyujya-mukti, although counted among the five kinds of mukti, is not actually mukti because from sāyujya-mukti one may again fall down to this material world.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4933_11" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="401" link="SB 4.9.33" link_text="SB 4.9.33"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.9.33|SB 4.9.33, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">By higher understanding one can know that the material body is nothing but a combination of the five material elements. In that sense also the bodily construction of a human being and that of a demigod are one and the same.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4937_12" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="405" link="SB 4.9.37" link_text="SB 4.9.37"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.9.37|SB 4.9.37, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Dhruva Mahārāja, a five-year-old boy, went to the forest for penance and austerity, and the King could not at all believe that a small boy of such a tender age could live in the forest. He was certain that Dhruva was dead. He therefore could not fix his faith in the message that Dhruva Mahārāja was coming back home again.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4952_13" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="418" link="SB 4.9.52" link_text="SB 4.9.52"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.9.52|SB 4.9.52, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">When Dhruva Mahārāja was away from his home, his father thought that he was dead. Ordinarily a king's son only five years old and away from home in the forest would certainly be supposed dead, but by the mercy of the Supreme Personality of Godhead, not only was he saved, but he was blessed with the highest perfection.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4965_14" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="430" link="SB 4.9.65" link_text="SB 4.9.65"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.9.65|SB 4.9.65, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Although Dhruva Mahārāja was the son of a king and was only five years old, he went to the forest and executed devotional service under strict austerity.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4101_15" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="433" link="SB 4.10.1" link_text="SB 4.10.1"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.10.1|SB 4.10.1, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Although he was busy in his political affairs and duties of government management, he was very anxious for self-realization. Therefore as soon as his son Dhruva Mahārāja was quite worthy to take charge of the government, he took this opportunity to leave home, just like his son, who, without fear, left home for self-realization, even at the age of five years. These are rare instances from which we can see that the importance of spiritual realization is above all other important work.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB41115_16" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="475" link="SB 4.11.15" link_text="SB 4.11.15"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.11.15|SB 4.11.15, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">The creation of the material world begins with the five elements, and thus everything, including the body of a man or a woman, is created of these elements. By the sexual life of man and woman, the number of men and women in this material world is further increased.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB41115_17" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="475" link="SB 4.11.15" link_text="SB 4.11.15"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.11.15|SB 4.11.15, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">When Svāyambhuva Manu saw that Dhruva Mahārāja understood the philosophy of Vaiṣṇavism and yet was still dissatisfied because of his brother's death, he gave him an explanation of how this material body is created by the five elements of material nature.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB41115_18" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="475" link="SB 4.11.15" link_text="SB 4.11.15"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.11.15|SB 4.11.15, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">It is by such powerful potencies that the universe is created, although grossly it appears to be no more than the five elements—earth, water, fire, air and ether. Similarly, the bodies of all species of living entities, whether human beings or demigods, animals or birds, are also created by the same five elements, and by sexual union they expand into more and more living entities. That is the way of creation, maintenance and annihilation.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB41116_19" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="476" link="SB 4.11.16" link_text="SB 4.11.16"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.11.16|SB 4.11.16, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">First, creation takes place with the ingredients of the five elements of material nature. Then, by the interaction of the modes of material nature, maintenance also takes place. When a child is born, the parents immediately see to its maintenance.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB41128_20" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="488" link="SB 4.11.28" link_text="SB 4.11.28"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.11.28|SB 4.11.28, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">My dear Dhruva, at the age of only five years you were very grievously afflicted by the words of your mother's co-wife, and you very boldly gave up the protection of your mother and went to the forest to engage in the yogic process for realization of the Supreme Personality of Godhead. As a result of this you have already achieved the topmost position in all the three worlds.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB41128_21" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="488" link="SB 4.11.28" link_text="SB 4.11.28"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.11.28|SB 4.11.28, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Manu was very proud that Dhruva Mahārāja was one of the descendants in his family because at the age of only five years Dhruva began meditating upon the Supreme Personality of Godhead and within six months he was able to see the Supreme Lord face to face.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB41130_22" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="490" link="SB 4.11.30" link_text="SB 4.11.30"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.11.30|SB 4.11.30, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Dhruva Mahārāja was already a liberated person because at the age of five years he had seen the Supreme Personality of Godhead. But even though liberated, he was, for the time being, afflicted by the illusion of māyā, thinking himself the brother of Uttama in the bodily concept of life.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB41223_23" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="518" link="SB 4.12.23" link_text="SB 4.12.23"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.12.23|SB 4.12.23, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">Nanda and Sunanda, the two confidential associates of Lord Viṣṇu, said: Dear King, let there be all good fortune unto you. Please attentively hear what we shall say. When you were only five years old, you underwent severe austerities, and you thereby greatly satisfied the Supreme Personality of Godhead.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB41223_24" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="518" link="SB 4.12.23" link_text="SB 4.12.23"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.12.23|SB 4.12.23, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">What was possible for Dhruva Mahārāja is possible for anyone. Any five-year-old child can be trained, and within a very short time his life will become successful by realization of Kṛṣṇa consciousness. Unfortunately, this training is lacking all over the world.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB41223_25" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="518" link="SB 4.12.23" link_text="SB 4.12.23"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.12.23|SB 4.12.23, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">It is necessary for the leaders of the Kṛṣṇa consciousness movement to start educational institutions in different parts of the world to train children, starting at the age of five years. Thus such children will not become hippies or spoiled children of society; rather, they can all become devotees of the Lord. The face of the world will then change automatically.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB41234_26" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="529" link="SB 4.12.34" link_text="SB 4.12.34"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.12.34|SB 4.12.34, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Sunīti instructed her son, even at the age of five years, to be unattached to worldly affairs and to go to the forest to search out the Supreme Lord. She never desired that her son remain at home comfortably without ever undertaking austerities and penances to achieve the favor of the Supreme Personality of Godhead.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB41234_27" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="529" link="SB 4.12.34" link_text="SB 4.12.34"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.12.34|SB 4.12.34, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Every mother, like Sunīti, must take care of her son and train him to become a brahmacārī from the age of five years and to undergo austerities and penances for spiritual realization. The benefit will be that if her son becomes a strong devotee like Dhruva, certainly not only will he be transferred back home, back to Godhead, but she will also be transferred with him to the spiritual world, even though she may be unable to undergo austerities and penances in executing devotional service.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB41242_28" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="537" link="SB 4.12.42" link_text="SB 4.12.42"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.12.42|SB 4.12.42, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">The great sage Nārada continued: Just see how Dhruva Mahārāja, aggrieved at the harsh words of his stepmother, went to the forest at the age of only five years and under my direction underwent austerity. Although the Supreme Personality of Godhead is unconquerable, Dhruva Mahārāja defeated Him with the specific qualifications possessed by the Lord's devotees.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB41242_29" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="537" link="SB 4.12.42" link_text="SB 4.12.42"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.12.42|SB 4.12.42, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Dhruva Mahārāja conquered the Supreme Lord because at a very tender age, only five years old, he underwent all the austerities of devotional service. This devotional service was of course executed under the direction of a great sage, Nārada.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB41243_30" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="538" link="SB 4.12.43" link_text="SB 4.12.43"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.12.43|SB 4.12.43, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">Dhruva Mahārāja attained an exalted position at the age of only five or six years, after undergoing austerity for six months. Alas, a great kṣatriya cannot achieve such a position even after undergoing austerities for many, many years.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB41243_31" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="538" link="SB 4.12.43" link_text="SB 4.12.43"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.12.43|SB 4.12.43, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Dhruva Mahārāja is described herein as kṣatra-bandhuḥ, which indicates that he was not fully trained as a kṣatriya because he was only five years old; he was not a mature kṣatriya. A kṣatriya or brāhmaṇa has to take training. A boy born in the family of a brāhmaṇa is not immediately a brāhmaṇa; he has to take up the training and the purificatory process.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB41729_32" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="715" link="SB 4.17.29" link_text="SB 4.17.29"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.17.29|SB 4.17.29, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">A devotee is not hampered by the material body, although he is situated in a physical body that runs according to so many material conditions, just as there are five kinds of air functioning within the body, and so many organs—the hands, legs, tongue, genitals, rectum, etc.—all working differently.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB41826_33" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="746" link="SB 4.18.26" link_text="SB 4.18.26"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.18.26|SB 4.18.26, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Every moon is earthly, being composed of the five elements. Every planet produces different types of food according to the needs of its residents. According to the Vedic śāstras, it is not true that the moon does not produce food or that no living entity is living there.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42011_34" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="804" link="SB 4.20.11" link_text="SB 4.20.11"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.20.11|SB 4.20.11, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">Anyone who knows that this material body, made of the five gross elements, the sense organs, the working senses and the mind, is simply supervised by the fixed soul is eligible to be liberated from material bondage.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42012_35" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="805" link="SB 4.20.12" link_text="SB 4.20.12"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.20.12|SB 4.20.12, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">Lord Viṣṇu told King Pṛthu: My dear King, the constant change of this material world is due to the interaction of the three modes of material nature. The five elements, the senses, the demigods who control the senses, as well as the mind, which is agitated by the spirit soul—all these taken together comprise the body. Since the spirit soul is completely different from this combination of gross and subtle material elements, My devotee who is connected with Me in intense friendship and affection, being completely in knowledge, is never agitated by material happiness and distress.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42212_36" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="893" link="SB 4.22.12" link_text="SB 4.22.12"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.22.12|SB 4.22.12, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The specific importance of the Kumāras is that they were brahmacārīs, living the life of celibacy from birth. They kept themselves as small children about four or five years old because by growing into youth one's senses sometimes become disturbed and celibacy becomes difficult. The Kumāras therefore purposefully remained children because in a child's life the senses are never disturbed by sex.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42226_37" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="907" link="SB 4.22.26" link_text="SB 4.22.26"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.22.26|SB 4.22.26, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">Upon becoming fixed in his attachment to the Supreme Personality of Godhead by the grace of the spiritual master and by awakening knowledge and detachment, the living entity, situated within the heart of the body and covered by the five elements, burns up his material surroundings exactly as fire, arising from wood, burns the wood itself.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42226_38" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="907" link="SB 4.22.26" link_text="SB 4.22.26"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.22.26|SB 4.22.26, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">A blazing fire is visible by its exhibition of heat and light; similarly, when the living entity within the heart becomes enlightened with full spiritual knowledge and detached from the material world, he burns up his material covering of the five elements—earth, water, fire, air and sky—and becomes free from the five kinds of material attachments, namely ignorance, false egoism, attachment to the material world, envy and absorption in material consciousness. Therefore pañcātmakam, as mentioned in this verse, refers to either the five elements or the five coverings of material contamination. When these are all burned into ashes by the blazing fire of knowledge and detachment, one is fixed firmly in the devotional service of the Supreme Personality of Godhead.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42226_39" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="907" link="SB 4.22.26" link_text="SB 4.22.26"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.22.26|SB 4.22.26, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Unless one takes shelter of a bona fide spiritual master and advances one's attraction for Kṛṣṇa by the spiritual master's instructions, the five coverings of the living entity cannot be uncovered from the material heart. The living entity is centered within the heart, and to take him away from the heart is to liberate him. This is the process. One must take shelter of a bona fide spiritual master and by his instruction increase one's knowledge in devotional service, become detached from the material world and thus become liberated.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42253_40" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="934" link="SB 4.22.53" link_text="SB 4.22.53"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.22.53|SB 4.22.53, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">Being situated in the liberated position of devotional service, Pṛthu Mahārāja not only performed all fruitive activities but also begot five sons by his wife, Arci. Indeed, all his sons were begotten according to his own desire.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42253_41" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="934" link="SB 4.22.53" link_text="SB 4.22.53"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.22.53|SB 4.22.53, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">As a householder, Pṛthu Mahārāja had five sons by his wife, Arci, and all these sons were begotten as he desired them. They were not born whimsically or by accident. How one can beget children according to one's own desire is practically unknown in the present age (Kali-yuga)</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42254_42" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="935" link="SB 4.22.54" link_text="SB 4.22.54"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.22.54|SB 4.22.54, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">After begetting five sons, named Vijitāśva, Dhūmrakeśa, Haryakṣa, Draviṇa and Vṛka, Pṛthu Mahārāja continued to rule the planet. He accepted all the qualities of the deities who governed all other planets.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42262_43" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="943" link="SB 4.22.62" link_text="SB 4.22.62"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.22.62|SB 4.22.62, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Although Pṛthu Mahārāja was a householder and father of five children, he was still considered to be most controlled. One who begets Kṛṣṇa conscious children for the benefit of humanity is actually a brahmacārī.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4236_44" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="948" link="SB 4.23.6" link_text="SB 4.23.6"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.23.6|SB 4.23.6, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">Following the principles of forest living and the footsteps of the great sages and munis, Pṛthu Mahārāja accepted five kinds of heating processes during the summer season, exposed himself to torrents of rain in the rainy season and, in the winter, stood in water up to his neck. He also used to simply lie down on the floor to sleep.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4236_45" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="948" link="SB 4.23.6" link_text="SB 4.23.6"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.23.6|SB 4.23.6, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">These are some of the austerities executed by the jñānīs and yogīs, who cannot accept the process of bhakti-yoga. They must undergo such severe types of austerity in order to become purified from material contamination. pañca-tapāḥ refers to five kinds of heating processes.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42315_46" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="957" link="SB 4.23.15" link_text="SB 4.23.15"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.23.15|SB 4.23.15, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The material body is composed of five gross elements—earth, water, fire, air and ether—and three subtle elements—mind, intelligence and ego. When one attains liberation, he is freed from these material coverings. Indeed, success in yoga involves getting free from these material coverings and entering into spiritual existence.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42317_47" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="959" link="SB 4.23.17" link_text="SB 4.23.17"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.23.17|SB 4.23.17, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">In respect to the ego, the total material energy is sundered in two parts—one agitated by the mode of ignorance and the other agitated by the modes of passion and goodness. Due to agitation by the mode of ignorance, the five gross elements are created. Due to agitation by the mode of passion, the mind is created, and due to agitation by the mode of goodness, false egoism, or identification with matter, is created.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42328_48" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="970" link="SB 4.23.28" link_text="SB 4.23.28"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.23.28|SB 4.23.28, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">There are five kinds of liberation, and one is called sāyujya-mukti, or merging into the existence of the Supreme, or the impersonal Brahman effulgence. However, since there is a chance of one's falling down again into the material sky from the Brahman effulgence, Śrīla Jīva Gosvāmī advises that in this human form of life one's only aim should be to go back home, back to Godhead.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4247_49" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="988" link="SB 4.24.7" link_text="SB 4.24.7"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.24.7|SB 4.24.7, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Devotional service is called kīrtana-yajña, and by practicing the saṅkīrtana-yajña, one is very easily elevated to the planet where the Supreme Lord resides. Out of the five kinds of liberations, achieving the same planet where the Lord resides and living with the Lord there is called sālokya liberation.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4244546_50" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1025" link="SB 4.24.45-46" link_text="SB 4.24.45-46"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.24.45-46|SB 4.24.45-46, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The inhabitants of Vṛndāvana—the gopīs, mother Yaśodā, Nanda Mahārāja, the cowherd boys, the cows and everyone else—are actually on the rāga-mārga or bhāgavata-mārga platform. They participate in five basic rasas-dāsya, sakhya, vātsalya, mādhurya and śānta. But although these five rasas are found in the bhāgavata-mārga, the bhāgavata-mārga is especially meant for vātsalya and mādhurya, or paternal and conjugal relationships.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42462_51" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1040" link="SB 4.24.62" link_text="SB 4.24.62"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.24.62|SB 4.24.62, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">My dear Lord, Your universal form consists of all five elements, the senses, mind, intelligence, false ego (which is material) and the Paramātmā, Your partial expansion, who is the director of everything. Yogis other than the devotees—namely the karma-yogī and jñāna-yogī—worship You by their respective actions in their respective positions. It is stated both in the Vedas and in the śāstras that are corollaries of the Vedas, and indeed everywhere, that it is only You who are to be worshiped. That is the expert version of all the Vedas.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42462_52" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1040" link="SB 4.24.62" link_text="SB 4.24.62"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.24.62|SB 4.24.62, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The word kovidāḥ is very significant, for it indicates the devotees of the Lord. Only the devotees know perfectly that the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Viṣṇu, is all-pervading. Within the material energy, He is represented by the five material elements as well as the mind, intelligence and ego. He is also represented by another energy—the living entities—and all these manifestations in the spiritual and material world combined are but representations of the different energies of the Lord.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42465_53" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1043" link="SB 4.24.65" link_text="SB 4.24.65"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.24.65|SB 4.24.65, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The Lord is just like death to the atheists, for He takes away everything they accumulate in the material world. Hiraṇyakaśipu, the father of Prahlāda, always denied the existence of the Lord, and he tried to kill his five-year-old boy due to the boy's unflinching faith in God. However, in due course of time the Lord appeared as Nṛsiṁhadeva and killed Hiraṇyakaśipu in the presence of his son.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42520_54" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1077" link="SB 4.25.20" link_text="SB 4.25.20"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.25.20|SB 4.25.20, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The intelligence influences the mind, and the mind controls the ten senses. Five of these senses gather knowledge, and five work directly. Each sense has many desires to be fulfilled. This is the position of the body and the owner of the body, purañjana, who is within the body.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42521_55" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1078" link="SB 4.25.21" link_text="SB 4.25.21"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.25.21|SB 4.25.21, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">The woman was protected on all sides by a five-hooded snake. She was very beautiful and young, and she appeared very anxious to find a suitable husband.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42521_56" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1078" link="SB 4.25.21" link_text="SB 4.25.21"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.25.21|SB 4.25.21, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The vital force of a living entity includes the five kinds of air working within the body, which are known as prāṇa, apāna, vyāna, samāna and udāna. The vital force is compared to a serpent because a serpent can live by simply drinking air. The vital force carried by the air is described as the pratīhāra, or the bodyguard. Without the vital force one cannot live for a moment. Indeed, all the senses are working under the protection of the vital force.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42527_57" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1084" link="SB 4.25.27" link_text="SB 4.25.27"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.25.27|SB 4.25.27, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The ten strong servants of the mind are the five working senses and the five knowledge-gathering senses. All these ten senses work under the aegis of the mind. The mind and the ten senses combine to become eleven strong bodyguards.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42546_58" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1103" link="SB 4.25.46" link_text="SB 4.25.46"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.25.46|SB 4.25.46, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">My dear King, of the nine doors, five led toward the eastern side, one led toward the northern side, one led toward the southern side, and two led toward the western side. I shall try to give the names of these different doors.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42546_59" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1103" link="SB 4.25.46" link_text="SB 4.25.46"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.25.46|SB 4.25.46, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Of the seven doors on the surface—namely the two eyes, two ears, two nostrils and one mouth—five look forward, and these are described as the doors facing the eastern side. Since looking forward means seeing the sun, these are described as the eastern gates, for the sun rises in the east. The gate on the northern side and the gate on the southern side represent the two ears, and the two gates facing the western side represent the rectum and the genitals. All the doors and gates are described below.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42550_60" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1107" link="SB 4.25.50" link_text="SB 4.25.50"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.25.50|SB 4.25.50, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The right ear is used for karma-kāṇḍīya, or fruitive activities. As long as one is attached to the enjoyment of material resources, he hears from the right ear and uses the five senses to elevate himself to the higher planetary systems like Pitṛloka. Consequently, the right ear is here described as the Pitṛhū gate.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42613_61" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1116" link="SB 4.26.1-3" link_text="SB 4.26.1-3"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.26.1-3|SB 4.26.1-3, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">The great sage Nārada continued: My dear King, once upon a time King Purañjana took up his great bow, and equipped with golden armor and a quiver of unlimited arrows and accompanied by eleven commanders, he sat on his chariot driven by five swift horses and went to the forest named Pañca-prastha. He took with him in that chariot two explosive arrows. The chariot itself was situated on two wheels and one revolving axle. On the chariot were three flags, one rein, one chariot driver, one sitting place, two poles to which the harness was fixed, five weapons and seven coverings. The chariot moved in five different styles, and five obstacles lay before it. All the decorations of the chariot were made of gold.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42613_62" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1116" link="SB 4.26.1-3" link_text="SB 4.26.1-3"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.26.1-3|SB 4.26.1-3, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The word pañca means "five," and this indicates the objects of the five senses. The body has five working senses, namely the hands, the legs, the tongue, the rectum and the genitals. By taking full advantage of these working senses, the body enjoys material life. The chariot is driven by five horses, which represent the five sense organs—namely the eyes, ears, nose, skin and tongue. These sense organs are very easily attracted by the sense objects. Consequently, the horses are described as moving swiftly.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42613_63" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1116" link="SB 4.26.1-3" link_text="SB 4.26.1-3"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.26.1-3|SB 4.26.1-3, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The five kinds of obstacles, or uneven roads, represent the five kinds of air passing within the body. These are prāṇa, apāna, udāna, samāna and vyāna. The body itself is covered by seven coverings, namely skin, muscle, fat, blood, marrow, bone and semen. The living entity is covered by three subtle material elements and five gross material elements. These are actually obstacles placed before the living entity on the path of liberation from material bondage.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42613_64" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1116" link="SB 4.26.1-3" link_text="SB 4.26.1-3"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.26.1-3|SB 4.26.1-3, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The living entity carries out various desires through five different processes, which indicate the working of the five working senses. The golden ornaments and dress indicate that the living entity is influenced by the quality of rajo-guṇa, passion. One who has a good deal of money or riches is especially driven by the mode of passion. Being influenced by the mode of passion, one desires so many things for enjoyment in this material world. The eleven commanders represent the ten senses and the mind. The mind is always making plans with the ten commanders to enjoy the material world. The forest named Pañca-prastha, where the King went to hunt, is the forest of the five sense objects: form, taste, sound, smell and touch. Thus in these three verses Nārada Muni describes the position of the material body and the encagement of the living entity within it.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4275_65" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1144" link="SB 4.27.5" link_text="SB 4.27.5"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.27.5|SB 4.27.5, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The modern scientific method, or advancement of scientific civilization, encourages the enjoyment of these five senses. The younger generation is very pleased to see a beautiful form, to hear radio messages of material news and sense gratificatory songs, to smell nice scents, nice flowers, and to touch the soft body or breasts of a young woman and gradually touch the sex organs. All of this is also very pleasing to the animals; therefore in human society there are restrictions in the enjoyment of the five sense objects. If one does not follow, he becomes exactly like an animal.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4279_66" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1148" link="SB 4.27.9" link_text="SB 4.27.9"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.27.9|SB 4.27.9, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The body is taken as the pañcāla-deśa, or the field of activities wherein the living entity can enjoy the senses in their relationship to the five sense objects, namely gandha, rasa, rūpa, sparśa and śabda—that is, sense objects made out of earth, water, fire, air and sky. Within this material world, covered by the material body of subtle and gross matter, every living entity creates actions and reactions, which are herein known allegorically as sons and grandsons.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42715_67" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1154" link="SB 4.27.15" link_text="SB 4.27.15"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.27.15|SB 4.27.15, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">When King Gandharva-rāja (Caṇḍavega) and his followers began to plunder the city of Purañjana, a snake with five hoods began to defend the city.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42715_68" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1154" link="SB 4.27.15" link_text="SB 4.27.15"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.27.15|SB 4.27.15, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">When one is sleeping, the life air remains active in different dreams. The five hoods of the snake indicate that the life air is surrounded by five kinds of air, known as prāṇa, apāna, vyāna, udāna and samāna. When the body is inactive, the prāṇa, or the life air, is active. Up to the age of fifty one can actively work for sense gratification, but after the fiftieth year one's energy decreases, although one can with great strain work for two or three more years—perhaps up to the fifty-fifth year.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42715_69" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1154" link="SB 4.27.15" link_text="SB 4.27.15"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.27.15|SB 4.27.15, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Thus the fifty-fifth year is generally taken by government regulations as the final year for retirement. The energy, which is fatigued after fifty years, is figuratively described herein as a serpent with five hoods.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42716_70" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1155" link="SB 4.27.16" link_text="SB 4.27.16"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.27.16|SB 4.27.16, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">The five-hooded serpent, the superintendent and protector of the city of King Purañjana, fought with the Gandharvas for one hundred years. He fought alone, with all of them, although they numbered 720.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42717_71" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1156" link="SB 4.27.17" link_text="SB 4.27.17"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.27.17|SB 4.27.17, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">Because he had to fight alone with so many soldiers, all of whom were great warriors, the serpent with five hoods became very weak. Seeing that his most intimate friend was weakening, King Purañjana and his friends and citizens living within the city all became very anxious.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42720_72" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1159" link="SB 4.27.20" link_text="SB 4.27.20"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.27.20|SB 4.27.20, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">King Yayāti had five youthful sons, and he begged all his sons to exchange their youth for his old age. No one agreed except the youngest son, whose name was Pūru. Upon accepting Yayāti's old age, Pūru was given the kingdom. It is said that two of Yayāti's other sons, being disobedient to their father, were given kingdoms outside of India, most probably Turkey and Greece. The purport is that one can accumulate wealth and all kinds of material opulences, but during old age one cannot enjoy them.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42823_73" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1192" link="SB 4.28.23" link_text="SB 4.28.23"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.28.23|SB 4.28.23, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">When the living entity and the life air are gone, the lump of matter produced of five elements—earth, water, air, fire and ether—is rejected and left behind. The living entity then goes to the court of judgment, and Yamarāja decides what kind of body he is going to get next. This process is unknown to modern scientists. Every living entity is responsible for his activities in this life, and after death he is taken to the court of Yamarāja, where it is decided what kind of body he will take next.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42830_74" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1199" link="SB 4.28.30" link_text="SB 4.28.30"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.28.30|SB 4.28.30, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The specific mention of Draviḍa-deśa refers to the five Draviḍa-deśas in South India. All are very strong in rendering the preliminary devotional processes (śravaṇaṁ kīrtanam ([[Vanisource:SB 7.5.23-24|SB 7.5.23]])). Some great ācāryas, like Rāmānujācārya and Madhvācārya, also came from Draviḍa-deśa and became great preachers. They were all situated on the platform of sakhyam ātma-nivedanam.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42850_75" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1218" link="SB 4.28.50" link_text="SB 4.28.50"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.28.50|SB 4.28.50, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">After the death of Mahārāja Pāṇḍu, his wives settled that one should remain and the other should go. Mādrī would perish with her husband in the fire, and Kuntī would remain to take charge of the five Pāṇḍava children. Even as late as 1936 we saw a devoted wife voluntarily enter the fire of her husband.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42856_76" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1224" link="SB 4.28.56" link_text="SB 4.28.56"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.28.56|SB 4.28.56, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">In that city (the material body) there are five gardens, nine gates, one protector, three apartments, six families, five stores, five material elements, and one woman who is lord of the house.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42857_77" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1225" link="SB 4.28.57" link_text="SB 4.28.57"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.28.57|SB 4.28.57, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">My dear friend, the five gardens are the five objects of sense enjoyment, and the protector is the life air, which passes through the nine gates. The three apartments are the chief ingredients—fire, water and earth. The six families are the aggregate total of the mind and five senses.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42857_78" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1225" link="SB 4.28.57" link_text="SB 4.28.57"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.28.57|SB 4.28.57, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The five senses that acquire knowledge are sight, taste, smell, sound and touch, and these act through the nine gates—the two eyes, two ears, one mouth, two nostrils, one genital and one rectum. These holes are compared to gates in the walls of the city. The principal ingredients are earth, water and fire, and the principal actor is the mind, which is controlled by the intelligence (buddhi).</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42858_79" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1226" link="SB 4.28.58" link_text="SB 4.28.58"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.28.58|SB 4.28.58, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">The five stores are the five working sensory organs. They transact their business through the combined forces of the five elements, which are eternal. Behind all this activity is the soul. The soul is a person and an enjoyer in reality. However, because he is now hidden within the city of the body, he is devoid of knowledge.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42858_80" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1226" link="SB 4.28.58" link_text="SB 4.28.58"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.28.58|SB 4.28.58, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">The living entity enters the material creation with the aid of the five elements—earth, water, fire, air and ether—and thus his body is formed. Although the living entity is working from within, he is nonetheless unknown. The living entity enters the material creation, but because he is bewildered by the material energy, he appears to be hidden.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42858_81" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1226" link="SB 4.28.58" link_text="SB 4.28.58"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.28.58|SB 4.28.58, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">It is said in the Vedas that the digested foods are ultimately divided into three. The solid portion becomes stool, and the semiliquid portion turns into flesh. The liquid portion turns yellow and is again divided into three. One of these liquid portions is called urine. Similarly, the fiery portion is divided into three, and one is called bone. Out of the five elements, fire, water and food grains are very important. These three are mentioned in the previous verse, whereas sky (ether) and air are not mentioned.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42865_82" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1233" link="SB 4.28.65" link_text="SB 4.28.65"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.28.65|SB 4.28.65, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">In the Chāndogya Upaniṣad it is said, ācāryavān puruṣo veda: "One who approaches a bona fide spiritual master can understand everything about spiritual realization."</p> |
| | :Malayadhvaja. A nice devotee who is like sandalwood. |
| | :Pañcāla. The five sense objects. |
| | :Paricchada. The total aggregate of the senses. |
| | :Paura-jana. The seven elements that constitute the body. |
| | :Pautra. Patience and gravity. |
| | :Prajvāra. A kind of fever called viṣṇu jvāra. |
| | :Pratikriyā. Counteracting agents such as mantras and medicines. |
| | :Pura-pālaka. The life air. |
| | :Putra. Consciousness. |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4296_83" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1239" link="SB 4.29.6" link_text="SB 4.29.6"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.29.6|SB 4.29.6, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">The five working senses and the five senses that acquire knowledge are all male friends of Purañjanī. The living entity is assisted by these senses in acquiring knowledge and engaging in activity. The engagements of the senses are known as girl friends, and the serpent, which was described as having five heads, is the life air acting within the five circulatory processes.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4296_84" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1239" link="SB 4.29.6" link_text="SB 4.29.6"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.29.6|SB 4.29.6, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">There is prāṇa, apāna, udāna, vyāna and samāna, and because the life air functions in this fivefold way, it is compared to the five-hooded serpent. The soul passes through the kuṇḍalinī-cakra like a serpent crawling on the ground. The life air is compared to uraga, the serpent. Pañca-vṛtti is the desire to satisfy the senses, attracted by five sense objects—namely form, taste, sound, smell and touch.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4297_85" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1240" link="SB 4.29.7" link_text="SB 4.29.7"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.29.7|SB 4.29.7, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">The eleventh attendant, who is the commander of the others, is known as the mind. He is the leader of the senses both in the acquisition of knowledge and in the performance of work. The Pañcāla kingdom is that atmosphere in which the five sense objects are enjoyed. Within that Pañcāla kingdom is the city of the body, which has nine gates.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4299_86" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1242" link="SB 4.29.9" link_text="SB 4.29.9"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.29.9|SB 4.29.9, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">Two eyes, two nostrils and a mouth—all together five—are situated in the front. The right ear is accepted as the southern gate, and the left ear is the northern gate. The two holes, or gates, situated in the west are known as the rectum and genital.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4291820_87" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1251" link="SB 4.29.18-20" link_text="SB 4.29.18-20"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.29.18-20|SB 4.29.18-20, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">Nārada Muni continued: What I referred to as the chariot was in actuality the body. The senses are the horses that pull that chariot. As time passes, year after year, these horses run without obstruction, but in fact they make no progress. Pious and impious activities are the two wheels of the chariot. The three modes of material nature are the chariot's flags. The five types of life air constitute the living entity's bondage, and the mind is considered to be the rope. Intelligence is the chariot driver. The heart is the sitting place in the chariot, and the dualities of life, such as pleasure and pain, are the knotting place. The seven elements are the coverings of the chariot, and the working senses are the five external processes. The eleven senses are the soldiers. Being engrossed in sense enjoyment, the living entity, seated on the chariot, hankers after fulfillment of his false desires and runs after sense enjoyment life after life.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42974_88" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1297" link="SB 4.29.74" link_text="SB 4.29.74"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.29.74|SB 4.29.74, Translation]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="trans text"><p style="display: inline;">The five sense objects, the five sense organs, the five knowledge-acquiring senses and the mind are the sixteen material expansions. These combine with the living entity and are influenced by the three modes of material nature. Thus the existence of the conditioned soul is understood.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB42974_89" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1297" link="SB 4.29.74" link_text="SB 4.29.74"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.29.74|SB 4.29.74, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">According to Śrī Madhvācārya, when consciousness, the living force in the heart, is agitated by the three modes of material nature, then the subtle body of the living entity, consisting of the mind, the sense objects, the five senses that acquire knowledge and the five senses for acting in the material condition, becomes possible.</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB4304_90" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1314" link="SB 4.30.4" link_text="SB 4.30.4"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.30.4|SB 4.30.4, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">Although Dhruva Mahārāja was only a five-year-old boy, he underwent severe austerities by eating simply dry foliage, drinking only water and taking no food. In this way, after six months, he was able to see the Supreme Personality of Godhead face to face. When he saw the Lord, he forgot all his austerities and said, svāmin kṛtārtho'smi: "My dear Lord, I am very pleased."</p> |
| | </div> |
| | </div> |
| | <div id="SB43016_91" class="quote" parent="SB_Canto_4" book="SB" index="1326" link="SB 4.30.16" link_text="SB 4.30.16"> |
| | <span class="link">[[Vanisource:SB 4.30.16|SB 4.30.16, Purport]]: </span><div style="display: inline;" class="purport text"><p style="display: inline;">According to Vedic principles, a woman cannot have many husbands, although a husband can have many wives. In special instances, however, it is found that a woman has more than one husband. Draupadī, for instance, was married to all of the five Pāṇḍava brothers. Similarly, the Supreme Personality of Godhead ordered all the sons of Prācīnabarhiṣat to marry the one girl born of the great sage Kaṇḍu and Pramlocā. In special cases, a girl is allowed to marry more than one man, provided she is able to treat her husbands equally.</p> |
| </div> | | </div> |
| </div> | | </div> |
| </div> | | </div> |