Friday 29 January 2016

Matsyagandha born

There was a king once called Parichar. Giving up everything, he went into the forests where he spent his days in meditation. Indra thought the king would take over his throne.
Riding his mount, Airavata, he arrived in the spot where the king was meditating. Addressing the king, he asked him to give up the austere penance. He gave the king many divine clothes and a garland called Vaijayanti. Crowing him as the king of Chedi, Indra left.

He got married to a beautiful woman.

One day he left for a hunt, to kill some deer. Though he was in the forest, hunting, his mind was thinking of his wife. Struck with passion, his seed feel on a leaf. He asked his pet falcon to take the semen to his wife.

When the bird was flying, he was spotted by another falcon. The birds started fighting and the leaf feel into the river Yamuna.

Dirghika, an apsara was living the waters. She had been cursed by a sage to live the life of a fish.  She ended up swallowing the semen that had fallen in the waters and became pregnant.

The fish was caught one day and the moment the fishermen lifted her on the banks, the fish gave birth to a tiny baby boy and a tiny baby girl, and taking the form of the apsara, she left for the heaven.

The people were amazed. They took the children and brought them to king Parichar. The king accepted the boy as his son, and gave the girl to the chief of fishermen, to be raised as his daughter.

The king named his son Matsyaraj and raised him as his son.

The chief of fishermen raised the girl was very beautiful except that she had a very strong fishy odour which would emanate from her body. So strong was the smell that no wanted to go near her.

He asked his daughter to live on the banks of Yamuna and help all who wanted to cross the river.

The sage Parasara one day happened to be there. He spotted the girl sitting on the banks of the river.
Moved by her beauty and driven by passion, the sage desired her. He asked her who she was.

She said was the daughter of a fisherman and because the smell that came from her body, she had been named Matsyagandha.

2 comments:

  1. Oh My God .... ha ha ha ... :)

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  2. Actually do not read these literally, there are many meanings that one needs to derive from these

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