अन्ये च मुनयो ब्रह्मन्ब्रह्मरातादयोऽमलाः ।
शिष्यैरुपेता आजग्मुः कश्यपाङ्गिरसादयः ॥८॥

anye ca munayo brahman
brahmarÄtÄdayo 'malÄḥ
Å›iá¹£yair upetÄ Äjagmuḥ
kaÅ›yapÄá¹…girasÄdayaḥ

 anye - many others; ca - also; munayaḥ - sages; brahman - O brÄhmaṇas; brahmarÄta - Åšukadeva GosvÄmÄ«; Ädayaḥ - and such others; amalÄḥ - completely purified; Å›iá¹£yaiḥ - by the disciples; upetÄḥ - accompanied; Äjagmuḥ - arrived; kaÅ›yapa - KaÅ›yapa; Äá¹…girasa - Āṅgirasa; Ädayaḥ - others.


Text

And many others like Åšukadeva GosvÄmÄ« and other purified souls, KaÅ›yapa and Āṅgirasa and others, all accompanied by their respective disciples, arrived there.

Purport

Åšukadeva GosvÄmÄ« (BrahmarÄta): The famous son and disciple of ÅšrÄ« VyÄsadeva, who taught him first the MahÄbhÄrata and then ÅšrÄ«mad-BhÄgavatam. Åšukadeva GosvÄmÄ« recited 1,400,000 verses of the MahÄbhÄrata in the councils of the Gandharvas, Yaká¹£as and RÄká¹£asas, and he recited ÅšrÄ«mad-BhÄgavatam for the first time in the presence of MahÄrÄja ParÄ«ká¹£it. He thoroughly studied all the Vedic literatures from his great father. Thus he was a completely purified soul by dint of his extensive knowledge in the principles of religion. From MahÄbhÄrata, SabhÄ-parva (4.11), it is understood that he was also present in the royal assembly of MahÄrÄja Yudhiṣṭhira and at the fasting of MahÄrÄja ParÄ«ká¹£it. As a bona fide disciple of ÅšrÄ« VyÄsadeva, he inquired from his father very extensively about religious principles and spiritual values, and his great father also satisfied him by teaching him the yoga system by which one can attain the spiritual kingdom, the difference between fruitive work and empiric knowledge, the ways and means of attaining spiritual realization, the four ÄÅ›ramas (namely the student life, the householder’s life, the retired life and the renounced life), the sublime position of the Supreme Personality of Godhead, the process of seeing Him face to face, the bona fide candidate for receiving knowledge, the consideration of the five elements, the unique position of intelligence, the consciousness of the material nature and the living entity, the symptoms of the self-realized soul, the working principles of the material body, the symptoms of the influential modes of nature, the tree of perpetual desire, and psychic activities. Sometimes he went to the sun planet with the permission of his father and NÄradajÄ«. Descriptions of his travel in space are given in the ÅšÄnti-parva of the MahÄbhÄrata (332). At last he attained the transcendental realm. He is known by different names like Araṇeya, Aruṇisuta, VaiyÄsaki and VyÄsÄtmaja.

KaÅ›yapa: One of the prajÄpatis, the son of MarÄ«ci and one of the sons-in-law of PrajÄpati Daká¹£a. He is the father of the gigantic bird Garuá¸a, who was given elephants and tortoises as eatables. He married thirteen daughters of PrajÄpati Daká¹£a, and their names are Aditi, Diti, Danu, KÄṣṭhÄ, AriṣṭÄ, SurasÄ, IlÄ, Muni, KrodhavaÅ›Ä, TÄmrÄ, Surabhi, SaramÄ and Timi. He begot many children, both demigods and demons, by those wives. From his first wife, Aditi, all the twelve Ä€dityas were born; one of them is VÄmana, the incarnation of Godhead. This great sage, KaÅ›yapa, was also present at the time of Arjuna’s birth. He received a presentation of the whole world from ParaÅ›urÄma, and later on he asked ParaÅ›urÄma to go out of the world. His other name is Ariṣṭanemi. He lives on the northern side of the universe.

Āṅgirasa: He is the son of Mahará¹£i Aá¹…girÄ and is known as Bá¹›haspati, the priest of the demigods. It is said that DroṇÄcÄrya was his partial incarnation. ÅšukrÄcÄrya was the spiritual master of the demons, and Bá¹›haspati challenged him. His son is Kaca, and he delivered the fire weapon first to BharadvÄja Muni. He begot six sons (like the fire-god) by his wife CandramÄsÄ«, one of the reputed stars. He could travel in space, and therefore he could present himself even in the planets of Brahmaloka and Indraloka. He advised the King of heaven, Indra, about conquering the demons. Once he cursed Indra, who thus had to become a hog on the earth and was unwilling to return to heaven. Such is the power of the attraction of the illusory energy. Even a hog does not wish to part with its earthly possessions in exchange for a heavenly kingdom. He was the religious preceptor of the natives of different planets.