माता भस्त्रा पितुः पुत्रो येन जातः स एव सः ।
भरस्व पुत्रं दुष्मन्त मावमंस्थाः शकुन्तलाम् ॥२१॥

mÄtÄ bhastrÄ pituḥ putro
yena jÄtaḥ sa eva saḥ
bharasva putraá¹ duá¹£manta
mÄvamaá¹sthÄḥ Å›akuntalÄm

 mÄtÄ - the mother; bhastrÄ - just like the skin of a bellows containing air; pituḥ - of the father; putraḥ - the son; yena - by whom; jÄtaḥ - one is born; saḥ - the father; eva - indeed; saḥ - the son; bharasva - just maintain; putram - your son; duá¹£manta - O MahÄrÄja Duá¹£manta;  - do not; avamaá¹sthÄḥ - insult; Å›akuntalÄm - ÅšakuntalÄ.


Text

The voice said: O MahÄrÄja Duá¹£manta, a son actually belongs to his father, whereas the mother is only a container, like the skin of a bellows. According to Vedic injunctions, the father is born as the son. Therefore, maintain your own son and do not insult ÅšakuntalÄ.

Purport

According to the Vedic injunction ÄtmÄ vai putra-nÄmÄsi, the father becomes the son. The mother is simply like a storekeeper, because the seed of the child is placed in her womb, but it is the father who is responsible for maintaining the son. In Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ the Lord says that He is the seed-giving father of all living entities (ahaá¹ bÄ«ja-pradaḥ pitÄ), and therefore He is responsible for maintaining them. This is also confirmed in the Vedas. Eko bahÅ«nÄá¹ yo vidadhÄti kÄmÄn: although God is one, He maintains all living entities with their necessities for life. The living entities in different forms are sons of the Lord, and therefore the father, the Supreme Lord, supplies them food according to their different bodies. The small ant is supplied a grain of sugar, and the elephant is supplied tons of food, but everyone is able to eat. Therefore there is no question of overpopulation. Because the father, Kṛṣṇa, is fully opulent, there is no scarcity of food, and because there is no scarcity, the propaganda of overpopulation is only a myth. Actually one suffers for want of food when material nature, under the order of the father, refuses to supply him food. It is the living entity’s position that determines whether food will be supplied or not. When a diseased person is forbidden to eat, this does not mean that there is a scarcity of food; rather, the diseased person requires the treatment of not being supplied with food. In Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ (7.10) the Lord also says, bÄ«jaá¹ mÄá¹ sarva-bhÅ«tÄnÄm: “I am the seed of all living entities.†A particular type of seed is sown within the earth, and then a particular type of tree or plant comes out. The mother resembles the earth, and when a particular type of seed is sown by the father, a particular type of body takes birth.