आत्मानं च प्रवयसमाकलय्य विशाम्पतिः ।
वनं विरक्तः प्रातिष्ठद्विमृशन्नात्मनो गतिम् ॥६७॥

ÄtmÄnaá¹ ca pravayasam
Äkalayya viÅ›Ämpatiḥ
vanaá¹ viraktaḥ prÄtiṣṭhad
vimṛśann Ätmano gatim

 ÄtmÄnam - himself; ca - also; pravayasam - advanced in age; Äkalayya - considering; viÅ›Ämpatiḥ - King UttÄnapÄda; vanam - to the forest; viraktaḥ - detached; prÄtiṣṭhat - departed; vimṛśan - deliberating on; Ätmanaḥ - of the self; gatim - salvation.


Text

After considering his advanced age and deliberating on the welfare of his spiritual self, King UttÄnapÄda detached himself from worldly affairs and entered the forest.

Purport

This is the sign of a rÄjará¹£i. King UttÄnapÄda was very opulent and was emperor of the world, and these attachments were certainly very great. Modern politicians are not as great as kings like MahÄrÄja UttÄnapÄda, but because they get some political power for some days, they become so much attached to their positions that they never retire unless they are removed from their posts by cruel death or killed by some opposing political party. It is within our experience that the politicians in India do not quit their positions until death. This was not the practice in olden days, as it is evident from the behavior of King UttÄnapÄda. Immediately after installing his worthy son Dhruva MahÄrÄja on the throne, he left his home and palace. There are hundreds and thousands of instances like this in which kings, in their mature age, would give up their kingdoms and go to the forest to practice austerity. Practice of austerity is the main business of human life. As MahÄrÄja Dhruva practiced austerity in his early age, his father, MahÄrÄja UttÄnapÄda, in his old age also practiced austerity in the forest. In modern days, however, it is not possible to give up one’s home and go to the forest to practice austerity, but if people of all ages would take shelter of the Kṛṣṇa consciousness movement and practice the simple austerities of no illicit sex, no intoxication, no gambling and no meat-eating, and chant the Hare Kṛṣṇa mantra regularly (sixteen rounds), by this practical method it would be a very easy task to get salvation from this material world.

Thus end the Bhaktivedanta purports of the Fourth Canto, Ninth Chapter, of the ÅšrÄ«mad-BhÄgavatam, entitled “Dhruva MahÄrÄja Returns Home.â€