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116 in wonderful acts. His soul was enlightened with ascetic penances, and his organs and their functions were under comple control. His practices and his speech were both very nice. He was contented and without avarice. He was without meanness of any kind and without envy. He was ofi and used to ob-erve the vow of silence. And he was the refuge whom all creatures might seek in distress.

"Such was the Rishi insulted by thy father! The son, however, of that Rishi, in wrath, cursed thy father. Though young in years, the powerful one was old in ascetic splendour. Speedily touching water, he spake, burping as it were with spiritual energy and rage, these words in allusion to thy father :- Behold the power of my asceticism ! Directed by my words, the snake Takshaka of powerful energy and virulent poison, shall, within seven nights hence, burn, with his poison, the wretch that hath placed the dead snake upon my un-offending father'! And having said this, he went to where his father was. And seeing his father he told him of his curse. The tiger among Rishis thereupon sent to thy father a disciple of his, named Gaurmukha, of amiable manners and possessed of every virtue. And having rested a while (after arrival at court) he told the king everything, saying in the words of his master,-'Thou hast been cursed, O king, by my son. Takshaka shall burn thee with his person! Therefore, O king. be careful. O Janamejaya, hearing those terrible words, thy father took every precaution against the powerful snake Takshaka.'"

"And when the seventh day had arrived, a Brahmana Rishi, named Kasya pa, desired to come to the monarch. But the snake Taksbaka saw Kasyapa. And the prince of snakes spake unto Kasya pa without loss of time, saying. --'Where dost thou go so quickly, and what is the business on which thou goest?'--Kasyapa replied, saying.-'O Brahmana, I am going whither king Parikshit that best of the Kurus, is. He shall to-day be burnt by the poison of the snake Takshaka. I go there quickly in order to cure him. in fact, in order that, protected by me, the spake may not bite him to death!' Taksbaka answered, saying - 'Why dost thou seek to revive the king to be bitten by me? I am that Takshaka. O Brahmana, behold the wonderful power of my poison ! Thou art incapable of reviving that monarch when bit by me 1'-So saying, Takshaka, then and there, bit a lord of the forest (a banian tree). And the banian, as soon as it was bit by the snake, was convert. ed into a hes. But Kasya pa, O king, revived it. Takshaka thereupon tempted him, saying. -'Tell me thy desire.' And Kasyapa, too, thus addressed, spake again unto Takshaka, saying 'I go there from desire of wealth.' And Takshaka, thus addressed, then spake unto the highsouled Kasyapa in these soft words :-'O sinless one, take from me more