Srimad Bhagvata Mahapurana Book 6 Chapter 17:33-41

Book 6: Chapter 17

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Srimad Bhagvata Mahapurana: Book 6: Chapter 17: Verses 33-41
Citraketu cursed (by Goddess Parvati)

None indeed is dear and none hateful to Him; none is His own and none alien to Him either. Being the very Self of all living beings, Sri Hari is the beloved of all creatures. And this highly blessed Citraketu is His beloved servant, looking on all with the same eye and tranquil (by nature); and indeed I too am a devotee of the immortal Lord (and hence did not feel perturbed by his behaviour at all). Therefore, you should have no wonder in regard to (the behaviour of those) high-souled men who are devotees of Lord Visnu (the Supreme Person) and tranquil (by nature) and who view all with the same eye. Sri Suka went on : On hearing this speech of Lord Siva, Goddess Uma (Parvati), O king (Pariksit), was freed from astonishment and felt pacified in mind.

Though fully capable of pronouncing a counter-curse, Citraketu (a devotee of the Lord) accepted the curse of the divine lady with reverence. Such (ideal non-violence) is the characteristic of a pious soul. Hurled into the demoniac species, he sprang up from the sacred fire, called Daksinagni, of the god Twasta and became known as Vrtra, (still) endowed with spiritual knowledge and wisdom. I have thus told you all that you inquired of me, viz., the cause of Vrtra's birth as a demon and what accounted for his devotion to the Lord. By listening to this sacred episode of the high-souled Citraketu, revealing the glory of the votaries of Lord Visnu, one is completely rid of (the) bondage (of mundane existence). Rising (early) in the morning, he who recites this episode with reverence, remaining silent (refraining from all other talk) and remembering Sri Hari (all the time), attains the supreme goal.

Thus ends the seventeenth discourse entitled "Citraketu cursed", in Book Six of the great and glorious Bhagavata-Purana, otherwise known as the Paramahamsa-Samhita.
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