Vishvamitra’s Supreme Fulfilment through Penance
From Royal Power to Brahmarshi through
Trial and Triumph
Simplified and
faithful rendering of the Adi Kavya-23
Vanam Jwala
Narasimha Rao (May 19, 2026)
In the earlier portions of this
series, we witnessed Vishvamitra’s extraordinary transition from a mighty king
to an uncompromising ascetic. His journey was marked not merely by renunciation
but by repeated self-examination, inner conflict, and renewed resolve. The
episode that follows completes that journey, revealing how sustained
discipline, humility, and ethical transformation ultimately lead to spiritual
fulfillment. For modern readers, especially those engaging with the Ramayana
in English, this narrative affirms that true achievement is not instant but
ripens through endurance and self-conquest.
Ensuring that the ‘Trishanku Heaven’
created by him remained permanently in the sky, along with its stars and
galaxies, Vishvamitra gave farewell to the sages who had come at his invitation
for the Trishanku ritual and who then returned to their respective abodes.
Shatananda continued his narration of the legend of Vishvamitra to Rama,
beginning with the sage’s decision to move in another direction to continue his
ascetic practices. Vishvamitra preferred the vast western region, known for its
sacred lakes. Upon reaching the lakeside, he undertook an unhindered and
rigorous penance, subsisting only on fruits and roots. This phase underscores how true seekers often choose solitude and nature
over comfort, a choice that resonates even today for those pursuing inner
clarity amid constant distractions.
Meanwhile, King Ambarisha of Ayodhya
resolved to perform a great Vedic ritual. However, Indra confiscated the
principal sacrificial animal, causing it to mysteriously vanish. The chief
priest declared that this loss occurred due to negligence and warned the king
that unguarded ritual elements could turn into destructive blemishes. To
compensate, the priest advised that a human substitute could be offered,
without which the ritual could not proceed.
The episode subtly highlights how responsibility and vigilance are integral
to sacred duties, as well as values equally applicable in modern personal and
professional commitments.
The king searched extensively for a
human substitute, offering thousands of cows in exchange. Traveling through
provinces, forests, villages, towns, and hermitages, he eventually reached Sage
Richika, husband of Vishvamitra’s sister, who lived peacefully on Mount Bhrigu
Tunga with his family. When Ambarisha requested for one of Richika’s three
sons, the sage declined to give his eldest or youngest son, offering instead
the middle son, Shunashepa. Ambarisha accepted and, during the return journey
to his kingdom, halted near a sacred lake to rest. This moment reflects the
complex ethical tensions of the era, prompting today’s readers to reflect on
duty, sacrifice, and moral responsibility.
While the king rested, Shunashepa,
filled with fear and anxiety, slipped away to the lakeside, and found his
maternal uncle Vishvamitra immersed in penance. Falling at his feet, he pleaded
for protection, as a son would seek refuge in his father. He prayed that
Ambarisha’s ritual succeed and that he himself be granted longevity and access
to heavenly realms through rigorous asceticism. The scene poignantly mirrors
the universal human instinct to seek guidance from trusted elders during
moments of crisis.
Moved by Shunashepa’s plight,
Vishvamitra instructed his sons to volunteer as substitutes for the ritual. He
assured them that such an act would please the gods. However, all his sons
arrogantly refused, branding their father’s proposal as disgraceful and
likening it to consuming dog’s flesh. Here, the narrative exposes
generational conflict and moral rigidity, that, issues still prevalent in
contemporary society.
Enraged by their defiance and
disrespect, Vishvamitra cursed his sons to wander the earth for a thousand
years, reborn among communities surviving on dog meat like the sons of sage
Vasishta. He then compassionately comforted Shunashepa and taught him purifying
Vedic hymns, including ‘IMAMME VARUNA’ instructing him to invoke the Fire God
during the ritual and when he was fastened to the sacrificial post of Vishnu.
Vishvamitra assured him of long life and spiritual fulfillment. This episode
reveals how knowledge and compassion, when imparted selflessly, can transform
even the gravest situations.
Shunashepa went to Ambarisha and told
him to proceed with performing his ritual, and that he would be his sacrificial
animal. Delighted, Ambarisha told his Ritwiks to continue with the ritual. On
their advice, the king had Shunashepa prepared as a ritual animal, cladding him
in red robes and securely fastening him to the sacrificial post of Vishnu.
The willingness of Shunashepa reflects an early understanding that
surrender, when guided by sacred knowledge, need not lead to destruction.
When this was done, Shunashepa was not
only unperturbed but also promptly pleased Indra and Upendra by reciting the
two hymns taught by Vishvamitra. Indra became delighted and bestowed longevity
upon Shunashepa. Ambarisha, too, obtained the fruits of the Vedic ritual
manifold through Indra’s grace. Thus, wisdom and faith together transformed
what appeared to be a fatal ordeal into an act of divine favor.
Vishvamitra continued his penance at
the same place for another thousand years. While he was deeply engrossed in
austerities, an apsara named Menaka arrived near the sacred lake and began to
bathe and swimming there. Vishvamitra noticed her incomparable beauty and
approached her, inviting her to his hermitage and assuring her safety. Even
the most disciplined minds, the text reminds, are tested repeatedly rather than
once.
Accepting Vishvamitra’s offer, Menaka
stayed with him, and they lived together like husband and wife. This
association caused a severe interruption in his penance, which Vishvamitra
realized only after ten years had passed. He repented deeply, lamenting the
loss of precious time, and felt profound anguish. Recognition of one’s lapse
is portrayed as the first step toward renewed spiritual vigilance.
Vishvamitra understood that the gods
had deliberately attempted to divert him from his penance. Seeing him in deep
contemplation, Menaka feared she would be cursed, but Vishvamitra calmly
absolved her, stating that the fault was not hers alone. Thereafter, he
proceeded to the northern Himalayan region to undertake still more rigorous
austerities.
The episode subtly teaches accountability without vindictiveness.
Lord Brahma appeared before
Vishvamitra along with the Devatas and conferred upon him the title of
‘Maharshi.’ When Vishvamitra pleaded for Brahmarshihood, Brahma replied that
his senses were not yet fully conquered. Disappointed but undeterred,
Vishvamitra resolved to intensify his penance further. Spiritual recognition
here is shown to be conditional upon inner mastery, not mere endurance.
Vishvamitra undertook extreme
austerities, standing with raised arms, subsisting on air alone. In summer he
became a five-fire ascetic, in the rainy season the open sky was his shelter,
and in winter water was his bed by day and night. Thus, he performed severe
penance for another thousand years. Such imagery conveys the symbolic
burning away of residual ego and desire.
Indra then instructed Rambha, the
celestial dancer of heaven, to disrupt Vishvamitra’s penance. Though hesitant,
Rambha approached Vishvamitra by assuming highly twinkling appearance, and sang
melodiously. Vishvamitra though delighted, suspected Indra’s mischief behind
this, and angered by the intrusion, cursed Rambha to become a rock for ten
thousand years. The incident reveals that even advanced ascetics must still
guard against anger.
Vishvamitra told her that, when he was
engaged in conquering the vicious, lust and senses to become a self-conquered
individual, she tried to seduce him and disrupt his penance with malicious
intention. Realizing that anger had nullified the merit he had earned,
Vishvamitra felt deep remorse. Determined henceforth never to yield to wrath,
he resolved to continue his penance without food and with restrained breath
until he attained Brahmarshihood. Here, the text emphasizes inner discipline
over outward austerity.
Vishvamitra then moved to the eastern
region and continued his penance for a thousand years that was exceptional and
supreme. One day, as he prepared to eat, Indra appeared disguised as a Brahmin
and begged for food. Without hesitation, Vishvamitra gave away his meal and
remained silent, adhering strictly to his vow. Selfless giving without
resentment marks a decisive shift in his spiritual maturity.
Vishvamitra continued his
breath-controlled penance for another thousand years. Flames emerged from his
head, alarming the three worlds. The Devatas, Gandharvas, Asuras, Pannagas and
Sages approached Lord Brahma and urged him to grant Vishvamitra his long-sought
Brahmarshihood. Brahma appeared and addressed him as ‘Brahmarshi Vishvamitra’
and requested him to withdraw his penance. The universe itself acknowledges
the completion of his transformation.
Vishvamitra then expressed his desire
clearly: that Brahminhood, the epitome of OUM, professor hood, mastery of the
Vedas, the power of sacred inquiry be conferred upon him, and that Sage
Vasishta, the outstanding among the scholars of Vedas of both Brahmins and
Kshatriyas, personally acknowledge him as a Brahmarshi. Until such recognition,
he said, he would not believe the title to be complete. This insistence
underscores the ethical dimension of spiritual legitimacy.
The Devatas approached Vasishta, who
came and embraced Vishvamitra as a Brahmarshi and equal. The long-standing
rivalry ended in friendship, and Vasishta affirmed that Vishvamitra possessed
all the qualities of a Brahmin Sage. The gods then departed.
Harmony replaces competition when ego dissolves.
Shatananda concluded the narration of
Vishvamitra’s life and attainment of Brahmarshihood. He told Rama that none equaled
Vishvamitra, who had become his teacher. King Janaka expressed gratitude for
Vishvamitra’s presence in Mithila and took leave for the day. Vishvamitra,
along with Rama and Lakshmana, returned to their assigned guesthouse.
Thus, the narrative seamlessly returns to the central Ramayana storyline.
Vishvamitra’s life, as narrated here,
is not the story of an unfinished quest but of a quest fulfilled through
perseverance, self-correction, and humility. His journey illustrates that
spiritual greatness is neither inherited nor immediate, but it is earned
through repeated trials and conscious restraint of ego, desire, and anger. For
contemporary readers, especially those encountering the Ramayana in English, this
episode reassures that lapses do not negate progress, and that sincere effort,
sustained over time, ultimately leads to fulfillment and recognition.
From Vishvamitra’s penance, it becomes
clear that true success in austerity is attained only by one who has conquered
destructive anger. To achieve Brahmarshihood or Brahminhood, the conquest of
desire and anger is essential. Desire and anger both arise from ‘Rajo Guna’ and
no amount of indulgence can ever satisfy them. They are great sins and
formidable inner enemies. Mastery over the senses (Jitendriyatva) is
indispensable for the fulfilment of penance. One who remains unaffected, neither
elated nor disturbed by what is eaten, touched, seen, or heard, alone deserves
to be called a master of the senses.
A doubt may arise: if Vishvamitra had
conquered desire and anger, why did he later display anger toward Dasharatha?
Had he been the earlier Vishvamitra, he might indeed have resorted to a curse.
But he did not. That anger was not a passion residing permanently in his mind
as before. It was anger consciously employed for the accomplishment of a
righteous purpose.
Vishvamitra was initially a king, a
householder. Accompanied by his wife, he withdrew into the forest, practiced
austerities as a Vanaprastha, and became a Rajarshi. Sustaining
himself only on forest fruits, he continued his penance and rose to the state
of a Rishi. Until that stage, his wife and children remained with him.
Later, living alone and deepening his austerities, he attained the status of a Maharshi.
Yet not all Maharshis are masters of the senses.
Therefore, in order to achieve
complete self-mastery, Vishvamitra stood amidst the five fires, renounced food
altogether, and sustained himself solely on air through penance. Even after
this, though he conquered desire, anger still eluded complete control. To
subdue that too, he undertook years of silent austerity and breath-retention (Kumbhakam).
Only then did he conquer everything and become a Brahmarshi.
Brahminhood acquired by birth does not
arise from action alone. That Vishvamitra attained it indicates the presence of
a profound and exceptional cause. For anyone, no matter how great the effort,
desire and anger are inevitable. Only one who brings them fully under his
command deserves to be called the noblest of Brahmins. That is why Brahminhood
is never easy to attain.
Acknowledgement
and Attribution
The foregoing philosophical commentary
and interpretative insights are drawn from the monumental vision of Andhra
Valmiki, Vavilikolanu Subbarau, revered also as Vasudasa Swamy, the first and
one and only poet to accomplish the extraordinary feat of translating all the
Kandas of Valmiki’s Sanskrit Ramayana into Telugu, meticulously preserving the
canonical total of 24000 shlokas into equal number of poems.
This vast corpus, rendered into Telugu
literary poetry first, composed across a rich spectrum of Classical Chandassu,
later also in to prose giving meaning for each and every word in the poems, and
in combination with poems, stands as a unique and unparalleled achievement in
world literature, without precedent before him and without equal after him. Far
beyond a translation, it is nothing short of an encyclopedia of spiritual,
philosophical, ethical, linguistic, and cultural knowledge, revealing at every
stage an extraordinary and comprehensive erudition. His Poetry-Prose
Combination is popular as Mandaram.
For any discerning reader endowed with
an instinct for deep inquiry, this work is not merely a text for study but a boundless
source of original insight, capable of sustaining not one but innumerable
doctoral inquiries, across disciplines and across the world. It is for this
reason that Vavilikolanu Subbarau justly bears the title ‘Andhra Valmiki.’ This
commentary seeks only to reflect, in a modest measure, the depth and radiance
of that unparalleled Telugu Ramayana Tradition.
{{From my Published Book ‘Simplified
and Faithful Rendering of the Adi Kavya’
Valmiki Ramayana: The Greatest Epic
(Bala and Ayodhya Kandas)}}
(This Book
is free of cost for all those who are interested to read the English Version of
Valmiki Ramayana, provided they collect it from me in person preferably.
Mobile: 8008137012)
>>> Photographs courtesy Rama Bhakta Vijaya Raghava Dasu

















