They
reported this to their commander. All of them went in and found-the stolen goods and the
robbers who were in hiding.
The commander thought: "Now I know the
reason why the brahmana pretended to be a silent sage. He is indeed the chief of these
robbers. He has inspired this robbery." Then he ordered his soldiers to guard the
place, went to the king and told him that the sage Mandavya had been caught with the
stolen goods.
The king was very angry at the audacity of the
chief of the robbers who had put on the garb of a brahmana sage, the better to deceive the
world. Without pausing to verify the facts, he ordered the wicked criminal, as he thought
him, to be impaled.
The commander returned to thehermitage, impaled
Mandavya on a spear and handed over the stolen things to the king.
The virtuous sage, though impaled on the spear,
did not die. Since he was in yoga when he was impaled he remained alive by the power of
yoga. Sages who lived in other parts of the forest came to his hermitage and asked
Mandavya how he came to be in that terrible pass.
Mandavya replied: "Whom shall I blame? The
servants of the king, who protect the world, have inflicted this punishment."
The king was surprised and frightened when he
heard that the impaled sage was still alive and that he was surrounded by the other sages
of the forest. He hastened to the forest with his attendants and at once ordered the sage
to be taken down from the spear. Then he prostrated at his feet and prayed humbly to be
forgiven for the offence unwittingly committed. |