cleansed souls about his having bathed in all the
tirthas without having found the relief he sought.
That foremost of Brahmanas then heard from those sages
words of high import about this foremost of tirthas
situate on the Sarasvati, and known by the name of
Usanasa, which was represented as competent to cleanse
from every sin and as an excellent spot for attaining
to (ascetic) success. That Brahmana, then, repairing
to that Usanasa tirtha, bathed in its waters.
Upon this, the Rakshasa’s head, leaving the thigh,
fell into the water. Freed from that (dead) head,
the Rishi felt great happiness. As regards the
head itself, it was lost in the waters. Mahodara
then, O king, freed from the Rakshasa’s head,
cheerfully returned, with cleansed soul and all his
sins washed away, to his asylum after achieving success.
The great ascetic thus freed, after returning to his
sacred asylum, spoke of what had happened to those
Rishis of cleansed souls. The assembled Rishis,
having heard his words, bestowed the name of Kapalamochana
on the tirtha. The great Rishi Mahodara, repairing
once more to that foremost of tirthas, drank its water
and attained to great ascetic success. He of
Madhu’s race, having given away much wealth unto
the Brahmanas and worshipped them, then proceeded
to the asylum of Rushangu. There, O Bharata,
Arshtishena had in former days undergone the austerest
of penances. There the great Muni Vishvamitra
(who had before been a Kshatriya) became a Brahmana.
That great asylum is capable of granting the fruition
of every wish. It is always, O lord, the abode
of Munis and Brahmanas. Baladeva of great beauty,
surrounded by Brahmanas, then went to that spot, O
monarch, where Rushangu had, in former days, cast off
his body. Rushangu, O Bharata, was an old Brahmana,
who was always devoted to ascetic penances. Resolved
to cast off his body, he reflected for a long while.
Endued with great ascetic merit, he then summoned all
his sons and told them to take him to a spot where
water was abundant. Those ascetics, knowing their
sire had become very old, took that ascetic to a tirtha
on the Sarasvati. Brought by his sons to the
sacred Sarasvati containing hundreds of tirthas and
on whose banks dwelt Rishis unconnected with the world,
that intelligent ascetic of austere penance bathed
in that tirtha according to due rites, and that foremost
of Rishis conversant with the merits of tirthas, then
cheerfully said, O tiger among men, unto all his sons,
who were dutifully waiting upon him, these words, ’He
that would cast off his body on the northern bank
of the Sarasvati containing much water, while employed
in mentally reciting sacred mantras, would never again
be afflicted with death!’ The righteoussouled
Baladeva, touching the water of that tirtha and bathing
in it, gave considerable wealth unto the Brahmanas,
being devoted to them. Possessed of great might
and great prowess Baladeva then proceeded to that
tirtha where the adorable Grandsire had created the
mountains called Lokaloka, where that foremost of
Rishis, Arshtishena of rigid vows, O thou of Kuru’s
race, had by austere penances acquired the status
of Brahmanhood, where the royal sage Sindhudwipa,
and the great ascetic Devapi, and the adorable and
illustrious Muni Vishvamitra of austere penances and
fierce energy, had all acquired a similar status.”


