i. 5. 2.
He who removes the fire
casts away the sacrifice and cattle. The sacrificial cake is offered on five potsherds;
the sacrifice is fivefold, cattle are fivefold; verily he wins the sacrifice
and cattle. Now he who removes the fire is the slayer of the hero among the
gods; Brahmans desirous of holiness did not aforetime eat his food; the Yajyas
and Anuvakyas are in the Pankti metre; the sacrifice is fivefold, man is
fivefold; verily making recompense to the gods for the hero he re-establishes
the fire [1]. They are of a hundred syllables; man lives a hundred years and
has a hundred powers; verily he rests on life and power. In that Agni when
established does not prosper, (it is that he is) desiring a greater portion; in
that it is all Agni's, that is his prosperity. Speech is uttered together in
the house of him who removes the fire; the sacrificer is liable to perish on
account of the uttering together of speech. There are discriminations, to sever
speech and preserve the sacrificer [2]. He makes a discrimination; verily he
makes the holy power (Brahman). He speaks the Yajus, muttering; it is as if one
who has found a rich treasure hides it. To Agni Svistakrt he speaks aloud; it
is as if one who has found a rich treasure is fain to go openly. Uttering the
discrimination he makes the Vasat cry with the foresacrifice; verily he leaves
not his abode. The sacrificial cake is the sacrificer, the oblations are
cattle; in that he offers these libations on either side of the cake [3], he
thus surrounds the sacrificer on either side with cattle. 'After performing the
Yajus and collecting the apparatus', they say: 'the apparatus should not be
collected, the Yajus should not be performed,' they say: the apparatus should
be collected and the Yajus performed, for the prosperity of the sacrifice. The
sacrificial fee is a renovated chariot, a newly-sewn garment, a draught ox let loose
again, for the prosperity of the re-establishing. 'Seven are thy
kindling-sticks, O Agni, seven thy tongues'; (with these words) he offers the
Agnihotra. Wherever there is anything of his nature, thence [4] does he win
him. Now he who removes the fire is the slayer of the hero among the gods,
Varuna is the exactor of the recompense; he should make an offering on eleven
potsherds to Agni and Varuna; him whom he slays and him who exacts the
recompense he delights with their own portion; the sacrificer is not ruined.
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