i. 7. 3.
Secretly offering is made
to one set of gods, openly to another. The gods who receive offering secretly,
he thus offers to them in sacrifice; in that he brings the Anvaharya mess - the
Brahmans are the gods openly - them he verily delights. This is his sacrificial
fee: verily he mends the rent in the sacrifice; whatever in the sacrifice is
harsh or is injured, that he makes good (anvaharati) [1] with the
Anvaharya mess, and that is why it has its name. Now the priests are the
messengers of the gods; in that he brings the Anvaharya mess, he delights the
messengers of the gods. Prajapati distributed the sacrifice to the gods; he
reflected that he was empty; he per ceived this Anvaharya mess unallotted; he
conferred it upon himself. The Anvaharya is connected with Prajapati; he, who
knowing thus brings the Anvaharya, assuredly enjoys Prajapati. An unlimited
amount should be poured out, Prajapati is unlimited; (verily it serves) to win
Prajapati [2]. Whatever the gods did in the sacrifice, the Asuras did; the gods
perceived the Anvaharya connected with Prajapati; they seized it - then the
gods prospered, the Asuras were defeated; he who knowing thus brings the
Anvaharya prospers himself, his foe is defeated. By the sacrifice there is
offering, by the cooked food satisfying. He who knowing thus brings the
Anvaharya, accomplishes at once sacrifice and satisfaction. 'Thou art the
portion of Prajapati' [3], he says; verily he unites Prajapati with his own
portion. 'Full of strength and milk', he says; verily he confers upon him
strength and milk. 'Protect my expiration and inspiration; protect my breathing
together and cross-breathing', he says; verily he invokes this blessing. 'Thou
art imperishable, for imperishableness thee; mayst thou not perish for me,
yonder, in yonder world', he says. Food perishes in yonder world, for given
hence in yonder world people live upon it; in that he touches thus, he makes it
imperishable; his food perishes not in yonder world.
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