THIRD BRAHMANA.
1.If a man wishes to reach greatness (wealth for performing
sacrifices), he performs the upasad rule during twelve days (i.e. he lives on
small quantities of milk), beginning on an auspicious day of the light half of
the moon during the northern progress of the sun, collecting at the same time
in a cup or a dish made of Udumbara wood all sorts of herbs, including fruits.
He sweeps the floor (near the house-altar, avasathya), sprinkles it, lays the
fire, spreads grass round it according to rule, prepares the clarified butter
(agya), and on a day, presided over by a male star (nakshatra), after having
properly mixed the Mantha (the herbs, fruits, milk, honey, &c.), he
sacrifices (he pours agya into the fire), saying'-: 'O Gatavedas, whatever
adverse gods there are in thee, who defeat the desires of men, to them I offer
this portion; may they, being pleased, please me with all desires.' Svaha!
'That cross deity who lies down, thinking that all things
are kept asunder by her, I worship thee as propitious with this stream of
ghee.' Svaha!
2. He then says, Svaha to the First, Svaha to the Best,
pours ghee into the fire, and throws what remains into the Mantha (mortar).
He then says, Svaha to Breath, Svaha to her who is the
richest, pours ghee into the fire, and throws what remains into the Mantha
(mortar).
He then says, Svaha to Speech, Svaha to the Support, pours
ghee into the fire, and throws what remains into the Mantha (mortar).
He then says, Svaha the Eye, Svaha to Success, pours ghee
into the fire, and throws what remains into the Mantha (mortar).
He then says, Svaha to the Ear, Svaha, to the Home, pours
ghee into the fire, and throws what remains into the Mantha (mortar).
He then says, Svaha to the Mind, Svaha to offspring, pours
ghee into the fire, and throws what remains into the Mantha (mortar).
He then says, Svaha toSeed, pours ghee into the fire, and
throws what remains into the Mantha (mortar).
3. He then says,Svaha to Agni (fire), pours ghee into the
fire, and throws what remains into the Mantha (mortar).
He then says, Svaha to Soma, pours ghee into the fire, and
throws what remains into the Mantha (mortar).
He then says, Bhuh (earth), Svaha, pours ghee into the fire,
and throws what remains into the Mantha (mortar).
He then says, Bhuvah (sky), Svaha, pours ghee into the fire,
and throws what remains into the Mantha (mortar).
He then says, Svah (heaven), Svaha, pours ghee into the
fire, and throws what remains into the Mantha (mortar).
He then says, Bhur, Bhuvah, Svah, Svaha, pours ghee into the
fire, and throws what remains into the Mantha (mortar).
He then says, Svaha to Brahman (the priesthood), pours ghee
into the fire, and throws what remains into the Mantha (mortar).
He then says, Svaha to Kshatra (the knighthood), pours ghee
into the fire, and throws what remains into the Mantha (mortar).
He then says, Svaha to the Past, pours ghee into the fire,
and throws what remains into the Mantha (mortar).
He then says, Svaha to the Future, pours ghee into the fire,
and throws what remains into the Mantha (mortar).
He then says, Svaha to the Universe, pours ghee into the
fire, and throws what remains into the Mantha (mortar).
He then says,Svaha to all things, pours ghee into the fire,
and throws what remains into the Mantha (mortar).
He then says, Svaha to Pragapati, pours ghee into the fire,
and throws what remains into the Mantha (mortar).
4. Then he touches it (the Mantha, which is dedicated to
Prana, breath), saying: 'Thou art fleet (as breath). Thou art burning (as
fire). Thou art.full (as Brahman). Thou art firm (as the sky). Thou art the
abode of all (as the earth). Thou hast been saluted with Hin (at the beginning
of the sacrifice by the prastotri). Thou art saluted with Hin (in the middle of
the sacrifice by the prastotri). Thou hast been sung (by the udgatri at the
beginning of the sacrifice). Thou art sung (by the udgatri in the middle of the
sacrifice). Thou hast been celebrated (by the adhvaryu at the beginning of the
sacrifice). Thou art celebrated again (by the agnidhra in the middle of the
sacrifice). Thou art bright in the wet (cloud). Thou art great. Thou art
powerful. Thou art food (as Soma). Thou art light (as Agni, fire, the eater).
Thou art the end. Thou art the absorption (of all things).'
5. Then he holds it (the Mantha) forth, saying: 'Thou
knowest all, we know thy greatness. He is indeed a king, a ruler, the highest
lord. May that king, that ruler make me the highest lord.'
6. Then he eats it, saying: 'Tat savitur varenyam (We
meditate on that adorable light) - The winds drop honey for the righteous, the
rivers drop honey, may our plants be sweet as honey! Bhuh (earth) Svaha!
'Bhargo devasya dhimahi (of the divine Savitri) - May the
night be honey in the morning, may the air above the earth, may heaven, our
father, be honey! Bhuvah (sky) Svaha!
'Dhiyo yo nah prokodayat (who should rouse our thoughts) -
May the tree be full of honey, may the sun be full of honey, may our cows be
sweet like honey! Svah (heaven) Svaha!'
He repeats the whole Savitri verse, and all the verses about
the honey, thinking, May I be all this! Bhur, Bhuvah, Svah, Svaha! Having thus
swallowed all, he washes his hands, and sits down behind the altar, turning his
head to the East. In the morning he worships Aditya (the sun), with the hymn,
'Thou art the best lotus of the four quarters, may I become the best lotus
among men.' Then returning as he came, he sits down behind the altar and
recites the genealogical list.
7. Uddalaka Aruni told this (Mantha-doctrine) to his pupil
Vagasaneya Yagnavalkya, and said: 'If a man were to pour it on a dry stick,
branches would grow, and leaves spring forth.'
8. Vagasaneya Yagnavalkya told the same to his pupil Madhuka
Paingya, and said: 'If a man were to pour it on a dry stick, branches would
grow, and leaves spring forth.'
9. Madhuka Paingya told the same to his pupil Kula
Bhagavitti, and said: 'If a man were to pour it on a dry stick, branches would
grow, and leaves spring forth.'
10. Kula Bhagavitti told the same to his pupil Ganaki Ayasthuna,
and said: 'If a man were to pour it on a dry stick, branches would grow, and
leaves spring forth.'
11. Ganaki Ayasthuna told the same to his pupil Satyakama
Gabala, and said: 'If a man were to pour it on a dry stick, branches would
grow, and leaves spring forth.'
12. Satyakama Gabala told the same to his pupils, and said:
' If a man were to pour it on a dry stick, branches would grow, and leaves
spring forth.'
Let no one tell this to any one, except to a son or to a
pupil.
13. Four things are made of the wood of the Udumbara tree,
the sacrificial ladle (sruva), the cup (kamasa), the fuel, and the two churning
sticks.
There are ten kinds of village (cultivated) seeds, viz. rice
and barley (brihiyavas), sesamum and kidney-beans (tilamashas), millet and
panic seed (anupriyangavas), wheat (godhumas), lentils (masuras), pulse
(khalvas), and vetches (khalakulas). After having ground these he sprinkles
them with curds (dadhi), honey, and ghee, and then offers (the proper portions)
of clarified butter (agya).
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