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________________ III PRAPÂTHAKA, 17 KHANDA, 5. 51 libation. The Gagati has forty-eight syllables, the third libation is offered with Gagatt hymns. The Adityas are connected with that part of it. The Pranas are the Ådityas, for they take up all this (âdadate). 6. If anything ails him in that (third) age, let him say: ‘Ye Prânas, ye Âdityas, extend this my third libation unto the full age, that I, the sacrificer, may not perish in the midst of the Pranas or Ådityas.' Thus he recovers from his illness, and becomes whole. 7. Mahidasa Aitareya (the son of Itarâ), who knew this, said (addressing a disease): Why dost thou afflict me, as I shall not die by it?' He lived a hundred and sixteen years (i. e. 24 +44 +48). He, too, who knows this lives on to a hundred and sixteen years. SEVENTEENTH KHANDA". 1. When a man (who is the sacrificer) hungers, thirsts, and abstains from pleasures, that is the Diksha (initiatory rite). 2. When a man eats, drinks, and enjoys pleasures, he does it with the Upasadas (the sacrificial days on which the sacrificer is allowed to partake of food). 3. When a man laughs, eats, and delights himself, he does it with the Stuta-sastras (hymns sung and recited at the sacrifices). 4. Penance, liberality, righteousness, kindness, truthfulness, these form his Dakshinas (gifts bestowed on priests, &c.) 5. Therefore when they say, 'There will be a 1 Here we have a representation of the sacrifice as performed without any ceremonial, and as it is often represented when performed in thought only by a man living in the forest. E 2 Digitized by Google Digitized by
SR No.007670
Book TitleUpnishad
Original Sutra AuthorN/A
AuthorMax Muller
PublisherOxford
Publication Year1879
Total Pages1835
LanguageEnglish
ClassificationBook_English
File Size35 MB
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