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GRIHYA-SOTRA OF HIRANYAKESIN.
13. With (the words), 'Herb! protect him’ (Taitt. Samh., loc. cit.), he puts an herb with the point upwards into (the hair).
14. With (the words), 'Axe! do no harm to him!' (Taitt. Samh., loc. cit.), he touches (that herb) with the razor.
15. With (the words), ‘Heard by the gods, I shave that (hair)' (Taitt. Samh., loc. cit.), he shaves him.
16. With (the formula), ‘If thou shavest, O shaver, my hair and my beard with the razor, the wounding, the well-shaped, make our face resplendent, but do not take away our life'-(the student who is going to take the bath), looks at the barber.
17. He has the beard shaven first, then the hair in his arm-pits, then the hair (on his head), then the hair of his body, then (he has) his nails (cut).
18. A person who is kindly disposed (towards the student), gathers the hair, the beard, the hair of the body, and the nails (that have been cut off), in a lump of bull's dung, and buries (that lump of dung) in a cow-stable, or near an Udumbara tree, or in a clump of Darbha grass, with (the words), Thus I
stamba-Srauta-sâtra X, 5, 8; Satapatha-Br. III, 1, 2, 6. According to Matridatta, there is some difference of opinion between the different teachers as to whether the Mantras for the moistening of the hair and the following rites are to be repeated by the teacher or by the barber.
13. Âsvalâyana I, 17,8; Paraskara II, 1, 10; Âpastamba-Sraut., loc. cit.; Kâtyâyana-Sraut. VII, 2, 1o. The parallel texts prescribe that one Kusa blade, or three Kusa blades, should be put into the hair.
14. Yagñikadeva in his commentary on Katyâyana (loc. cit.) says, kshurenâbhinidhaya kshuradhârâm antarhitatrinasyopari nidhaya.
16. Asvalâyana I, 17, 16. Comp. also Rig-veda 1, 24, II.
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