Pavamāna Soma’s purification and ascent, bringing protection, fame, and sacrificial efficacy
तिस्रो वाच उदीरते गावो मिमन्ति धेनवः हरिरेति कनिक्रदत्
tisro vāca udīrate gāvo mimanti dhenavaḥ harireti kanikradat
tisro1 vāca2 udīrate3 gāvo1 mimanti2 dhenavaḥ3 harireti1 kanikradat2
تُرَدَّدُ ثلاثُ أصواتٍ؛ وتَخُورُ الأبقارُ، ذواتُ الدَّرِّ؛ ويمضي هاري (سوما) مُدَوِّيًا مُرَنِّمًا.
tisraḥ | vācaḥ | udīrate | gāvaḥ | mimanti | dhenavaḥ | hariḥ | eti | kanikradat
Pavamāna-stotra (generic; specific gāna not supplied in input)
{ "prastava": "(stobha-led prelude, often with elongated ‘hā/ho/ā’) preparing ‘tisro vācaḥ…’", "udgitha": "Main text carried on the principal melodic line; emphasis on vācaḥ, gāvaḥ, hariḥ.", "pratihara": "Responsive reiteration/cadence segment aligning the ensemble; often compresses the semantic text and expands vowels.", "upadrava": "After-song continuation resolving the melodic tension; ‘…eti kanikradat’ tends to take the resolving descent.", "nidhana": "Final settling syllables (often stobha-vowels) sung together to ‘seal’ the sound.", "structure_notes": "Exact stobha distribution depends on the specific gāna; pavamāna stotras commonly elongate openings and cadences, keeping semantic words intact in udgītha.", "singer_assignments": "Prastotṛ: prastāva; Udgātṛ: udgītha+upadrava; Pratihartṛ: pratihāra; all three: nidhana." }
{ "gloss_summary": "‘Three voices’ are explained as a triad of ritual utterance/roles; ‘cows/milch-kine’ are the yielding streams that produce the soma-juice; Soma is ‘tawny’ and ‘resounding’ as it moves through purification.", "ritual_interpretation": "Maps to coordinated Hotṛ–Adhvaryu–Udgātṛ functions (or stotra–śastra–yajus triad) accompanying the pressing/straining; the ‘lowing’ indicates abundant outflow.", "theological_insight": "Soma is both substance and praise: its purification is inseparable from correctly ordered sacred speech; sound is a sign of ṛta manifesting.", "etymology_highlights": "kanikradat: onomatopoetic ‘ringing/crying’; hari: tawny/lustrous; udīrate: ‘rise up’—voices as upward-moving offerings." }