अग्निष्टोमादयो यज्ञा ये प्रोक्ताः प्राक्स्वयंभुवा । अन्यदेहांतरे स्वर्गः प्राप्यते तैः कृतैर्नृप
agniṣṭomādayo yajñā ye proktāḥ prāksvayaṃbhuvā | anyadehāṃtare svargaḥ prāpyate taiḥ kṛtairnṛpa
أيها الملك، إن القرابين التي تبدأ بأغنيشْطوما وغيرها، والتي علّمها قديمًا المولودُ بذاته (براهما)، تُفضي حقًّا إلى السماء؛ غير أنّ تلك السماء لا تُنال إلا بعد الدخول في جسدٍ آخر، أي بعد الموت، بفضل أداء تلك الشعائر.
Vasiṣṭha (implied from the surrounding dialogue with Triśaṅku)
Listener: Triśaṅku
Scene: Vasiṣṭha enumerates Vedic sacrifices—Agniṣṭoma foremost—while explaining that their heaven is reached only after leaving the present body.
Vedic sacrifices can grant heavenly merit, but their fruition is generally post-mortem; the verse contrasts delayed ritual reward with the desire for immediate attainment.
This verse itself speaks generally of yajña and svarga; the broader Tīrthamāhātmya context frames the teaching within sacred-geography praise, but no single tīrtha is named in this line.
Performance of Vedic sacrifices such as the Agniṣṭoma is referenced as the means to attain svarga.