स्वाहाकारस्वधाकारौ वषट्कारश्च पुत्रक । हन्तकारस्तथै वान्यस्तस्याः स्तनचतुष्टयम्
svāhākārasvadhākārau vaṣaṭkāraśca putraka | hantakārastathai vānyastasyāḥ stanacatuṣṭayam
O liebes Kind, ihre vier Zitzen sind: der Ruf „svāhā“, der Ruf „svadhā“, der Ruf „vaṣaṭ“ und ebenso der Ruf „hantā“ — dies sind ihre vier Euter.
Skanda (deduced)
Listener: पुत्रक (dear child) addressed by the speaker
Scene: A luminous cosmic cow (Dharma/Yajña-Dhenū) with four prominent teats labeled svāhā, svadhā, vaṣaṭ, hantā; subtle streams of mantra-sound flowing outward as nourishment to different classes of beings.
The cow is a ritual-cosmic symbol: offerings to gods and ancestors are integrated into a single dharmic vision of nourishment.
Not a site-specific verse; it is a dharma-ritual teaching within Dharmāraṇya’s narrative.
Recognition of svāhā/svadhā/vaṣaṭ as key ritual utterances associated with offering rites (devayajña and pitṛyajña).