Pitṛ-śrāddha-haviḥ-phala-nirdeśa
Offerings for Ancestors and Their Stated Results
अश्रृत्थस्थो3ग्निरित्येवमाह देवान् भृगूद्गवह | भुगुश्रेष्ठ॒ तदनन्तर देवराज इन्द्रके ऐरावतकी भाँति कोई विशालकाय गजराज देवताओंसे बोला--'अश्वत्थ अग्निरूप है'
aśvatthastho 'gnir ity evam āha devān bhṛgūdgvaha | bhṛguśreṣṭha tad-anantaraṃ devarāja indraḥ airāvataka iva viśālakāyo gajarājo devatābhyo 'bravīt— “aśvattho 'gnirūpaḥ” |
Bhīṣma said: “Thus did Bhṛgu, the foremost of his line, address the gods: ‘The fire is stationed in the aśvattha tree.’ Thereafter Indra, king of the gods—like Airāvata, a mighty lord of elephants—spoke to the deities, affirming: ‘The aśvattha is of the nature of fire.’” The passage sets forth a sacred identification, bidding one treat the revered tree with the same caution and reverence due to fire.
भीष्म उवाच
The verse conveys a sacral identification: the aśvattha is to be regarded as embodying fire (Agni). Ethically, it encourages reverence and careful conduct toward sacred natural forms, treating them as bearers of divine power rather than mere objects.
Bhīṣma recounts a statement attributed to the Bhṛgu tradition about fire being ‘in’ the aśvattha. Indra then addresses the gods, reinforcing the same identification—presented with the imagery of a mighty elephant-lord—thereby authoritatively confirming the sacred status of the aśvattha.