Previous Verse
Next Verse

Shloka 45

Pitṛ-śrāddha-haviḥ-phala-nirdeśa

Offerings for Ancestors and Their Stated Results

उत्पादने तथोपायमभिजम्मुश्न मानवा: । आपो रसालले यास्तु संस्पृष्टाश्चित्रभानुना

utpādane tathopāyam abhijajñuḥ manuṣyāḥ | āpo rasātale yās tu saṃspṛṣṭāś citrabhānunā, bhārgava! |

Bhīṣma said: “O Bhārgava, in order to bring forth fire, human beings discovered the method—namely, producing it by friction (of the śamī-wood). And the waters that, in the netherworld (Rasātala), came into contact with the Fire-god (Citrabhānu) become heated by his radiance; releasing that heat, they emerge as warm mountain springs.”

{'utpādane''in producing, in bringing forth (especially fire here)', 'upāya': 'means, method, practical device', 'abhijajñuḥ': 'they came to know, they discovered', 'manuṣyāḥ': 'human beings', 'āpaḥ': 'waters', 'rasātale': 'in Rasātala, the nether region', 'yāḥ tu': 'those which indeed', 'saṃspṛṣṭāḥ': 'touched, contacted', 'citrabhānunā': 'by Citrabhānu (a name of Agni, the Fire-god)', 'bhārgava': 'O Bhārgava (descendant of Bhṛgu
{'utpādane':

भीष्म उवाच

B
Bhīṣma
B
Bhārgava (a Bhṛgu-descendant sage, addressee)
A
Agni
C
Citrabhānu
R
Rasātala
Ś
śamī (wood used for fire-churning)
M
mountain springs (heated waters)

Educational Q&A

The passage links human ingenuity and ritual knowledge (discovering fire by friction) with a dharmic-cosmic view of nature: phenomena like hot springs are explained as effects of Agni’s presence and power, reinforcing reverence for elemental forces central to Vedic life.

Bhīṣma addresses a Bhārgava sage and explains (1) how people learned the practical method of manifesting fire through churning wood (śamī), and (2) why certain waters become hot—because they touched Agni in Rasātala and later release that heat as warm springs.