Shloka 113

लेभे च कामांस्तान्‌ सर्वान्‌ पावकादिति न: श्रुतम्‌,'सुना है कि उन्हें अग्निदेवसे वे सभी मनोवाञ्छित फल प्राप्त हो गये थे। उन्होंने एक हजार वर्षोतक बारंबार दर्श, पौर्णमास, चातुर्मास्य तथा अश्वमेध यज्ञोंका अनुष्ठान किया था

lebhe ca kāmāṁs tān sarvān pāvakād iti naḥ śrutam | sahasra-varṣotkaṁ bāraṁbāra darśa-paurṇamāsa-cāturmāsya-aśvamedha-yajñānām anuṣṭhānaṁ kṛtavān iti |

Vāyu said: “We have heard that he obtained all those desired boons from Pāvaka (Agni). It is said that he repeatedly performed the Darśa and Paurṇamāsa rites, the Cāturmāsya sacrifices, and even the Aśvamedha—continuing such sacrificial observances for a thousand years.”

लेभेobtained
लेभे:
Karta
TypeVerb
Rootलभ्
FormPerfect (Liṭ), 3, Singular, Parasmaipada
and
:
TypeIndeclinable
Root
कामान्desired objects/boons
कामान्:
Karma
TypeNoun
Rootकाम
FormMasculine, Accusative, Plural
तान्those
तान्:
Karma
TypePronoun
Rootतद्
FormMasculine, Accusative, Plural
सर्वान्all
सर्वान्:
Karma
TypeAdjective
Rootसर्व
FormMasculine, Accusative, Plural
पावकात्from (the god) Pāvaka/Agni
पावकात्:
Apadana
TypeNoun
Rootपावक
FormMasculine, Ablative, Singular
इतिthus (quotative)
इति:
TypeIndeclinable
Rootइति
नःof us / to us
नः:
TypePronoun
Rootअस्मद्
FormGenitive, Plural
श्रुतम्heard (it is heard/known)
श्रुतम्:
TypeVerb
Rootश्रु
Formkta (past passive participle), Neuter, Nominative, Singular

वायुदेव उवाच

V
Vāyu (Vāyudeva)
P
Pāvaka (Agni, Fire-god)
D
Darśa sacrifice
P
Paurṇamāsa sacrifice
C
Cāturmāsya sacrifices
A
Aśvamedha sacrifice

Educational Q&A

The verse highlights the traditional idea that sustained, disciplined performance of Vedic duties (yajñas and periodic rites) is believed to generate merit and lead to the fulfillment of legitimate desires—yet it also implicitly frames such attainments as dependent on divine sanction (here, Agni/Pāvaka).

Vāyu reports a received tradition: a certain person is said to have gained all wished-for results from Agni and to have undertaken major sacrificial observances repeatedly—Darśa-Paurṇamāsa, Cāturmāsya, and Aśvamedha—over an immense span of a thousand years, emphasizing extraordinary ritual commitment.