Agastya–Lopāmudrā: Marriage, Austerity, and Conditions for Conjugal Union (लोमशकथितम्)
“अमिततेजस्वी राजर्षि गयने अपने यज्ञमें जो व्यय किया था, वह पहलेके राजाओंने भी नहीं किया था और भविष्यमें भी कोई दूसरे कर सकेंगे, ऐसा सम्भव नहीं है ।। कथं तु देवा हविषा गयेन परितर्पिता: । पुन: शक्ष्यन्त्युपादातुमन्यैर्दत्तानि कानिचित्,“गयने सम्पूर्ण देवताओंको हविष्यसे भलीभाँति तृप्त कर दिया है, अब वे दूसरोंके दिये हुए हविष्यको कैसे ग्रहण कर सकेंगे?
amitatejasvī rājarṣiḥ gayena svayajñe yo vyayaḥ kṛtaḥ sa pūrvair api rājabhir na kṛtaḥ, bhaviṣyati ca anyaḥ kaścid api kartum iti na sambhāvyate. kathaṃ tu devā haviṣā gayena paritarpitāḥ punaḥ śakṣyanty upādātum anyair dattāni kānicit?
Śamaṭha dijo: «El sabio real Gayā, resplandeciente con un fulgor inconmensurable, gastó en su sacrificio tal riqueza y tales ofrendas como ni los reyes de antaño gastaron jamás—y difícilmente alguien en el porvenir podrá igualarlo. Pues si Gayā ya ha saciado por completo a todos los dioses con las oblaciones sacrificiales, ¿cómo podrían esos dioses aceptar después otras oblaciones ofrecidas por otros?»
शमठ उवाच
The verse highlights the ideal of extraordinary dharmic generosity in yajña: a ruler’s greatness is measured not by conquest but by selfless offering and sustaining cosmic order. It also raises a reflective question about limits—when merit and satisfaction are described as ‘complete,’ it prompts inquiry into how ritual efficacy and divine acceptance are to be understood.
Śamaṭha praises the legendary king-sage Gaya for an unparalleled sacrificial expenditure. He then poses a rhetorical challenge: since Gaya has already fully gratified the gods with oblations, how could those same gods accept further offerings from other sacrificers—underscoring the superlative nature of Gaya’s yajña.