यथास्वं लोकपालानाम् इन्द्रादीनां विशेषतः वनस्पतेश्च विद्वद्भिर् होमः कार्यो द्विजातिभिः //
yathāsvaṃ lokapālānām indrādīnāṃ viśeṣataḥ vanaspateśca vidvadbhir homaḥ kāryo dvijātibhiḥ //
En el orden debido, los dvija (dos veces nacidos), versados en el rito, deben realizar el homa—las ofrendas al fuego sagrado—para los Lokapālas (Guardianes de los Mundos), en especial para Indra y los demás dioses, y también para Vanaspati, señor de la vegetación y de los árboles.
This verse is not about Pralaya; it focuses on maintaining cosmic order through prescribed homa offerings to world-guardians like Indra and to Vanaspati, reflecting a dharmic way of sustaining harmony rather than describing dissolution.
It frames a core duty of dharmic life: qualified dvijas should perform fire-offerings to key cosmic administrators (Lokapālas, Indra) and to Vanaspati, implying that rulers and householders support social and ecological well-being through properly conducted yajña/homa.
Ritually, it emphasizes correct allocation (“yathāsvaṃ”) and competent performance (“vidvadbhiḥ”) of homa to specific deities—principles that also underpin temple and Vastu-linked consecration rites where offerings are made in precise order to directional deities and cosmic powers.