पंचाग्निसाधको ग्रीष्मे जपहोमपरायणः । केनचित्त्वथ कालेन तस्य धेनुः पयस्विनी । नंदिनीति सुविख्याता सा वै कामदुघा शुभा
paṃcāgnisādhako grīṣme japahomaparāyaṇaḥ | kenacittvatha kālena tasya dhenuḥ payasvinī | naṃdinīti suvikhyātā sā vai kāmadughā śubhā
En été, il pratiquait l’austérité des cinq feux et se vouait au japa et au homa. Puis, au bout d’un temps, il obtint une vache donnant du lait, renommée Nandinī—vraiment de bon augure, telle une Kāmadhenu exauçant les vœux et dispensant l’abondance.
Sūta
Listener: Dvija-śreṣṭhas/ṛṣis
Scene: In the blazing summer, Vasiṣṭha sits amid the five fires, chanting and offering oblations; beside the hermitage stands Nandinī, the radiant wish-fulfilling cow, overflowing with milk—an auspicious sign of dharma’s abundance.
Austerity joined with japa and homa generates spiritual power and divine support that sustains dharma.
The Arbuda-māhātmya context continues; the episode introduces Nandinī, pivotal to the forthcoming sanctification narrative.
Pañcāgni-sādhana (five-fire penance), japa (mantra repetition), and homa (fire offerings).