Pṛthu Mahārāja Milks the Earth (Bhūmi-dugdha) and Organizes Human Settlement
वटवत्सा वनस्पतय: पृथग्रसमयं पय: । गिरयो हिमवद्वत्सा नानाधातून् स्वसानुषु ॥ २५ ॥
vaṭa-vatsā vanaspatayaḥ pṛthag rasamayaṁ payaḥ girayo himavad-vatsā nānā-dhātūn sva-sānuṣu
樹木はバニヤン(菩提樹)を仔牛として、さまざまに甘美な樹液を乳として搾り取った。山々はヒマラヤを仔牛とし、峰々を器として、多種多様な鉱物・金属を乳のごとく搾り出した。
This verse states that trees yield different saps and mountains yield various minerals—portrayed as ‘milk’ drawn from the Earth—showing that nature supplies abundance when cosmic order is restored.
In the Earth-milking imagery, a ‘calf’ stimulates the flow of a specific yield; the Himalayas represent the mountains’ own principle that draws out minerals and metals from the Earth.
It encourages seeing nature as sacred and regulated by dharma: responsible leadership and ethical living support sustainable prosperity rather than exploitative extraction.