Parīkṣit’s Final Absorption, Takṣaka’s Bite, Janamejaya’s Snake Sacrifice, and the Vedic Sound-Lineage
तेनासौ चतुरो वेदांश्चतुर्भिर्वदनैर्विभु: । सव्याहृतिकान् सोंकारांश्चातुर्होत्रविवक्षया ॥ ४४ ॥
tenāsau caturo vedāṁś caturbhir vadanair vibhuḥ sa-vyāhṛtikān soṁkārāṁś cātur-hotra-vivakṣayā
その音声の集成によって、全能の梵天は四つの口より四ヴェーダを顕し、聖なるオーム(oṁkāra)と七つのヴ்யाहリティの唱えを伴わせ、四ヴェーダの祭官の職分に応じたヴェーダ祭祀の道を弘めようとした。
This verse explains that the four Vedas, along with Oṁ and the vyāhṛtis, were manifested through four mouths to establish the fourfold Vedic recitation used in sacrifice.
Because they function as foundational sacred utterances in Vedic chanting and yajña, supporting the structure of Vedic recitation (including the fourfold sacrificial system).
It highlights that sacred sound (especially Oṁ and Vedic mantras) is a primary means of aligning consciousness with the divine—encouraging disciplined chanting, attentive recitation, and reverence for revealed wisdom.