Puṣkara Sacrifice: Gāyatrī’s Marriage, Sāvitrī’s Wrath, Rudra’s Test, and the Tīrtha-Māhātmya
वरं वरय भो ब्रह्मन्हृदि यत्ते प्रियं स्थितम् । सर्वं तव प्रदास्यामि अदेयं नास्ति मे प्रभो
varaṃ varaya bho brahmanhṛdi yatte priyaṃ sthitam | sarvaṃ tava pradāsyāmi adeyaṃ nāsti me prabho
အို ဘြာဟ္မဏ၊ ဆုတောင်းတစ်ပါးကို ရွေးချယ်ပါ—သင်၏နှလုံး၌ ချစ်မြတ်နိုးသောအရာကို။ ကျွန်ုပ်သည် အရာအားလုံးကို ပေးအပ်မည်; အရှင်ဘုရား၊ ကျွန်ုပ်အတွက် မပေးနိုင်သောအရာ မရှိပါ။
Unspecified (a benefactor addressing 'Brahman')
Concept: Dāna offered with humility to a Brahman/holy person is presented as limitless when motivated by reverence rather than bargaining.
Application: Give within your means but with an ungrudging heart; make offerings (time, resources, attention) without keeping a mental ledger.
Primary Rasa: vira
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A solemn sacrificial pavilion with a blazing altar; a noble benefactor stands with folded hands before a serene Brahmā-like brāhmaṇa figure, offering an open casket of gifts—gold, cloth, and sacred vessels—signifying ‘nothing is ungivable.’ Attendants hold water-pots and kusa grass, while the fire’s sparks rise like mantras made visible.","primary_figures":["Benefactor (yajamāna)","Brahmā (or Brahman sage as recipient)","Ritual priests (ṛtviks)"],"setting":"Vedic yajña-śālā with vedi, kuṇḍa, ladles, kusa mats, and offering trays","lighting_mood":"temple lamp-lit","color_palette":["saffron orange","smoke gray","gold leaf","deep maroon","ivory white"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: a grand yajña pavilion with a central homa-kunda rendered in embossed gold leaf; the benefactor in rich maroon silk offering jeweled vessels to a calm Brahmā/brāhmaṇa seated on a lotus-like pedestal; ornate crowns, gem-studded ornaments, thick gold outlines, deep reds and greens, sacred fire highlighted with gold shimmer, traditional South Indian iconography.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: delicate yajña scene with fine linework—kusa grass, ladles, and small offerings precisely detailed; the benefactor bows with humility, Brahmā/brāhmaṇa serene; cool, lyrical palette with soft hills in the distance, refined faces, gentle smoke curling upward like calligraphy.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold black outlines and flat natural pigments; the yajña fire as a stylized orange-red motif; large expressive eyes on figures; the benefactor’s offering gesture emphasized; red/yellow/green palette with temple-wall symmetry and ritual objects simplified into iconic forms.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: a devotional offering scene framed by lotus borders; the yajña pavilion stylized with floral motifs; attendants and ritual vessels arranged symmetrically; deep indigo background with gold accents, peacocks at the corners, intricate vine patterns around the central act of giving."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Yaman","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["crackling sacrificial fire","soft temple bells","low priestly chanting","conch shell (distant)"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: ब्रह्मन्हृदि = ब्रह्मन् + हृदि; यत्ते = यत् + ते; नास्ति = न + अस्ति
It expresses absolute willingness to grant a boon—an ideal of generosity and openness—inviting the addressee to ask for what is truly cherished in the heart.
Even without naming a specific deity, the verse models devotional ethics: humility in address and wholehearted giving, which are core virtues in Bhakti-oriented narratives.
In this context, 'Brahman' is a respectful form of address meaning a Brahmin/sage (or a revered spiritual authority). The verse itself does not provide enough context to identify the exact individual.