The Exposition of the Saptamī Vow Observed Across Twelve Months
Saptamī-vrata-prakāśana
तस्याहं पुत्रतां यास्ये स्वांशेन भृशतोषितः । तस्माज्जितेंद्रियो भूत्वा समुपोष्य दिवानिशम् ॥ ६६ ॥
tasyāhaṃ putratāṃ yāsye svāṃśena bhṛśatoṣitaḥ | tasmājjiteṃdriyo bhūtvā samupoṣya divāniśam || 66 ||
అతనిపై నా స్వాంశముతో అత్యంత ప్రసన్నుడనై నేను అతని కుమారుడిగా జన్మిస్తాను. కాబట్టి ఇంద్రియజయుడై పగలు-రాత్రి విధిగా ఉపవాసం చేయవలెను.
Narada (quoting the Lord’s vow/assurance within the narrative)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: bhakti
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It teaches that intense devotion and disciplined vrata can draw divine grace so powerfully that the Lord Himself agrees to manifest for the devotee, even as a son—showing God’s responsiveness to bhakti.
Bhakti is shown as practical and embodied: the Lord is ‘pleased’ (toṣitaḥ) by sincere observance and purity, and the devotee’s self-restraint (jitendriya) becomes the foundation for receiving divine presence and protection.
The verse emphasizes ritual discipline (vrata/upavāsa) and ethical self-control rather than a technical Vedanga; it highlights correct observance—continuous fasting ‘day and night’—as a regulated practice within dharma.