Soma Pavamāna’s self-purification through the filter as life-giving, rain-bestowing, and disease-removing power in the yajña
पवस्व वृष्टिमा सु नो ऽपामूर्मिं दिवस्परि अयक्ष्मा बृहतीरिषः
pavasva vṛṣṭimā su no 'pāmūrmiṃ divaspari ayakṣmā bṛhatīriṣaḥ
pavasva vṛṣṭimā su no apāmūrmiṃ divaspari ayakṣmā bṛhatīriṣaḥ
ఓ సోమా! నీవు నిన్ను నీవే పవిత్రం చేసుకో—వృష్టిదాతా, మా కొరకు మంగళకరంగా. దివ్యలోకమునుండి జలతరంగంలా ప్రవహించు. రోగరహితుడై, మహా తృప్తి మరియు పోషణను ప్రసాదించు.
pavasva | vṛṣṭi-māḥ su naḥ | apām ūrmiṃ | divaḥ pari | a-yakṣmāḥ | bṛhatīḥ iṣaḥ
Unknown/unspecified (Pavamāna sāman; exact tune requires chant-index)
{ "prastava": null, "udgitha": null, "pratihara": null, "upadrava": null, "nidhana": null, "structure_notes": "Pavamāna sāmans often use extended Prastāva stobhas to ‘set the stream’; the semantic ‘pavasva’ commonly anchors the Udgītha; final nourishment phrase can serve as Nidhana cadence.", "singer_assignments": "Prastotṛ: Prastāva; Udgātṛ: Udgītha+Upadrava; Pratihartṛ: Pratihāra; all: Nidhana." }
{ "gloss_summary": "Soma is urged to purify; ‘apām ūrmi’ is linked to Soma-washing/filtration; ‘ayakṣmā’ denotes disease-removing efficacy; ‘bṛhatīḥ iṣaḥ’ are great nourishments/boons.", "ritual_interpretation": "The verse accompanies the pavitra process: purification makes Soma fit for offering and for granting health and prosperity.", "theological_insight": "Purity is a divine attribute realized through rite; Soma becomes both cosmic rain and sacramental medicine.", "etymology_highlights": "pavasva from √pū (to purify/cleanse); yakṣma as illness/consumption; ūrmi as wave/undulation." }