Aindra praise invoking Indra’s sovereign power to hear the stotra and grant victory, abundance, and unhindered ritual progress
अद्य नो देव सवितः प्रजावत्सावीः सौभगम् परा दुःष्वप्न्यं सुव
adya no deva savitaḥ prajāvatsāvīḥ saubhagam parā duḥṣvapnyaṃ suva
adya no deva savitaḥ prajāvatsāvīḥ saubhagam parā duḥṣvapnyaṁ suva
วันนี้ โอ้สวิตฤ (Savitṛ) ผู้เป็นเทพ โปรดเร่งเร้าให้เรามีศุภมงคลพร้อมด้วยบุตรหลาน; และโปรดขับไล่ความฝันร้ายอันเป็นลางไม่ดีให้ไกลโพ้น.
adya | naḥ | deva | savitaḥ | prajā-vat | sāvīḥ | saubhagam | parā | duḥ-svapnyam | suva
Sāvitra-sāman (generic; specific gāna-name not supplied in input)
{ "prastava": "ō/hō-ī (typical Sāvitra opening stobha, tradition-dependent)", "udgitha": "adya no deva savitaḥ prajāvatsāvīḥ saubhagam", "pratihara": "parā duḥṣvapnyaṃ (responsive turn; may be distributed as refrain)", "upadrava": "suva (extended with stobha elongation)", "nidhana": "suva/ā (cadential prolongation; school-specific)", "structure_notes": "Sāman practice often places the imperative verb in a climactic udgītha/upadrava with elongation; the ‘driving away’ clause is given a firm response contour to ‘seal’ the ritual boundary.", "singer_assignments": "Prastotṛ initiates stobha-prastāva; Udgātṛ carries main text; Pratihartṛ answers on the apotropaic segment; all join for nidhana to stabilize auspiciousness." }
{ "gloss_summary": "Savitṛ is invoked to ‘impel’ saubhāgya together with prajā; duḥsvapnya is an inauspicious omen/dream to be driven away so the day’s rite proceeds without obstruction.", "ritual_interpretation": "A protective commencement formula: removal of omens that could spoil the sacrifice and securing continuity (prajāvat) of the sacrificial undertaking.", "theological_insight": "Divine ‘impulsion’ is the enabling cause (nimitta) for auspicious success; omens are treated as subtle impediments removable by deity-guided mantra.", "etymology_highlights": "duḥsvapnya = duḥ (bad) + svapna (dream/omen); Savitṛ from √sū/√su ‘to impel/bring forth’ as the one who sets activity in motion." }