Vasiṣṭhāpavāha: Sarasvatī’s Diversion and Viśvāmitra’s Curse (वसिष्ठापवाहः)
ऋषि: प्रसन्नस्तस्याभूत् संरम्भं च विहाय सः । मोक्षार्थ तस्य राज्यस्य जुहाव पुनराहुतिम्
ṛṣiḥ prasannastasyābhūt saṃrambhaṃ ca vihāya saḥ | mokṣārthaṃ tasya rājyasya juhāva punarāhutim ||
رِشی اس پر خوش ہوا؛ سارا ہیجان اور غضب چھوڑ کر اس نے اس راجا اور اس کی ریاست کی نجات کے لیے دوبارہ آہوتی دی۔
वैशम्पायन उवाच
Spiritual benefit (mokṣa) is best pursued through serenity and restraint: the sage first abandons saṃrambha (heated anger/agitation) and then acts for the higher good through a deliberate, purifying rite.
The narrator states that a sage, now pleased, gives up his earlier agitation and performs another fire-offering (āhuti), explicitly intending liberation connected with a king and his kingdom.