Adhyaya 34 — Madālāsā’s Instruction on Sadācāra (Householder Conduct, Purity, and Daily Rites)
पर्जन्याय धरित्रीणां दद्याच्च माणके त्रयम् । वायवे च प्रतिदिशं दिग्भ्यः प्राच्यादितः क्रमात् ॥
parjanyāya dharitrīṇāṃ dadyācca māṇake trayam | vāyave ca pratidiśaṃ digbhyaḥ prācyāditaḥ kramāt ||
Người ấy nên dâng ba đơn vị māṇaka cho Parjanya (thần mưa) và cho Địa Mẫu; lại cũng dâng cho Vāyu (thần Gió) ở mỗi phương, làm lễ cúng các phương theo thứ tự, bắt đầu từ phương Đông, đúng nghi thức.
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The householder is taught to honor the sustaining forces of life—rain, earth, wind, and the cosmic quarters—before personal consumption. Ethically, it encodes gratitude and reciprocity with nature and the cosmic order (ṛta/dharma).
This passage is primarily Ācāra/Dharma instruction (not one of the strict pañcalakṣaṇa items: sarga, pratisarga, vaṃśa, manvantara, vaṃśānucarita). In Purāṇic classification it belongs to dharma-śāstra style material embedded in the Purāṇa.
Directional offerings symbolize harmonizing the practitioner’s microcosm with the macrocosm: breath (vāyu), fertility (parjanya), stability (dharitrī), and spatial order (diśaḥ). Beginning with the East reflects alignment with solar/ritual orientation.