45. With an ointment etc.: for various objects.
[Bhṛgu.—daça. 1-5. āñjanadevatyam; 6-10. mantroktadevatyam. 1, 2. anuṣṭubh; 3-5. triṣṭubh; 6-10. 1-av. mahābṛhatī (6. virāj; 7-10. nicṛṭ).]
⌊Prose in part, vss. 6-10.⌋ Found (except vs. 9) also in Pāipp. xv., next after our 44. The practical use is, according to the comm., the same with that of 44.
Translated: Griffith, ii. 301.
1. Bringing together witchcraft to the house of the witchcraft-maker, as it were debt from debt, do thou, O ointment, crush in the ribs of the hostile eye-conjurer.
With the second half-verse compare ii. 7. 5 c, d. The first half seems to mean "paying back or returning...as debt upon debt, or repeated debt"; this is, except for the sense given to the ablative ṛṇāt (which he explains by ṛṇāt...bhītaḥ, or, alternatively, ṛṇadātur uttamarṇāt: both wrongly), the understanding of the comm. ⌊Griffith says: "As debt from debt: as a man returns to his creditor a part of what he owes him."⌋ Many of the authorities give riṇā́d riṇám (Ppp. has ṛṇ-); and some accent the first syllable, ri- or ṛ-. At the end of a, nearly all have saṁnayáṁ (p. sam॰nayám), but the comm. saṁnayan, which SPP. adopts (saṁnáyan) and which is followed in the translation above, as being a smaller alteration of the original than our emendation sáṁ naya, and at least equally acceptable in point of sense. In c the comm. has the bad reading cakṣur mitrasya. Ppp. ends d with āñjanam.
2. What evil-dreaming [is] in us, what in [our] kine, and what in our house, also the...of one hostile, let him that is unfriendly take upon himself (prati-muc).
*⌊The reciter V., curiously, has as an alternative, durhā́rdo ‘priyás, which (the accent being wrong) is neither one thing nor the other, but may well be taken as supporting the comm's reading ápriyas, as against priyás; the true saṁhitā-reading would then be durhā́rdó ‘priyaḥ.⌋
⌊The solution of this desperate passage seems to me to be suggested by 57. 5 below, of which the first part is identical with our a, b here, and of which the second part begins with anāsmākás tád and ends (nearly like v. 14. 3 d) with niṣkám iva (pronounce niṣkéva) práti muñcatām. In our c, d I would read anāsmākás tád durhā́rdó ‘priyaḥ práti muñcatām (pada-reading duḥ॰hā́rdaḥ: ápriyaḥ), and render 'that let him who is not