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subhashitabhartrhariniti-shatakahumility

𑌭𑌵𑌨𑍍𑌤𑌿 𑌨𑌮𑍍𑌰𑌾𑌸𑍍𑌤𑌰𑌵𑌃 𑌫𑌲𑍋𑌦𑍍𑌗𑌮𑍈𑌃

Bhavanti Namras Taravah Phalodgamaih in Grantha · 𑌗𑍍𑌰𑌨𑍍𑌥

🕉️ hindu·📿 3× repetitions·🕐 Morning reflection, or in moments of success, achievement or recognition·📜 Niti Shataka of Bhartrhari (Subhashita)
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Origin & Story

Niti Shataka of Bhartrhari (Subhashita) · Bhartrhari · Classical Sanskrit literature (c. 5th century CE)

In his Niti Shataka, Bhartrhari repeatedly praises the character of the sajjana, the truly good person. Here he turns to nature for his lesson: the heavily fruiting tree and the water-bearing cloud both bend humbly toward the earth. From these images he draws the principle that the benevolent grow more modest as they grow more prosperous, making humility the very signature of a generous soul.

As told in scripture

Teachers of niti often recount how this verse alone has softened proud hearts, for once a person truly sees the bowing tree and the descending cloud as mirrors of the noble soul, arrogance in prosperity begins to feel unnatural and humility becomes its own quiet reward.

The Mantra

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𑌭𑌵𑌨𑍍𑌤𑌿 𑌨𑌮𑍍𑌰𑌾𑌸𑍍𑌤𑌰𑌵𑌃 𑌫𑌲𑍋𑌦𑍍𑌗𑌮𑍈𑌃 𑌨𑌵𑌾𑌮𑍍𑌬𑍁𑌭𑌿𑌰𑍍𑌭𑍂𑌮𑌿𑌵𑌿𑌲𑌮𑍍𑌬𑌿𑌨𑍋 𑌘𑌨𑌾𑌃। 𑌅𑌨𑍁𑌦𑍍𑌧𑌤𑌾𑌃 𑌸𑌤𑍍𑌪𑍁𑌰𑍁𑌷𑌾𑌃 𑌸𑌮𑍃𑌦𑍍𑌧𑌿𑌭𑌿𑌃 𑌸𑍍𑌵𑌭𑌾𑌵 𑌏𑌵𑍈𑌷 𑌪𑌰𑍋𑌪𑌕𑌾𑌰𑌿𑌣𑌾𑌮𑍍॥

bhavanti namrās taravaḥ phalodgamaiḥ navāmbubhir bhūmi-vilambino ghanāḥ। anuddhatāḥ sat-puruṣāḥ samṛddhibhiḥ svabhāva evaiṣa paropakāriṇām॥

Meaning:Trees bow low under the burden of their fruit; rain-laden clouds hang down close to the earth with fresh water; and noble people remain unassuming in the midst of their prosperity — for this very humility is the natural disposition of those who live to benefit others. Bhartrhari draws on nature itself to show that true greatness expresses itself through gentleness, not arrogance.

Word-by-Word Meaning

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𑌭𑌵𑌨𑍍𑌤𑌿🔊bhavantibecome, are
𑌨𑌮𑍍𑌰𑌾𑌃🔊namrāḥbent low, humble, bowing down
𑌤𑌰𑌵𑌃🔊taravaḥtrees
𑌫𑌲𑍋𑌦𑍍𑌗𑌮𑍈𑌃🔊phalodgamaiḥby the appearance/burden of fruit
𑌨𑌵𑌾𑌮𑍍𑌬𑍁𑌭𑌿𑌃🔊navāmbubhiḥwith fresh (rain) water
𑌭𑍂𑌮𑌿𑌵𑌿𑌲𑌮𑍍𑌬𑌿𑌨𑌃🔊bhūmi-vilambinaḥhanging low toward the earth
𑌘𑌨𑌾𑌃🔊ghanāḥclouds
𑌅𑌨𑍁𑌦𑍍𑌧𑌤𑌾𑌃🔊anuddhatāḥunarrogant, free of pride, not haughty
𑌸𑌤𑍍𑌪𑍁𑌰𑍁𑌷𑌾𑌃🔊sat-puruṣāḥgood and noble people, the virtuous
𑌸𑌮𑍃𑌦𑍍𑌧𑌿𑌭𑌿𑌃🔊samṛddhibhiḥby/with prosperity, riches, abundance
𑌸𑍍𑌵𑌭𑌾𑌵𑌃🔊svabhāvaḥnatural disposition, innate nature
𑌏𑌵 𑌏𑌷𑌃🔊eva eṣaḥthis indeed (is)
𑌪𑌰𑍋𑌪𑌕𑌾𑌰𑌿𑌣𑌾𑌮𑍍🔊paropakāriṇāmof the benevolent, those who help others

Benefits of Chanting Bhavanti Namras Taravah Phalodgamaih

Cultivates humility and grace, especially in times of success and abundance

Teaches that true greatness reveals itself through gentleness, not pride

Inspires a spirit of selfless service (paropakara) toward others

A beautiful nature-based meditation for daily character reflection

Counters arrogance and ego as one grows in wealth, status or knowledge

A timeless verse for value education and self-cultivation

How to Chant Bhavanti Namras Taravah Phalodgamaih

Repetitions3times
Best TimeMorning reflection, or in moments of success, achievement or recognition

Recite the verse and picture its three images — the fruit-laden tree bowing, the rain cloud sinking low, the noble person staying humble in prosperity. Let each image deepen your resolve to remain unassuming and generous. It is best used as a contemplative reminder to meet success with humility and to serve others quietly.

Frequently Asked Questions

This page shows the complete Bhavanti Namras Taravah Phalodgamaih written in the Grantha script — the same Sanskrit/Hindi verses, transliterated character-by-character so you can read and chant comfortably. Tap any line (or the ▶ button) to hear it recited aloud.
Yes — only the script changes; the words and their meaning are the original. The verse-by-verse meaning, benefits and how-to-chant guidance on this page apply exactly the same.
It means 'trees become bent low by the burden of fruit.' The full verse compares fruit-laden trees and rain-filled clouds, which both bow toward the earth, to noble people who remain humble amid prosperity — showing that humility is the natural way of the benevolent.
It is from the Niti Shataka of Bhartrhari, the renowned Sanskrit poet-philosopher, in his hundred verses on ethics and right living.
That genuine greatness and prosperity should make a person more humble and giving, not more arrogant. The natural world itself models this: abundance causes the tree and the cloud to bend low, just as it makes the noble person gentle and unassuming.

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