Kanda, Prapathaka, Paragraph
1 1, 5, 8 | wins all the domesticated animals. 'Ye are water; may I share
2 2, 1, 1 | many are the domesticated animals; verily by their characteristics
3 2, 1, 8 | producer of pairings of animals [3]; verily he has recourse
4 2, 1, 8 | share; verily he produces animals in pairs for him, for in
5 2, 4, 6 | these offerings, the tame animals are seven, the wild seven;
6 2, 6, 1 | winter. Therefore in winter animals over which the cry of 'Hail!'
7 2, 6, 2 | sacrifice to support both those animals which have incisors on one
8 3, 4, 3 | sound kikkita the domestic animals stop, the wild run away.
9 3, 4, 3 | serves) to support domestic animals. He offers while the circumambulation
10 4, 2, 10| Injure not this biped of animals,~O hundred-eyed one, being
11 5, 1, 4 | gather with the skin of tame animals he would afflict with pain
12 5, 1, 4 | would afflict with pain tame animals; he gathers with a black
13 5, 1, 4 | afflicts with pain wild animals [2]; therefore of animals
14 5, 1, 4 | animals [2]; therefore of animals of even birth the wild animals
15 5, 1, 4 | animals of even birth the wild animals are the smaller, for they
16 5, 1, 5 | best burden-gatherer of animals. He gathers with the ass;
17 5, 1, 5 | becomes fat beyond other animals, for by it they gather food
18 5, 1, 5 | is born as the least of animals, for Agni burns his place
19 5, 1, 8 | To the fires he offers animals; the fires are desires;
20 5, 1, 8 | he were not to offer the animals, then he would not obtain
21 5, 1, 8 | then he would not obtain animals [2]; if he were to let them
22 5, 1, 8 | exhausted; in that he offers the animals, he wins thereby animals;
23 5, 1, 8 | animals, he wins thereby animals; in that he lets them go
24 5, 1, 8 | that metre of Prajapati, animals are hairy; verily he wins
25 5, 1, 8 | are hairy; verily he wins animals. There are all forms in
26 5, 2, 5 | restrain Agni. So many are animals, bipeds and quadrupeds;
27 5, 2, 7 | transversely; therefore animals move their limbs transversely,
28 5, 2, 8 | fire is an animal here [2]; animals do not find pleasure in
29 5, 2, 8 | he puts down, to support animals; with two (verses), for
30 5, 2, 8 | tortoise is the intelligence of animals; in that he puts down the
31 5, 2, 8 | puts down the tortoise, animals resort there, seeing their
32 5, 2, 8 | that the heads of the dead animals are deposited, a burial-ground
33 5, 2, 8 | the east facing west the animals attend the sacrifice. If
34 5, 2, 9 | thousand of cattle, the other animals a thousand; in the middle
35 5, 2, 9 | puts down the heads of the animals; the heads of the animals
36 5, 2, 9 | animals; the heads of the animals are cattle; verily he wins
37 5, 2, 9 | with him. So many are the animals [4], bipeds and quadrupeds;
38 5, 2, 9 | puts down the heads of the animals. 'I appoint for thee N.N.
39 5, 2, 9 | of the wild; therefore of animals born at one time the animals
40 5, 2, 9 | animals born at one time the animals of the wild are the smaller,
41 5, 2, 9 | looking with the heads of the animals, (the snakes) would bite
42 5, 2, 9 | the snakes) would bite the animals of the village; if turned
43 5, 2, 9 | snake, he injures not the animals of the village, nor those
44 5, 2, 10| therefore transversely do animals move their limbs, for support.
45 5, 3, 1 | therefore man is overlord of animals.~
46 5, 3, 12| on the right from other animals. The mat is of reeds; the
47 5, 4, 3 | the milk of domesticated animals [1], he would afflict domestic
48 5, 4, 3 | he would afflict domestic animals with pain; if (with that)
49 5, 4, 3 | if (with that) of wild (animals), wild (animals); he should
50 5, 4, 3 | of wild (animals), wild (animals); he should offer with groats
51 5, 4, 3 | neither domesticated nor wild animals. Then they say, 'Wild sesame
52 5, 4, 3 | neither domesticated nor wild animals. The Angirases going to
53 5, 4, 4 | it) with a frog; this of animals is the one on which one
54 5, 4, 5 | transversely; therefore animals move their limbs transversely,
55 5, 4, 9 | domesticated, seven wild [ 1] animals; (verily it serves) to win
56 5, 4, 12| the horse the highest of animals; verily by the highest he
57 5, 4, 12| metres, different sets of animals are offered, both domesticated
58 5, 5, 1 | cutting it in two. The male animals belong to Indra; in that
59 5, 5, 1 | to make up all forms of animals; its hairs are [2] the form
60 5, 5, 5 | deities, overlords of these animals; to them he is cut off who
61 5, 5, 5 | puts down the heads of the animals. He puts down the gold bricks;
62 5, 5, 5 | places the domesticated animals, with pain he afflicts the
63 5, 5, 5 | pain he afflicts the wild animals; what then does he leave?'
64 5, 5, 5 | healing for the domesticated animals, he hurts them not. The
65 5, 5, 7 | it up, he would sever the animals from the chips; one stake
66 5, 5, 7 | of heaven, nor sever the animals from the chips. He who piling
67 5, 7, 10| he puts down the heads of animals, he piles it [1], winning
68 5, 7, 10| every side. The heads of animals are bricks, breath supporting,
69 5, 7, 10| he puts down the heads of animals, the sacrificer breathes
70 5, 7, 10| The fire is an animal, animals are food, the heads of animals
71 5, 7, 10| animals are food, the heads of animals are this fire; if he desire
72 5, 7, 10| down for him the heads of animals more closely together; his
73 6, 1, 6 | returned with the (sacrificial) animals and consecration. Therefore
74 6, 1, 8 | There are seven domesticated animals, and seven wild; there are
75 6, 1, 8 | metres to win both sets of animals. 'Thou art a Vasvi, thou
76 6, 2, 3 | boon; let me be overlord of animals.' Therefore is Rudra overlord
77 6, 2, 3 | Therefore is Rudra overlord of animals. Rudra let it go; it cleft
78 6, 3, 7 | seven; there are seven tame animals, seven wild; there are seven
79 6, 4, 5 | reason is it that three animals take by the hand?' In that
80 6, 4, 5 | therefore there are three animals which take by the hand,
81 6, 5, 8 | the forms of pairings of animals; verily he places form in
82 6, 5, 8 | verily he places form in animals. The gods sought to slay
83 6, 5, 10| and Manthin, whole-hooved animals through the season-cups,
84 6, 5, 11| used once only the wild animals go to the forest; through
85 6, 5, 11| used again the domestic animals come back again to the village.
86 6, 6, 4 | harms not domestic nor wild animals. Prajapati created offspring;
87 6, 6, 5 | he should interchange the animals; verily he causes the people
88 7, 2, 2 | be win all the domestic animals. He, who knowing thus sacrifices
89 7, 2, 2 | nights, wins all domestic animals. (The rite) is of seven
90 7, 2, 2 | nights; the domesticated animals are seven, the wild seven,
|