1n-contr | cooki-grind | groin-optio | ordai-showe | shril-wealt | weare-yuva
Kanda, Prapathaka, Paragraph
502 4, 6, 8 | And they that collect the cooking-pot for the steed [2],~May their
503 6, 3, 10| gods found truth in three (cookings). He who says what is not
504 4, 5, 9 | k Homage to him of the copse, and to him of the grass [
505 5, 3, 6 | couple; upon them he bestowed copulation (with the words) 'Thou art
506 5, 1, 6 | witchcraft he should make it nine cornered; verily gathering together
507 7, 3, 20| the panicles hail!~To the corona hail!~To the branches hail!~
508 1, 1, 7 | raw flesh, send away the corpse-eating one, bring hither the fire
509 4, 7, 14| Adityas have made me~A dread corrector and overlord, sky reaching.~
510 2, 2, 9 | Varuna, this (offering) corresponds to his foe's cow which is
511 4, 5, 6 | the armoured, and to the corsleted.~o Homage to the mailed,
512 7, 4, 12| dark-necked with goats, the cotton-tree with increase, the Parna-tree
513 4, 2, 10| milk Aditya, the embryo,~Counterpart of a thousand, of every
514 2, 6, 3 | sacrificer would perish. He counts before covering, to guard
515 5, 3, 6 | hearing and seeing, did not couple; upon them he bestowed copulation (
516 5, 3, 6 | These offspring though coupling [2] were not propagated;
517 1, 7, 8 | gods go.~h May the swift coursers, who hear the call,~All
518 4, 6, 7 | horses reach the divine coursing-place~1 Thy body is fain to fly,
519 4, 6, 2 | the boon of the first of coverers.~b Since Viçvakarman is
520 1, 7, 4 | Whatever of his foe's he may covet, the name of that he should
521 2, 3, 14| thousand eyes, opening the cow-pens, with the thunderbolt in
522 4, 5, 1 | Blue-necked and ruddy,~Him the cowherds have seen,~Have seen the
523 4, 5, 9 | him who dwelleth in the cowshed, and to him of the house.~
524 5, 5, 15| offered) to Aryaman; the crab for Dhatr.~
525 4, 6, 9 | smelling, not make thee crackle;~May not the radiant pot
526 5, 7, 8 | all-knower, thy light,~Thy cracklings, thy drops,~With these pile
527 1, 5, 11| marvels of Vaiçvanara~By his craftsmanship the sage hath performed
528 5, 5, 16| 5. 16.~For the sun the crane; the deer, the peacock,
529 4, 6, 7 | steeds,~Vie together like cranes in rows,~When the horses
530 4, 6, 9 | warming,~The hooks, the crates, attend the steed.~c The
531 2, 2, 11| the Agnidh) to utter the Çrausat call, he should say, 'Utter
532 4, 4, 10| Naksatra, Visnu the deity; Çravistha the Naksatra, the Vasus [
533 5, 2, 8 | cake becoming a tortoise crawled after them [4]; in that
534 1, 7, 31| Saman of the Brahman is the Çrayantiya; the Agnistoma Saman is
535 5, 2, 2 | sacrifice where the axle creaks; 'He hath cried', he repeats,
536 2, 5, 5 | for him; Indra gives it in crease; Visnu is the sacrifice,
537 4, 7, 14| foresight.~g The creator of creators, lord of the world,~The
538 4, 5, 1 | do we deprecate.~h He who creepeth away,~Blue-necked and ruddy,~
539 5, 3, 7 | Prsthas. He puts down the five crested; verily becoming Apsarases
540 6, 2, 10| sacrifice. He fills up the crevices, for distinction; therefore
541 1, 3, 10| rejoice.~e Thou art fortune (çri).~f Let Agni cook (çrinatu)
542 5, 6, 1 | serpent,~Therefore are yo criers (nadyáh) by name;~These
543 6, 3, 9 | directions for the Svaha cries', he says [5], for the completion
544 1, 3, 10| çri).~f Let Agni cook (çrinatu) thee.~g The waters are
545 4, 4, 10| the All-gods the deity; Çrona the Naksatra, Visnu the
546 5, 5, 4 | like backs straight and crooked, like men; for wealth and
547 5, 6, 12| The dappled, the one with cross-lines dappled, the one with dappled
548 6, 1, 4 | verily making a bridge he crosses over.~
549 6, 3, 9 | from the middle; be cuts crossways, for men cut along; for
550 2, 6, 8 | transfer it (to the Brahman) crosswise, he would pierce the unwounded
551 5, 5, 19| for other men; to Agni the crow.~
552 2, 5, 3 | ready (milk) has its name (çrta). 'They have collected it;
553 7, 1, 13| be hath run hail!~To the crying of 'shoo' hail!~To him over
554 1, 7, 19| increaser of prosperity;~Like a cucumber from its stem,~From death
555 5, 7, 6 | Brilliance in Viçyas and Çudras;~With thy flame grant me
556 4, 5, 6 | to the mailed, and to the cuirassed.~p Homage to the famous,
557 4, 2, 5 | honey and milk,~And do ye, O Çuna and Sira, accord prosperity
558 5, 2, 1 | of the sun. Varuna seized Çunahçepa Ajigarti, he saw this verse
559 1, 7, 20| twelve potsherds to Indra Çunasira, milk to Vayu, to Sarya
560 2, 3, 14| mountains;~He burst their cunningly-made obstructions;~These things
561 1, 4, 29| When thou hadst drunk the cup-pressed Soma.~b Thou art taken with
562 4, 4, 5 | Meghayanti, Varsayanti, Cupunika, art thou by name, with
563 1, 1, 3 | of wealth.~m With Soma I curdle thee, curds for Indra.~n
564 5, 5, 12| these are for Pusan; the curlew to speech.~
565 3, 2, 5 | fathers; homage to your [5] custom, O fathers; homage to your
566 5, 3, 1 | various purposes and various customs, but only as regards water
567 4, 5, 3 | wanderers, to the lord of cut-purses homage!~h Homage to the
568 4, 6, 8 | fill the channels.~f The cutters of the stake, the bearers
569 5, 2, 12| v. 2. 12.~a Who cutteth thee? Who doth divide thee~
570 6, 3, 10| performs (ávadayate) by these cuttings off', and that is why the
571 3, 4, 5 | ye further, ye nearer, ye dadas, ye granddadas, do ye here
572 2, 5, 3 | ahinot) him; verily curds (dadhi) has its name. The theologians
573 2, 4, 10| by means of the gods he daily seeks rain. If it should
574 2, 5, 11| the messenger of the gods, Daivya of the Asuras; they went
575 3, 5, 8 | full of light I take; for Daksa who increases cleverness, (
576 2, 5, 5 | should sacrifice with the Daksayana sacrifice. On the full moon
577 7, 1, 12| 12.~a Many through thy dam, powerful through thy sire,
578 7, 5, 10| remove their sin. Slave girls dance round the Marjaliya fire
579 6, 2, 9 | sacrifice wins blessings. Now Danda Aupara split by the Vasat
580 5, 6, 4 | of Darbha grass [1]; the Darbhas are the ambrosia, the strength
581 2, 6, 2 | Satyakami said to Keçin Darbhya, 'The seven-footed Çakvari
582 4, 1, 9 | and enduring;~O mother, daringly show thy heroism [1];~With
583 3, 1, 11| sides.~s Indra men.~t The dark-coloured steeds with fair feathers,~
584 7, 4, 12| thee with cooked food, the dark-necked with goats, the cotton-tree
585 4, 2, 2 | among men;~He beareth and darteth forward his ruddy smoke;~
586 1, 1, 14| ninety forts~Of which the Dasas were lords ye overtbrew~
587 1, 6, 12| Indra, rolled against the Dasyus.~
588 6, 2, 3 | twelve months; verily he de lights the year. They make
589 1, 7, 25| quarters protect me; from all deadly things protect me.~m Gold
590 7, 4, 12| let the helpers help thee. Deal among dear things, best
591 1, 3, 14| for booty;~May we win, O deathless, undying glory.~i O Agni,
592 5, 6, 3 | lives all his life, for all deaths are removed by him; therefore
593 2, 1, 11| holy,~Righteous, enacting debts.~r Three earths they support,
594 7, 1, 5 | He should not break the decades lest he should thus destroy
595 1, 6, 11| N. N.', he says; by that deceit the gods deceived the Asuras;
596 5, 4, 1 | conflict, they could not decide the issue; Indra saw these
597 6, 5, 9 | confusion in the sacrifice.' He decided to offer; Agni said, Thou
598 1, 6, 12| praise Indra before the decisive day;~Him that goeth as with
599 2, 2, 12| w Agni give wealth that decketh the hero;~Agni the Rsi who
600 5, 1, 11| v. 1. 11.~a Enkindled, decking the store-room of prayers,~
601 5, 1, 10| words) he gazes; verily he declares his greatness in that form. '
602 2, 3, 14| knowing his connexion,~The god declareth all births,~From the middle
603 4, 2, 7 | and in plants;~I abandon decline, lack of food, and ill-health.~
604 7, 1, 8 | desirous of children. She deemed herself empty, without strength,
605 7, 4, 19| the deer eateth grain,~He deemeth not his flock fat.~When
606 2, 3, 11| Or as many seasons as he deems that he will live, so many
607 1, 2, 9 | without a foe,~Whereby a man defeateth all his foes and winneth
608 4, 6, 4 | driving away the enemy;~Defeating hosts, destroyer, victor
609 4, 3, 13| not with the darkness;~The defiling leave no stain in thy body.~
610 7, 4, 2 | middle one which is not defined. The Prsthas go onwards,
611 2, 2, 11| garment with a fringe, for the delectation of his fellows. He who desires
612 4, 3, 5 | lordly power in strength, the delight-giving metre; the all-creating
613 1, 5, 9 | Agni; be praised by them delivered their cattle from night
614 1, 6, 12| offer our praise to him who delivereth from trouble,~Swiftest to
615 2, 2, 7 | his own share; verily he delivers him from the misfortune,
616 1, 2, 14| the strung (weapon) of the demon-driven;~Crush our foes, kin or
617 1, 5, 8 | he makes them constant, departing not. Now one fire is piled
618 6, 1, 3 | called to them, and they depositing their might in day and night
619 4, 5, 1 | quarters [2],~Their wrath do we deprecate.~h He who creepeth away,~
620 3, 5, 3 | my foes born before me, I depress them, I repel them, in this
621 5, 6, 9 | and that would be like descending after consecration. He sets
622 2, 3, 11| upon the butter; verily he describes its form and greatness. '
623 2, 6, 12| Come with the Angirases who deserve the sacrifice~Yama, rejoice
624 3, 2, 8 | safety.~f Those who eating deserved not riches,~Whom the fires
625 2, 3, 14| of wealth, much invoked, deserving;~With a thousand eyes, opening
626 6, 3, 4 | been done.' The Sadhya gods despised the sacrifice; the sacrifice
627 6, 6, 4 | created offspring; he was destitute of proper food, he saw this
628 5, 7, 6 | an animal; now an animal destroys him who moves up to it face
629 7, 5, 7 | they say, 'for these two determine the dependent sacrifice.' '(
630 6, 6, 2 | Vasistha Satyahavya asked Devabhaga, 'When thou didst cause
631 1, 5, 3 | oblation; Vivasvan, Aditi, Devajuti, may these Adityas rejoicing
632 2, 5, 12| hath mounted the lap~Of the devious ones, rising up and clothed
633 5, 2, 9 | of the man is impure as devoid of breaths; the breaths
634 5, 7, 13| partridges; the Saman with the dewclaws; speed with the legs; health~
635 1, 6, 12| fulfilled.~k That to which Dhisana impelled me have I produced;~
636 3, 2, 10| my expiration.~m Thou art Dhuh, best of rays, guardian
637 3, 4, 11| u As gamesters cheat in dicing,~What we know in truth or
638 4, 3, 12| the covering metre; the difficult of access metre; the slow
639 1, 2, 2 | we' may pass over all our difficulties.~f Thou art the strength
640 5, 7, 11| gnawer; strength with the digester; the wild with the knee-cap;
641 4, 2, 6 | ye him healing.~t May the digger of you come to no ill,~Nor
642 7, 4, 9 | kindle themselves with the Diksas, and cook themselves with
643 3, 5, 7 | became the Khadira; he, whose dipping-spoon is make of Khadira wood,
644 6, 3, 11| vi. 3. 11.~He covers the dipping-spoons with fat; cattle are distinguished
645 1, 7, 28| of Mitra and Varuna, the directors, I yoke thee with the yoking
646 6, 4, 3 | says; verily he removes dirt from them. 'I draw you for
647 2, 5, 1 | who cleans her teeth has dirty teeth; (the son born) of
648 4, 2, 6 | With the whirlwind do thou disappear.~o Rich in steeds, rich
649 7, 2, 7 | and if the sacrifice is disarranged, they are at discord. Verily
650 5, 7, 4 | ruler, your overlord;~On his discernment do ye depend;~Upon him henceforth
651 2, 6, 2 | By Agni the sacrificer discerns the world of the gods, by
652 2, 2, 12| thousandfold;~Like doors disclose for us booty for renown;~
653 7, 1, 6 | found a thousand; Indra discovered it after him. Yama approached
654 4, 7, 3 | firmness, all [1], greatness, discovery, knowledge, begetting, procreation,
655 6, 4, 7 | said to Indra, 'Do thou discriminate this speech for us'; he
656 6, 1, 3 | girds him in the middle he discriminates between the pure and impure
657 6, 5, 10| verse) in which there is no discriminating mark; he draws with a pot,
658 1, 5, 2 | together of speech. There are discriminations, to sever speech and preserve
659 3, 5, 7 | in his oblation. The gods discussed regarding holy power; the
660 3, 3, 11| rich in offspring;~In her disfavour may we not fall;~May the
661 4, 6, 9 | juice,~The coverings of the dishes for warming,~The hooks,
662 1, 7, 18| rejoiced,~The dear ones have dispelled (evil),~The radiant sages
663 5, 6, 1 | The bitter sap of those dispensing sweetness [3], the satisfying,~
664 3, 4, 10| lost, his fire would be dispersed, it would have to be piled
665 1, 3, 6 | deeds of Visnu~Wherein he displayed his laws,~Indra's true friend.~
666 1, 7, 8 | shoulder, and the mouth;~Displaying his strength Dadhikra~Springeth
667 4, 6, 6 | we win;~The bow doth work displeasure to the foe;~By the bow let
668 4, 3, 13| Maruts, speeding like steeds,~Disport themselves like youths gazing
669 2, 5, 11| failure. Speech and mind disputed; 'I will bear the offering
670 5, 2, 12| limbs?~Who, too, is thy wise dissector?~b May the seasons in due
671 5, 2, 12| seasons in due season,~The dissectors, divide thy joints,~And
672 4, 7, 12| seven quarters,~The four distances,~Strength aid us here with
673 3, 5, 5 | cloud to fall; may Indra distil (it), may the Maruts cause (
674 6, 1, 5 | Pathya Svasti; verily he distinguishes the eastern quarter. Having
675 6, 3, 11| bestows on cattle their distinguishing mark. He covers (them) after
676 7, 3, 11| body godless, strengthless,~Distorted and inert;~May it rest with
677 1, 4, 34| hail! To effort hail! To distraction hail! To attempt hail! To
678 6, 4, 7 | They could not find its distribution; Aditi said, 'Let me choose
679 4, 6, 4 | warrior~Fond of slaughter, disturber of the people,~Bellowing,
680 6, 3, 4 | offers the chip, to avoid disturbing the sacrifice.~
681 4, 5, 7 | i Homage to him of the ditch, and to him of the lake.~
682 5, 5, 20| atmosphere; the otter, the diver, the swimmer, these for
683 5, 3, 9 | in unison, the gods would divert his fire; in that he puts (
684 2, 5, 1 | thinking), 'Such an one is diverting the sovereignty (from me).'
685 6, 2, 1 | Saccharum spontaneum and the dividing-stakes of sugar-cane, verily he
686 1, 6, 1 | the sacrificers'; for the divinities of the gods I take thee.~
687 7, 1, 5 | with Visnu; (verily the division is) just as they two agreed
688 7, 2, 9 | is Prajapati in twelve divisions. The two sides are the Atiratras,
689 5, 5, 16| Rudras the partridge; the red doe, the Kundrnaci, the Golattika,
690 4, 5, 4 | you, hunters, and to you, dog-leaders, homage!~r Homage to you
691 7, 4, 10| perform it first?' Now in doing so they really perform in
692 5, 5, 13| fish; the crocodile, the dolphin, the Kulikaya are for the
693 3, 4, 8 | kingdom he wins the king dom for him; he becomes the
694 4, 1, 8 | expanse, lording it with dominion.~g May day and night~Like
695 7, 4, 2 | verily thus the sacrificers don a protection for the breath,
696 4, 7, 13| thou create sacrifice and donation;~Making thee, his father,
697 4, 5, 10| Unstring for the generous donors (thy) strong (bows);~O bounteous
698 6, 5, 3 | sets out by the southern (door), the Pratiprasthatr by
699 4, 5, 4 | homage!~I Homage to you, doorkeepers, and to you, charioteers,
700 6, 2, 6 | from his evil foe, they doubt not of him for common meal
701 6, 2, 6 | regarding whom they have doubts as to (admitting him to)
702 4, 5, 9 | away.~o Homage to him who draggeth, and to him who repelleth.~
703 1, 3, 3 | one foot.~q Thou art the dragon of the deep.~r With thy
704 1, 3, 14| worlds,~Agni before the dreadful thunder,'~Of golden colour,
705 6, 1, 6 | oblation they pour out the dregs of the Soma; for they regard
706 3, 4, 3 | victims) up with a verse ad dressed to Vayu; verily winning
707 7, 1, 19| eateth, to that hail!~What he drinketh, to that hail!~To what he
708 3, 1, 11| Which are full of honey and drip ghee.~n Let us call for
709 2, 5, 1 | woman bathing is fated to drown; (the son born) of one who [
710 7, 5, 9 | yet been won. They beat drums; the voice of the drum is
711 4, 5, 7 | drum, and to him of the drumstick.~b Homage to the bold, and
712 2, 5, 1 | before the year is out the dug-out portion of earth grows up
713 4, 4, 5 | fellowship with me.~b Amba, Duhi, Nitatni, Abhrayanti, Meghayanti,
714 5, 6, 11| barren cows for the Sun; the dusky-spotted hornless ones are for Mitra
715 3, 3, 11| Who knowest the Hotr's duty, discerning, best bestower
716 4, 3, 3 | three-year-old the strength; the Dvapara of throws; the west wind
717 7, 5, 8 | the Ekavinça (Stoma) with Dvipada verses, for support. The
718 1, 1, 8 | q Hail to Ekata, hail to Dvita, hail to Trita.~
719 5, 6, 13| ear-holes, that with one white ear-hole, the one with both white
720 1, 5, 11| protections which ye have for the earnest worshipper,~Threefold do
721 7, 5, 9 | of) speech. They beat the earth-drum; verily they win that speech
722 2, 5, 4 | a wooden vessel, for an earthenware one does not hold the offering.
723 2, 6, 12| after;~Who are seated in the earthly region~Or who are now in
724 4, 5, 11| wind, and rain, to them ten eastwards, ten to the south, ten to
725 6, 4, 9 | thereby, his remedy becomes effective. The theologians say, 'For
726 6, 5, 9 | crushes them together, and effects both; many cattle attend
727 6, 5, 6 | pregnant, from her was born an egg which miscarried. She cooked
728 1, 1, 8 | with our prayer.~q Hail to Ekata, hail to Dvita, hail to
729 7, 2, 5 | Pañcadaça; the sacrificer the Ekavimça, the sacrificer the Trayastrinça,
730 1, 1, 5 | Do thou with good labour elaborate this offering for the gods.~
731 5, 4, 6 | verily with holy power he elevates himself, with holy power
732 6, 1, 2 | Rc raised (it), hence the elevating offering has the name. With
733 5, 2, 5 | these wings are longer by an ell; therefore birds have strength
734 1, 1, 14| f Lord of each way with eloquence;~Driven by love he went
735 1, 7, 19| rich in cattle,~That he may embolden us.~i To Tryambaka we make
736 3, 3, 3 | it~All knowledge doth he embrace,~Even as the felly the wheel.~
737 7, 2, 5 | of ten nights has three eminences [2]; the Pañcadaça (Stoma)
738 7, 2, 5 | ten nights, becomes thrice eminent among his peers. The sacrificer
739 2, 5, 1 | her food, for she keeps emitting the colour of guilt. Or
740 1, 6, 1 | overpower those who practise emnity; thou art of a thousandfold
741 2, 2, 9 | Puronuvakyas, for special employment. With the same (offering)
742 1, 7, 5 | i. 7. 5.~Through the emptying of the Dhruva the sacrifice
743 2, 1, 11| 4] the holy,~Righteous, enacting debts.~r Three earths they
744 6, 1, 6 | women love one who sings; enamoured are women of him who thus
745 1, 2, 14| overcometh godless and malign enchantments~He sharpeneth his horns
746 4, 1, 11| Which on all sides thou dost encircle,~It of a truth goeth to
747 4, 6, 6 | snake with its coils it encircleth his arm,~Fending off the
748 5, 7, 7 | sacrificer.~e With the strew, the encircling-stick,~The offering-ladle, the
749 5, 7, 9 | heart, O fathers,~May we enclose him in ourselves;~May he
750 5, 5, 4 | one in the last; verily he encloses by the two (worlds) the
751 3, 2, 8 | approveth himself homage. To the enclosing-stick which extendeth men hail!
752 1, 4, 38| encompass thee,~Even as the sun encompasses the atmosphere with its
753 2, 1, 8 | It is spacious; verily he encourages him. He who desires rain
754 1, 4, 34| hail! To attempt hail! To endeavour hail! To striving hail!
755 2, 2, 6 | 2. 6.~He who is about to engage in a conflict should offer
756 4, 6, 3 | the divine supporter, the enjoyer,~Serving the gods, benign,
757 5, 1, 7 | the sciences; verily he enkindles it with the sciences. 'May
758 4, 3, 13| Glory full of heroes.~q Enricher, slayer of disease,~Wealth-finder,
759 6, 2, 7 | thee', he says; verily he enriches the sacrificer with offspring
760 1, 5, 11| desired on earth,~Desired he entereth all the plants;~Agni Vaiçvanara
761 2, 2, 10| him from his own deity he entrusts him to Rudra; swiftly he
762 4, 3, 12| razor-with-strop metre; the enveloping metre; the side metre; the
763 7, 5, 5 | Visnu and containing the epithet Çipivista. Whatever in the
764 3, 1, 3 | lost, he should cut off an equivalent portion of the butter; that
765 7, 3, 1 | one should not point out (errors) to one who comes to grief.
766 1, 3, 4 | gods); guard it; let it escape you not.~i So, O Soma, god
767 4, 2, 4 | thy gleam, moving and men espying.~h May the Agnis of the
768 2, 6, 9 | were to say, 'That indeed (etád u) hath been glorious, O
769 2, 5, 1 | born) of one who spins is a eunuch; (the son born) of one who
770 3, 1, 2 | support to the Soma he verily (eva) gives, to the Stoma, to
771 7, 1, 19| to that hail!~To what he evacuateth, to that hail!~To the dung
772 2, 6, 2 | are in front. He offers evenly; therefore the eyes are
773 4, 2, 11| come to us,~Our wondrous, ever-waxing, friend?~With what most
774 | everywhere
775 7, 2, 1 | rite) of six nights, mount evidently upon the gods. (The rite)
776 3, 2, 10| guard it [1] let not the evil-eyed one espy this of thine.~
777 2, 5, 12| we conquer in battle the evil-minded,~Him who is fain to overpower
778 1, 2, 9 | robbers find thee;~Let not the evil-working wolves (find) thee;~Nor
779 5, 6, 19| offered) to Indrani; three ewes are for Aditi; those of
780 1, 5, 2 | the gods, Varuna is the exactor of the recompense; he should
781 1, 5, 2 | whom he slays and him who exacts the recompense he delights
782 5, 5, 6 | praise', he says; verily he exalts him.~These are the forms
783 4, 3, 10| and Adityas followed their example, theirs was the overlordship.
784 1, 4, 45| desires to be fulfilled;~None excelleth thee, O Indra.~d At each
785 7, 2, 10| his fried grain, eats his excrement, who eats his ghee, eats
786 7, 2, 10| sweat, and also he eats the excrements from his head, who accepts (
787 3, 1, 7 | spoken, guard me, from every execration' - (with these words) he
788 5, 1, 8 | it serves) to prevent the exhaustion of the heads; he concludes (
789 1, 2, 3 | for oblation, mighty, most exhilarating,~That stream of yours may
790 2, 2, 10| produces whatever splendour exists. 'Too much splendour is
791 2, 3, 1 | sustainers; the Adityas are the expellers, the Adityas are the procurers;
792 2, 3, 1 | foot (dust) of him (who is expelling him); Aditi is this (earth);
793 6, 1, 9 | it would be as when one expels from the mouth what has
794 3, 2, 6 | mightiness,~As great as the expense of the seven rivers,~So
795 3, 2, 8 | That is their offering to expiate the ill sacrifice~A good
796 4, 6, 5 | heads,~A hundred are thy expirations, a thousand thine inspirations;~
797 2, 5, 11| to a Brahman (saying), 'Explain the phrase, "Make announcement"', '
798 6, 1, 8 | verily thus by her form he expounds her greatness [1]. 'May
799 2, 4, 14| a horse well guided hath expressed.~k With Indra may splendid
800 3, 3, 5 | the lordship of the Pitrs, expugnate the waters and the plants.~
801 4, 5, 2 | homage!~l Homage to the extender of the world, the offspring
802 5, 4, 10| the Agnistoma; a further extension is performed over and above
803 5, 7, 12| between; by the gloss the external (radiance); by the knob
804 3, 4, 10| were to set out without extinguishing the smouldering embers,
805 2, 3, 12| prosperity. He should offer an extra one; whatever (horse) he
806 6, 1, 1 | destruction. Indra slew Vrtra; his eyeball fell away; it became collyrium.
807 2, 1, 6 | power. It is ruddy and has eyebrows; that is the form of Indra; (
808 7, 5, 12| which hath eyes hail!~To the eyeless hail!~To that which hath
809 7, 5, 12| hath a face hail!~To the faceless hail!~To that which hath
810 6, 5, 11| used once only the plants fade; through those which are
811 5, 3, 5 | the middle of the body is faeces (púrisa); verily he piles
812 4, 2, 5 | never is exhausted, never faileth.~o The well with buckets
813 5, 6, 2 | sprinkle with water him who is faint; he does not go to ruin,
814 4, 3, 13| Favouring is thy look, O fair-faced Agni,~That art dread and
815 7, 3, 17| different one hail!~To a fair-like one hail!~To form hail!~
816 7, 3, 18| dead black hail!~To the fair-shaped hail!~To the one of like
817 3, 3, 11| prosperity.~r O Sinivali,~s The fairhanded.~t I invoke at the sacrifice
818 7, 5, 2 | by faith, or by lack of faith-that is, those which have no
819 4, 6, 2 | thou teach thy comrades, O faithful one;~Do thou thyself sacrifice
820 3, 1, 10| its metre.~c The drop that falleth of them, that shoot,~Shaken
821 5, 6, 1 | Gazing on the truth and falsehood of men,~Dripping honey,
822 1, 2, 13| upward the sacrifice; do not falter; there rest on the height
823 3, 2, 8 | thy sin [1] creatures are famishing and troubled';~He did not
824 2, 5, 11| conquers them. Thrice he fans (the fire); the worlds of
825 1, 7, 7 | with the rushing wind,~The far-darting, powerful one, the winged
826 1, 2, 13| abode,~Stepping thrice, the far-goer.~k Thou art the forehead
827 2, 1, 11| guardians of all the universe,~Far-seeing, guarding [4] the holy,~
828 1, 3, 14| thou art lord of food;~Thou farest with ruddy winds, blessing
829 4, 6, 3 | light;~On his instigation fareth Pusan the god,~The guardian,
830 1, 5, 3 | the mother~And the father, faring to the heaven.~c Thirty
831 1, 6, 12| firm rooted,~The Rsi of farthest hearing,~The glowing pot
832 3, 2, 6 | his own place of origin he fashions offspring for him. His sacrifice
833 1, 6, 7 | man is hunger; in that he fasts without eating, he straightway
834 2, 5, 1 | with a woman bathing is fated to drown; (the son born)
835 7, 4, 17| waters full of life and fatness;~Rudra, be gracious to the
836 3, 3, 8 | strength.'~d May he that fatteneth protect us~From in front
837 3, 3, 8 | he says; the god that fattens is yonder Aditya; verily
838 6, 1, 9 | the Soma-seller in both (faults), and therefore the Soma-seller
839 4, 5, 10| auspicious,~Be auspicious and favourably inclined to us;~Placing
840 1, 7, 13| women~I have heard to be favoured with a spouse,~For never
841 4, 7, 3 | longevity, freedom from foes, fearlessness, ease of going, lying, fair
842 2, 4, 14| With Indra may splendid feasts be ours,~Rich in strength,~
843 1, 3, 14| service with hymns,~Who feedeth on bull and cow,~The disposer,
844 4, 1, 9 | to prevent breaking.~g Feeding on wood, sipping clarified
845 1, 6, 12| steeds or chariots were the fellies~Which, sped by Indra, rolled
846 5, 6, 21| heifers are for earth; two females are for the Viraj two heifers
847 1, 7, 13| granter of aid,~For ever fend far from us the enemy.~n
848 4, 6, 6 | coils it encircleth his arm,~Fending off the friction of the
849 7, 1, 6 | parts at the three-night festival; verily he makes her possessed
850 3, 5, 7 | from hence; the Gayatri fetched it, a leaf of it was cut
851 2, 2, 2 | fragrant, to smite away the fetid odour. When a battle is
852 5, 4, 11| Viçvamitra and Jamadagni had a feud with Vasistha; Jamadagni
853 5, 3, 11| conflict; the gods were the fewer, the Asuras the more; the
854 1, 7, 5 | the sacrifice the sacri ficer, throuo - h the sacrificer
855 5, 5, 18| Çaka, is for earth; the field-rat, the Kaça, the flying fox,
856 7, 4, 12| holy power (Brahman), the fig-tree with the sacrifice, the
857 7, 4, 15| found the end of thee in fight.~
858 4, 7, 14| overseer may we conquer the fighters.~b Let all the gods be at
859 4, 6, 3 | in the midst of the sky,~Filling the two worlds and the atmosphere;~
860 7, 2, 10| in which they carry food, filth is produced from it [2].
861 1, 4, 33| light.~c I place thee that findest light.~d I place thee that
862 6, 1, 9 | of its peers. With each (finger) separately [4] he measures;
863 3, 5, 5 | with more gain.~g All the fire-sticks that are thine, O Agni,~
864 1, 2, 14| on all sides spread thy firebrands.~c Send forth thy spies,
865 2, 2, 2 | having established a sacred firebreaks his vow as it were; verily
866 5, 1, 6 | Makha is the sacrifice, the firepan is his head; therefore he
867 6, 2, 10| this (earth), and makes it firm-rooted.' 'Support the sky, fill
868 4, 4, 2 | atmosphere may the Rsis firstborn among the gods extend thee
869 6, 5, 5 | arrow; with the first he fits the arrow, with the second
870 1, 6, 1 | a support, of the five five-peoples I take thee.~g For a prop,
871 7, 3, 16| vertical column hail!~To the flank hail!~To the sides hail! [
872 5, 7, 16| the breast, for Aditi the flanks, for the quarters the cervical
873 1, 4, 33| burnest.~f I place thee that flashest.~g I place thee that art
874 7, 3, 14| the king men, by fruit the flavours, by the boa constrictor
875 7, 5, 12| hath flesh hail!~To the fleshless hail!~To sinews hail!~To
876 2, 4, 7 | light, full of darkness, flooding, with fair foam,~Supporting
877 4, 2, 4 | unison with those of the floods~Accept the oblation offered,~
878 5, 1, 1 | the Rc make the Stoma to flourish', he says [3], for prosperity.
879 1, 3, 14| and gave it impulse.~s He (flourishes) with keener mind, aided
880 7, 3, 17| white-shouldered one hail!~To the flower-cared one hail!~To the white-lipped
881 4, 2, 6 | fruitful, the fruitless,~The flowering, the flowerless,~Impelled
882 4, 2, 6 | fruitless,~The flowering, the flowerless,~Impelled by Brhaspati,~
883 4, 1, 8 | being sung.~k That seminal fluid of ours, wondrous,~Abundant,
884 6, 1, 4 | drum, the lute, and the flute. In that he offers the staff
885 1, 6, 12| thine~That is in the five folks,~That do I choose of thee.~
886 5, 5, 6 | not exhausted. It has a follower to avoid monotony. He follows
887 2, 2, 8 | share; verily he makes his followers obedient to him; he becomes
888 4, 2, 5 | the thief and robber thou followest;~Seek another than us, that
889 5, 5, 4 | wise discern wisdom and folly, like backs straight and
890 4, 6, 4 | sharpening his horns, the warrior~Fond of slaughter, disturber
891 5, 6, 3 | on the mouth he bestows food-eating upon him. 'With the lordship
892 5, 2, 5 | of food, to win diverse foods. He scatters on the ploughed (
893 3, 2, 4 | the seat of another more foolish than we are.~m From the
894 3, 1, 3 | gather the dust of) the foot-print of the Soma cow; the oblation-holders
895 7, 5, 12| which hath feet hail!~To the footless hail!~To that which breatheth
896 4, 5, 2 | screaming, to the lord of footmen homage!~n Homage to the
897 4, 6, 7 | Eager to win food in the footstep of the cow;~When a mortal
898 4, 6, 4 | comrades, follow in Indra's footsteps.~f Conspicuous by might,
899 4, 5, 11| i Those that resort to fords [1],~With spears and quivers - ~
900 2, 6, 1 | must be completed (in the fore-sacrifice) before the Raksases [5]
901 6, 1, 1 | fringe to the Pitrs, the foreedge to the plants [3], the warp
902 3, 1, 1 | advance; may Brhaspati be thy forerunner', he says. Brhaspati is
903 1, 5, 2 | makes the Vasat cry with the foresacrifice; verily he leaves not his
904 1, 4, 43| laboured;~Come wise and foreseeing one to the sacrifice.~e
905 4, 4, 11| Thou art) the uniter and forethinker of Agni, Soma, Surya.~i
906 2, 6, 2 | Vasat call is a bolt; thus forges be a threefold bolt and
907 2, 4, 7 | Hail! Thundering, raining, formidable; Ravat! Hail! Thundering
908 3, 4, 9 | call. Raka is the first fortnight, Kuhu the second, Sinivali
909 1, 1, 14| Be a broad, thick, wide fortress for us,~Health and wealth
910 3, 2, 11| in three abodes~Of three foundations, the sage;~May he offer
911 7, 1, 9 | knowing thus offers the four-day rite.~
912 1, 7, 11| fourteen syllables won the fourteenfold Stoma; the Adityas with
913 5, 5, 18| field-rat, the Kaça, the flying fox, these are for the fathers;
914 2, 6, 3 | go among the gods. If one fragment were lost, one month of
915 4, 7, 3 | holy order, immortality, freeness from disease, freedom from
916 7, 5, 11| hail!~To storm hail!~To freezing hail!~To springing hail!~
917 4, 1, 7 | Agni, vie with Mitra in friendlihood;~Be thou the midmost of
918 4, 5, 10| O waster, red and blue,~Frighten not nor injure~(Any) of
919 6, 1, 9 | the eye and moves to and fro; the Adhvaryu would be hungry,
920 5, 7, 11| 11.~Flies with the teeth, frogs with the grinders; the cater
921 4, 2, 6 | With flowers, with shoots,~Fruit-bearing and without fruit,~Like
922 4, 2, 6 | safety.~p The fruitful, the fruitless,~The flowering, the flowerless,~
923 4, 7, 4 | Panicum miliaceum, Panicum frumentaceum, and wild rice (prosper
924 1, 2, 14| leadership, let us gain strength;~Fulfil both our desires, O truthful
925 4, 7, 4 | lordship, much, more, fun, fuller, imperishableness, bad crops,
926 1, 4, 14| pressed drink, the delightful fumes~Drink ye of it, impelled
927 4, 7, 4 | lordship, much, more, fun, fuller, imperishableness,
928 5, 7, 16| stomach; Vaiçvanara with the fundament.~
929 4, 2, 8 | boundary,~He hath revealed its fundamental nearest forms,~The womb
930 4, 2, 11| eager, of keen spirits, the furious,~With darts in their mouths,
931 1, 7, 7 | one,~The fires which are furtherers, further us.~
932 1, 2, 14| Follow them, glowing in thy fury;~Thy heat, O Agni, thy winged (
933 3, 4, 3 | the waters, he would con fuse the sacrifice; he should
934 3, 4, 10| it would be like a con fusion of the sacrifice or a burning. '
935 1, 2, 11| Soma, swell,~For Indra who gaineth the chiefest wealth;~May
936 5, 5, 17| the Kvayi, the Kutaru, the gallinule, these are (to be offered)
937 5, 6, 15| for the Vasus; three red gallinules, these are for the Rudras;
938 3, 4, 11| O god, harm us not.~u As gamesters cheat in dicing,~What we
939 2, 5, 2 | he led him on, and as he gaped Agni and Soma went forth
940 2, 5, 2 | inspiration; therefore one who gapes should say, 'Skill and intelligence (
941 1, 7, 31| gives to the Adhvaryu, the garland to the Udgatr, the round
942 5, 1, 8 | to one who sings, for the Gatha appropriates it. To the
943 7, 5, 11| To the Vedas hail!~To the Gathas hail!~To the Naraçansis
944 1, 1, 7 | his fellows, &c.~h Ye are gatherers, bring offspring to this
945 7, 1, 4 | the second the complete (gati). The first day is the Jyotistoma
946 5, 5, 11| the tiger, the king, a Bos Gavaeus; to the king of men a monkey;
947 7, 5 | PRAPATHAKA V The Gavam Ayana~
948 4, 4, 4 | praise, to the strong bull;~Gavisthira with his homage hath raised
949 4, 4, 9 | Vayu when covered up; the gazer on men when revealed; the
950 4, 2, 2 | the sky, O Agni, he who gazeth on men;~Thee standing in
951 6, 2, 1 | mistress of the household gear; verily he offers what is
952 7, 3, 14| speech holy power, by a gem forms, by Indra the gods,
953 5, 7, 2 | the wise,~I have come, generating thee ever new;~Be our household
954 1, 4, 43| May Tvastr, Visnu, accord generously~Wealth with offspring to
955 7, 1, 19| about to get up hail!~To him getting up hail!~To him who hath
956 4, 4, 4 | skilful, for fresh prosperity;~Ghee-faced, with mighty sky-reaching (
957 4, 4, 3 | Susena, and Viçvaci and Ghrtaci his Apsarases, his missile
958 1, 1, 10| in devotion to Agni,~I gird my body for good action.~
959 7, 5, 10| remove their sin. Slave girls dance round the Marjaliya
960 3, 2, 3 | with Soma, thee whom I have gladdened with Soma. May I be possessed
961 4, 2, 4 | atmosphere,~Glittering is thy gleam, moving and men espying.~
962 5, 1, 11| the steed, anointed with glee, of his own impulse~Go to
963 7, 4, 13| rime hail!~To those which glide hail!~To those which are
964 1, 4, 44| f O bath, O flood, thou glidest, O flood; thou hast removed
965 5, 3, 6 | Restrainer'; the eye (with) 'the gliding'; the ear (with) 'the bestower
966 7, 1, 1 | plants, though not anointed, glisten.' They also say, 'He placed
967 7, 1, 2 | begetting. Verily thus Stoma glorifies Stoma; verily also Stoma
968 7, 1, 2 | morning pressing he keeps glorifying the Trivrt Stoma by the
969 4, 4, 4 | sky-reaching (blaze)~He shineth gloriously, pure for the Bharatas.~
970 7, 3, 17| variegated one hail!~To the glossy-thighed one hail!~To the white-footed
971 5, 7, 11| grinders; the cater with the gnawer; strength with the digester;
972 5, 1, 6 | healing. He unites (him) with goat-hair; the female goat is Agni'
973 2, 1, 1 | hooves that of sheep, the goat-nature that of goats; so many are
974 6, 5, 2 | the Dhruva down into the goblet of the Hotr, so he places
975 3, 5, 5 | rich in steeds,~Bidden I God-speed' by Brhaspati, with wealth~
976 5, 5, 16| doe, the Kundrnaci, the Golattika, these are for the Apsarases;
977 4, 5, 2 | iv. 5. 2.~a Homage to the golden-armed leader of hosts, and to
978 1, 2, 6 | resplendent light shone high,~The golden-banded sage hath measured the heaven
979 2, 5, 12| his highest greatness~The golden-coloured young ones go about.~q Some [
980 1, 4, 23| to-day guard our house;~Golden-tongued do thou protect us for new
981 4, 7, 13| eagle, the righteous,~The golden-winged busy bird, mighty,~That
982 2, 6, 12| lived their lives [3] in goodness and without sin;~May these
983 7, 1, 1 | to the priests) all one's goods or a thousand, for he escaped.
984 1, 2, 14| hath descended to me from Gotama, my sire;~Pay heed to this
985 4, 3, 11| those of the heat; Savitr governeth one.~n She who first shone
986 3, 4, 11| To our offspring, Rudra's grace.~h Harm us not in our children,
987 3, 3, 6 | that they won by the Para (Grahas), and that is why the Paras
988 3, 4, 5 | ye nearer, ye dadas, ye granddadas, do ye here help me.~c In
989 5, 2, 2 | food is Agni; verily he grants him food. 'Uninjurious,
990 2, 1, 11| might of his glory [3],~Graspeth the reins of sacred law.~
991 2, 1, 7 | becomes resplendent. The bull grazes at will, splendour indeed
992 5, 1, 5 | therefore the ass, even when grazing is bad, becomes fat beyond
993 4, 6, 4 | hath ascended of the gods~Great-hearted that shake the worlds as
994 4, 3, 11| beareth the mothers;~Three greatnesses attend her.~b Charming,
995 4, 6, 7 | pleaseth thy taste,~Then most greedily dost thou consume the plants.~
996 4, 6, 9 | stay in thy body;~May no greedy skilless carver,~Missing
997 4, 5, 2 | homage!~e Homage to the green-haired, wearer of the cord, to
998 5, 6, 12| Sarasvati; the piebald, the grey piebald, the slightly piebald,
999 7, 1, 9 | Jamadagni are not seen as grey-haired. That prosperity is his
1000 7, 3, 1 | should be pointed out by the Grhapati. At any rate it should be
1001 5, 7, 11| the teeth, frogs with the grinders; the cater with the gnawer;
|