11may-beget | begga-conte | conti-enric | enrob-gamin | ganda-inan | incep-marut | masar-path- | patha-right | ring--speed | spend-tobat | toble-water | waver-zimme
      Book, Hymn, Verse 
1502    9,   43, 1 |                                 1. WE will enrobe with sacred song the Lovely
1503    9,   86, 6 |                 from earth and heaven, his ensigns who is ever steadfast, travel
1504   10,   51, 1 |               texture, folded wherein thou enteredst the waters.~One Deity alone,
1505    5,   34, 5 |                              5 He seeks no enterprise with five or ten to aid,
1506    9,   39, 3 |                  bestowing power, thejuice enters the purifying sieve,~Far-seeing,
1507    1,   36, 9 |                    art mighty; shine, best entertainer of the Gods.~Worthy of sacred
1508    9,   92, 1 |                hath rejoiced the Gods with entertainments.~
1509    1,  125, 1 |                   prudent one receives and entertains him.~Thereby increasing
1510    8,   85, 18|                   win the floods that were enthralled by Dasas.~
1511    5,   15, 1 |                  glorious, a song I offer.~Enthroned in oil, the Asura, bliss-giver,
1512    4,   12, 4 |                make thou us sinless remit, entirely, Agni, our offences.~
1513    5,   61, 8 |                unpraised, mean niggard, is entitled man:~Only in weregild is
1514    8,    8, 18|                   solemn rites, with calls entreating you to come.~
1515    6,   51, 12|                    the Bharadvajas' priest entreats your favour.~He, sacrificing,
1516   10,   47, 7 |                    Indra with their strong entreaty,~Moving his heart and uttered
1517   10,   14, 11|                   and guard the pathway, -~Entrust this man, O King, to their
1518    6,   20, 2 |                 Asura sway was by the Gods entrusted,~When thou, Impetuous! leagued
1519    1,  146, 3 |                    that must be travelled, entrusting all desires to him the Mighty.~
1520    4,   23, 5 |               those who love him, who have entwined in him their firm affection?~
1521    7,   34, 12|                   the tribes, and make the envier's praise devoid of light.~
1522   10,  122, 2 |                   knowest every ordinance.~Enwrapped in holy oil further the
1523   10,   82, 7 |                   hath risen up among you.~Enwrapt in misty cloud, with lips
1524   10,   68, 10|                    ne'er done, ne'er to be equalled, whereby the Sun and Moon
1525    6,   30, 1 |                 greatness: one half of him equalleth earth and heaven.~
1526   10,   46, 5 |                 The foolish brought the ne'er-bewildered forward, great, Victor,
1527    1,  166, 6 |                Terrible Maruts, ye with ne'er-diminished host, with grcat benevolence
1528    4,   17, 19|                 lauded, he slayeth many ne'er-resisted Vrtras.~Him in whose keeping
1529    1,   11, 7 |                  wily Susna, Indra! thou o'er-threwest with thy wondrous powers.~
1530    1,   33, 8 |             Although they hastened, they o'ercame not Indra: their spies he
1531    4,   30, 5 |             fighting singly, Indra. thou o'ercamest all the furious Gods, thou
1532    5,   23, 1 |           victorious wealth,~Wealth that o'ercometh all mankind, and, near us,
1533   10,   61, 15|                  line, the Babe springs up erectly, his Mother straight hath
1534   10,   21, 3 |                   twere with ladles that o'erflow.~Black and white-gleaming
1535   10,  149, 2 |                where ocean, firmly fixt, o'erflowed its limit.~Thence sprang
1536    8,   52, 9 |                                 9 At the o'erflowing of this Steer, boldly he
1537    7,   73, 1 |                               1. WE have o'erpassed the limit of this darkness
1538    1,   92, 6 |                                6 We have o'erpast the limit of this darkness;
1539    1,  168, 5 |                   sought for food, on many errands like the Sun's diurnal Steed.~
1540   10,    4, 4 |                   we, O Wise and free from error: verily, Agni, thou dost
1541    4,   36, 2 |                thought, the car that never errs,~You, being such, to drink
1542    3,   36, 2 |                   For Indra were the Somas erst- discovered, whereby he grew
1543    5,   51, 9 |                Soma, Visnu, come,~Agni, as erstwith Atri, so enjoy the juice.~
1544    8,   19, 6 |                 mortal man from any side o'ertaketh him.~
1545    8,   43, 1 |                Whose worshipper is ne'er o'erthrawn.~
1546    5,   29, 10|                weapon, and in their home o'erthrewest hostile speakers.~
1547    2,   21, 3 |                 mortals, ruler over men, o'erthrower, warrior, he hath waxen
1548    1,   85, 4 |                glitter with your spears, o'erthrowing with your strength e'en
1549    6,   20, 1 |                    with might, as heaven o'ertops the earth, o'ercomes our
1550    7,   50, 2 |                                          2 Eruption that appears upon the twofold
1551   10,   84, 7 |                   with stricken spirits, o'erwhelmed with terror, slink away
1552    7,   18, 12|                  12 Thou, thunder-armed, o'erwhelmedst in the waters famed ancient
1553   10,   42, 9 |                    Celestial-natured, he o'erwhelms with riches the devotee
1554    6,   51, 16|                     The road whereon a man escapes all enemies and gathers
1555   10,   85, 38|                 bridal train, they, first, escorted Surya to her home.~Give
1556 AppI          |                  pilos corporis mei-paucos esse: tota sum villosa sicut
1557    9,   86, 28|                  thou, Indu, art the first establisher of Law.~
1558    6,   67, 9 |                    neither Gods nor men in estimation, like Api's sons have godless
1559    5,   31, 11|                   backward in its running.~Etaga brought his wheel and firmly
1560    6,   15, 5 |            speeding on, as in the fight of Etaia, cometh, untouched by age,
1561    8,   59, 7 |                    bright-hued steeds, the Etasas, even Indra yoker of the
1562   10,   33, 7 |              Mitratithi:~I am thy father's eulogist.~
1563    8,   63, 2 |                Mitra, men presenting gifts~Eulogize with their songs of praise~
1564    8,   63, 8 |            exceeding sweet:~Grow mightier, eulogized therewith.~
1565    6,   62, 7 |                   heard the calling of the eunuch's consort.~Bounteous, ye
1566    5,   44, 10|                    Yajata, and Sadhri, and Evavada,~With Avatsara's sweet songs
1567    4,    6, 1 |                   of sacrificers,~For over evei y thought thou art the Ruler:
1568    1,   97, 5 |                                       5 As ever- conquering Agni's beams
1569    9,   56, 2 |               strengthening food a hundred ever-active streams~To Indra's friendship
1570   10,   88, 14|                verses, Agni Vaisvanara the ever-beaming,~Who hath surpassed both
1571    1,   25, 5 |                     never do they fail~The ever-faithful worshipper.~
1572    3,   51, 2 |        breaker-down of forts, faithful and ever-glorious, finder of the light.~
1573    9,    5, 10|              streams anoint Vanaspati,~The ever-green. the golden-hued, refulgent,
1574    2,    9, 2 |                blessings.~Refulgent, be an ever-heedful keeper, Agni, for us and
1575    7,   86, 8 |                    and labour. Preserve us ever-more, ye Gods, with blessings.~
1576    4,   50, 2 |                    this company's raining, ever-moving birthplace.~
1577    7,   52, 3 |                                      3 The ever-prompt Angirases, imploring riches
1578    5,   36, 3 |                 singer give thee praise, O ever-prospering Maghavan, mounted on thy
1579   10,   92, 5 |                             5 Onward, with ever-roaming Rudra, speed the floods:
1580    5,   58, 2 |                 magical powers, bountiful, ever-roaring,-these, liberal Heroes,
1581   10,  155, 1 |                 one-eyed limping hag, fly, ever-screeching, to the hill.~We frighten
1582    4,   17, 8 |                                      8 The ever-slaying, bold and furious Indra,
1583    1,  178, 4 |                  friends have offered.~The ever-strengthening song of him who worships
1584    8,  101, 2 |                    you approach before the Ever-Truthful.~Accepting this our worship
1585    3,    3, 7 |                 great man's strength, thou ever-vigilant: thou, longing for the Gods,
1586   10,    4, 7 |                descendants, and guard with ever-watcliful care our bodies.~
1587    3,    2, 2 |                 oblation-bearer, gracious, ever-young, infallible, rich in radiant
1588    2,   21, 2 |                     unassailable, to Indra everconquering speak your reverent prayer.~
1589    5,   64, 2 |                  places is sung forth your evergracious friendliness.~
1590   10,   50, 5 |            protecting might.~Thou shalt be Everlasing, Giver of success yea, on
1591    3,   62, 17|                   of might,~With pure laws everlastingly.~
1592               | everyone
1593    3,    6, 4 |                Spouses of the Far-Strider, everyoung, united.~
1594    3,   32, 7 |                great and sublime, eternal, everyouthful,~Whose greatness the dear
1595   10,   87, 15|                  Gods destroy this day the evil-doer may each hot curse of his
1596    7,   86, 6 |                even sleep removeth not all evil-doing.~
1597   10,   85, 44|                                     44 Not evil-eyed, no slayer of thy husband,
1598   10,   95, 15|                    nor vanish: let not the evil-omened wolves devour thee.~With
1599    5,    3, 7 |                    shall bring evil on the evil-plottcr whoever turns against us
1600    5,   32, 8 |                    smote down the footless evil-speaking ogre.~
1601   10,   87, 18|                     may Aditi cast off the evildoers.~May the God Savitar give
1602    1,  129, 8 |                  wicked hence, to rend the evilhearted ones!~The weapon which devouring
1603    2,   23, 7 |               without offence of ours, the evilminded, arrogant, rapacious man, -~
1604 AppI          |            slave-girl. Gandharidun ovis: a ewe of the Gandharis. The country
1605    1,   43, 6 |                  wellbeing to our rams and ewes,~To men, to women, and to
1606    9,  110, 1 |                speedest to subdue like one exacting debts.~
1607    4,   23, 7 |                Strong, although our debts' exactor, drives in the distant mornings
1608    8,   23, 2 |                  men's friend, Visvamanas, exaltest Agni with thy song,~The
1609    8,   21, 5 |                  milk, that gladdeneth and exalteth thee,~Indra, to thee we
1610    2,   12, 14|            sacrificer, singer.~Whom prayer exalts, and pouring forth of Soma,
1611    4,   16, 5 |                 majesty extendeth who hath exceeded all the worlds in greatness.~
1612    4,   12, 1 |                  thee food, O Agni,~May he excel, triumphant through thy
1613   10,  104, 5 |                 thee, Indra, through thine excellencies.~
1614    1,  162, 17|                  If one, when seated, with excessive urging hath with his heel
1615    1,  100, 6 |                        6 Humbler of pride, exciter of the conflict, the Lord
1616    7,   19, 1 |                    horns, terrific, singly excites and agitates all the people:~
1617   10,  109, 1 |                  first-born by holy Order, exclaimed against the outrage on a
1618    2,   33, 1 |                 let thy bliss approach us: exclude us not from looking on the
1619    8,   15, 11|                 rest:~None else than Indra executes the mighty deed.~
1620    1,   33, 13|                   on Vrtra; and conquered, executing all his purpose.~
1621   10,   94, 11|                 loosened, never weary, and exempt from death,~Eternal, undiseased,
1622   10,   22, 3 |                great and perfect strength, exerter of heroic might,~Who bears
1623    9,  101, 5 |               declared.~The Lord of Speech exerts himself, Ruler of all, because
1624    7,   68, 8 |                 lent your aid to Vrka when exhausted, and listened when invoked
1625   10,   33, 2 |               wives.~Indigence, nakedness, exhaustion press me sore: my mind is
1626    9,   76, 3 |                purified with flowing wave, exhibiting thy strength enter thou
1627    2,   28, 8 |                    pass away from light to exile. Scatter, that we may live,
1628    6,   24, 5 |                Indra makes what is not yet existeni.~Here have we Mitra, Varuna,
1629    4,   42, 2 |                  me were given these first existinghigh celestial powers.~Varuna'
1630    2,   16, 2 |                      2 Without whom naught exists, Indra the Lofty One; in
1631    1,  173, 1 |                  which like heaven's light expandeth,~That the milk-giving cows
1632    4,   16, 14|                form, Immortal One, is seen expanding:~Thou a wild elephant with
1633    1,  190, 2 |               Brhaspati-for helaid out the expanses- was, at the sacrifice, vast
1634    2,   15, 2 |                   upheld, and gave it wide expansion. These things did Indra
1635   10,   61, 4 |                   contented, not deceiving expectation. '~
1636    8,   40, 11|                    Susna's brood who still expected not the stroke, and won
1637    1,  141, 4 |                   As both together join to expedite his birth, most youthful
1638    4,   33, 8 |                  mental insight.~The Gods' expert artificer was Vaja, Indra'
1639   10,  189, 2 |                                          2 Expiring when he draws his breath,
1640   10,   61, 22|                    ye who are undeceivable explorers.~
1641    8,   47, 11|                    us, Adityas, as a guide exploring from the bank.~Lead us to
1642    8,    3, 2 |                    may we still be strong: expose us not to foe's attack.~
1643    7,   57, 4 |                 against you.~Let us not he exposed to that, ye Holy! May your
1644   10,   42, 5 |                with plenteous food for him expresses strong Somas as much quickly-coming
1645   10,   89, 11|                 bounds of earth and wind's extension, vaster than rivers and
1646    1,  191, 4 |                    had sought their lairs,~Extinguished were the lights of men,
1647    1,  101, 2 |                   the unrighteous one;~Who extirpated Susna the insatiate, him
1648    6,   47, 24|                           24 Ten cars with extra steed to each, for the Atharvans
1649    3,   21, 5 |                    Fatness exceeding rich, extracted from the midst,-this as
1650   10,   87, 10|          Man-beholder: rend thou his three extremities in pieces.~Demolish with
1651    8,   98, 8 |            Praskanva bounty vast and firm, exuberant, that shall never fail.~
1652    8,    2, 8 |                         8 Three reservoirs exude their drops, filled are
1653    3,   60, 6 |                near, and Vaja, Indra, here exult, with Saci, praised of many,
1654    6,   15, 5 |                    Who with his purifying, eye-attracting form hath shone upon the
1655    6,   11, 5 |                  earth is based the altar: eye-like, the sacrifice is directed
1656    9,   26, 5 |                  Him, green, beloved, many eyed, the Sisters with prosing
1657    2,   28, 7 |               troubles: I am not even mine eyelid's lord without thee.~
1658    1,  116, 16|               father robbed Rjrasva of his eyesight who for the she-wolf slew
1659    1,   33, 2 |                    falcon to his cherished eyrie,~With fairest hymns of praise
1660    6,   20, 4 |                   light was won, the Panis f1ed, 'neath a hundred blows,
1661   10,   85, 19|                 Mornings~Coming, he orders f6r the Gods their portion.
1662    1,   33, 5 |                  fled, Indra! with averted faces.~When thou, fierce Lord
1663    5,   59, 5 |                    they make the Sun's eye fade away,~
1664    7,    1, 3 |                   Youthful God, that never fadeth.~To thee come all our sacrificial
1665    5,    6, 4 |                     rich in thy splendour, fading not,~So that this glorious
1666   10,    2, 4 |               shall correct our faults and failings, skilled to assign each
1667    6,   49, 9 |        life-bestower, the ever active God, fair-armed, fair-handed.~
1668    5,   45, 10|               ocean when he hath yoked his fair-backed Tawny Horses.~The wise have
1669    5,    4, 7 |                  thee, and with our gifts, fair-beaming Purifier!~Send to us wealth
1670    4,   54, 4 |                  universal world.~What the fair-fingered God brings forth on earth'
1671   10,  101, 5 |                that hath a copious stream, fair-flowing well that never fails.~
1672    1,  113, 3 |                   alternately they travel.~Fair-formed, of different hues and yet
1673   10,   43, 4 |                                4 As on the fair-leafed tree rest birds, to Indra
1674    3,    7, 10|                gleamed forth in splendour, fair-rayed, fair-speaking, worshipped
1675   10,    1, 1 |               light from out the darkness.~Fair-shapen Agni with white-shining
1676    3,    7, 10|                  in splendour, fair-rayed, fair-speaking, worshipped with all viands,~
1677   10,   88, 19|                      19 As great as is the fair-winged Morning's presence to him
1678    1,  127, 5 |                   for him who shines forth fairer in the night than in the
1679    5,   43, 2 |                    Mother, sweetof speech, fairhanded, may they, far-famed, in
1680    4,   42, 3 |                    these the two wide deep fairly-fashioned regions,~These the two world-halves
1681    1,  146, 3 |                common youngling both Cows, fairshaped, spread forth in all directions,~
1682   10,   75, 3 |                   Like floods of rain that fall- in thunder from the cloud,
1683    7,   20, 6 |                               6 The people falter not, nor suffer sorrow,
1684    1,  177, 1 |                     Indra, called of many,~Fame-loving, praised, hither to me with
1685    1,   85, 8 |                rush about, like combatants fame-seeking have they striven in war.~
1686    1,  103, 4 |                 races, Maghavan, bearing a fame-worthy title,~Thunderer, drawing
1687   10,  146, 4 |                    the dweller in the wood fancies that somebody hath screamed.~
1688    1,  189, 5 |              brings us trouble;~Not to the fanged that bites, not to the toothless:
1689    5,    9, 5 |                  heaven, like as a smelter fanneth thee, e'en as a smelter
1690    4,   34, 9 |                  heaven and earth asunder,-far- reaching Heroes, they have
1691    6,   10, 4 |               filled heaven and earth with far-apparent splendour:~And he himself
1692    1,   71, 4 |                        4 Since Matarisvan, far-diffused, bath stirred him, and he
1693    8,   73, 2 |                                2 Whom as a far-foreseeing Sage the Gods have, from
1694    5,   30, 5 |                 bearing a name renowned in far-off regions,~Since then e'en
1695    8,   41, 8 |                           8 He is an Ocean far-removed, yet through the heaven
1696    7,    1, 1 |                  engendered glorious Agni,~Far-seen, with pointed flame, Lord
1697    3,    6, 4 |               their nectar, Spouses of the Far-Strider, everyoung, united.~
1698    7,   21, 2 |                  brought the press-stones, far-thundering, famous, strong, that wait
1699    1,  134, 4 |                   the radiant Dawns in the fardistant sky broaden their lovely
1700    6,   15, 9 |                    thy regard and gracious fare, be thou to us a thriceprotecting
1701    4,    2, 2 |                    born beings, Agni,~Thou farest as an envoy, having harnessed,
1702   10,  124, 3 |                    of Law and Order.~I bid farewell to the Great God, the Father,
1703    8,    5, 2 |              Heroes on your will-yoked car farshining, Wonder-Workers! ye~Attend,
1704    3,    3, 10|              Vaisvanara, wherewith thou, O farsighted God, has found the light.~
1705   10,   99    |                 Splendid One, Loud-voiced, Farstriding, dost thou, well knowing,
1706    1,  130, 6 |                like as a skilful craftsman fashioneth a car, so have they wrought
1707    1,   61, 4 |                 for him I frame a laud, as fashions the wright a chariot for
1708    5,   33, 2 |                  hymns, Steer! Indra! thou fastenedst the girth of thy Bay Coursers,~
1709   10,   49, 4 |                   I gave as prey to Kutsa, father-like, to succour him.~I was a
1710   10,   16, 10|                     10 I choose as God for Father-worship Agni, flesh-eater, who hath
1711   10,   23, 5 |               several deeds of valour who, fatherlike, with power hath made us
1712    4,   17, 17|                   As Friend, as Sire, most fatherly of fathers giving the suppliant
1713    8,    4, 7 |                  we will riot fear or feel fatigue.~May we see Turvasa and
1714   10,   27, 17|               Heroes dressed with fire the fatted wether: the dice were thrown
1715    5,   43, 7 |               heating that which holds the fatty membrane.~
1716   10,    2, 4 |                Wise Agni shall correct our faults and failings, skilled to
1717    1,  114, 4 |                 Gods: verily we desire his favourable grace.~
1718    8,   93, 9 |                   kine,~As, Maghavan, thou favouredst Medhyatithi, and, in the
1719   10,   65, 13|                    Holy Ones,~Boon-givers, favourers, finders of light, and Heaven,
1720   10,   15, 5 |                 the Soma, invited to their favourite oblations.~Laid on the sacred
1721    6,   29, 4 |                pray, extolling Indra chief favourites of Gods, recite their praises.~
1722    4,   55, 5 |                      5 I have besought the favourof the Maruts, of Parvata,
1723   10,   89, 15|                  darkness follow those our fbemen, while these shall have
1724    9,   49, 1 |               plenteous store of wholesome fbod.~
1725    8,   82, 29|                   blessings, all felicity:~Fbr, Indra, thou art kind to
1726    7,   16, 4 |                    Strength, all food that fcedeth man: give that for which
1727    4,   46, 3 |                  To drink the Soma, to the feagt.~
1728    1,   84, 17|                  forth? who suffereth? who feareth? Who knoweth Indra present,
1729    6,   37, 1 |             invoketh: may we this day, thy feast-companions, prosper.~
1730    9,   89, 7 |              uninjured come where Gods are feasted; Soma, as Vitra-slayer flow
1731    5,   41, 14|                Waters will I summon to the feasting.~May days with bright dawns
1732    4,   27, 4 |              downward bither fell a flying feather of the Bird hasting forward
1733   10,   27, 12|                   be both good and fair of feature, she finds, herself, a friend
1734    1,  164, 50|                   pleasure, wherewith thou feedest all things that are choicest,~
1735   10,   27, 14|                  the Youngling, loosed, is feeding.~Loud hath she lowed, licking
1736   10,   35, 4 |                   pray to kindled Agni for feilicity.~
1737    6,   54, 3 |              ground,~Nor doth the loosened felIy shake.~
1738    1,  147, 5 |               injures with double tongue a fellow-mortal,~From him, praised Agni!
1739    3,    1, 10|                 the Bright and Strong, the fellow-spouses friendly to men and bound
1740   10,  145, 5 |                  us both we will subdue my fellow-wife.~
1741   10,  159, 6 |           conqueror these rivals, these my fellow-wives,~That I may hold imperial
1742    3,   29, 9 |                Raise ye a mighty smoke, my fellow-workers! Ye shall attain to wealth
1743    5,   32, 5 |                   wounded still his vitals felt that, the God's bolt, which
1744    1,  164, 16|                   were males, though truly females: he who hath eyes sees this,
1745   10,   90, 15|                                   15 Seven fencing-sticks had he, thrice seven layers
1746   10,  130, 3 |                model? What were the wooden fender and the butter?~What were
1747    6,   75, 14|                 arm with serpent windings, fending away the friction of the
1748   10,  105, 1 |              stream.~The juice is ready to ferment.~
1749    1,  121, 8 |                    strengthened with milk, fermenting, to exalt thee.~
1750    7,   33, 7 |                                    7 Three fertilize the worlds with genial moisture:
1751    8,  103, 6 |                  these through my spirit's fervid glow have I beheld.,~
1752   10,  112, 4 |                 thou whose grandeur in thy festive transports not even these
1753    8,   78, 4 |                                  4 Aim and fetch boldly forth, O thou whose
1754    8,   26, 15|                                    16 Most fetching of all calls, the laud,
1755 AppII         |               occasionally they consist of fewer and sometimes of more than
1756   10,  168, 3 |                   earliest-born, Friend of fhe waters, where did he spring
1757    5,   83, 2 |                  From him exceeding strong fices e'en the guiltless, when
1758    1,  135, 5 |                    vigour have they beauti fied, like a swift veed of mighty
1759    9,    1, 2 |                                          2 Fiend-queller, Friend of all men, he hath
1760    7,  104, 20|                   let him cast his bolt at fiendish wizards.~
1761   10,   85, 28|                   hue is blue and red: the fienod who clingeth close is driven
1762   10,  109, 1 |             boundless Sea, and Matarisvan, fierce-glowing Fire, the Strong, the Bliss-bestower.~
1763   10,   95, 1 |                     my consort! Stay, thou fierce-souled lady, and let us reason
1764    8,    6, 6 |                                      6 The fiercely-moving Vrtra's head he severed
1765    1,   37, 4 |                   exultant Marut host,~The fiercely-vigorous, the strong.~
1766   10,   34, 14|                  us not with your terrific fierceness.~Appeased be your malignity
1767    1,  120, 4 |                  us from what is stronger, fiercer than ourselves.~
1768    3,   30, 16|                  us: against them send thy fiercest-flaming weapon.~Rend them from under,
1769    1,   26, 4 |                                          4 Fiere let the foe-destroyers sit,
1770    1,  133, 5 |                   bray to bits the fearful fiery-weaponed fiend:~Strike every demon
1771   10,   27, 2 |             bullock, and pour for thee the fifteen-fold strong juices.~
1772    7,   98, 4 |                 them.~Or, Indra, when thou fightest girt by heroes, we in the
1773    8,   11, 8 |                 thou art Lord.~In fray and fightt we call on thee.~
1774    3,   54, 4 |                  you;~And brave men in the fightwhere heroes conquer, O Earth,
1775    8,    4, 12|                  12 The man with whom thou fillcst thee with Soma deems himself
1776    9,   68, 9 |                  heaven. Soma, while he is filtcred, settles in the jars.~With
1777    9,   27, 2 |                 Vayu he~Is poured upon the filtering-cloth.~
1778    9,  104, 4 |                 have sung aloud to thee as finderout of wealth for us:~We clothe
1779    8,   19, 3 |                Priest among the Gods,~Wise finisher of this holy rite:~
1780   10,   76, 5 |                   heavens themselves, who, finishing your task with more than
1781    1,  129, 8 |                    mark; hurled forth, the fire-brand shall not strike.~
1782    1,  162, 5 |                ministering priest, atoner, fire-kindler Soma-presser, sage, reciter,~
1783    1,  180, 4 |                wish, like streaming water.~Fire-offering thence is yours, O Asvins,
1784   10,  165, 3 |                    distract us: beside the fire-place, on the hearth it settles.~
1785   10,   28, 8 |                    laid good timber in the fire-receivers, and burnt the grass up
1786    1,   42, 3 |                   foot and trample out the firebrand of the wicked one,~The double-tongued,
1787    4,    4, 2 |                 Agni; unfettered, cast thy firebrands all around thee.~
1788   10,  107, 3 |                 niggards-for they give not fireely-comes Meed at sacrifice, Gods'
1789    6,   62, 11|                   singer doors e'en of the firm-closed stall of cattle.~
1790   10,   66, 8 |                             8 Potent, with firm-fixt laws, arranging sacrifice,
1791    7,    1, 14|                    offspring, vigorous and firm-handed,~Wins, on a thousand paths,
1792   10,   66, 5 |                    Holy Thoughts Sarasvan, firm-lawed Varuna, great Vayu, Pusan,
1793    1,  118, 9 |           conquering the foe, highmettled, firm-limbed and vigorous, winning thousand
1794    3,   38, 2 |                  sages' mighty generations firm-minded and devout they framed the
1795    2,   17, 1 |                    with strength the solid firm-shut stables of the kine.~
1796   10,  143, 2 |                earth.~Ye loosed him like a firm-tied knot which Gods unsoiled
1797    3,   31, 5 |                sages freed them from their firmbuilt prison: the seven priests
1798    6,   22, 5 |                    sends a song effectual, firmly-grasping, and strength-bestowing,
1799    3,    7, 7 |               Adhvaryus the Bird's beloved firmly-settled station.~The willing Bulls,
1800    7,   18, 23|                them.~Sudas's brown steeds, firmly-stepping, carry me and my son for
1801    1,   71, 2 |                  with lauds burst e'en the firmset fortress, yea, the Angirases,
1802   10,   27, 23|                    Gods' mansion stood the first-created, and from their separation
1803    6,   28, 4 |                 they seem a portion of the first-poured Soma.~These present Cows,
1804    4,   17, 10|              conquering and when slaying: 'fis he who winneth cattle in
1805   10,   68, 8 |                sweetness as one who eyes a fish in scanty water.~Brhaspati,
1806    7,   18, 6 |                   fain to win wealth, like fishes urged by hunger.~The Bhrgus
1807    3,   31, 6 |                   had found the mountain's fissure, that vast and ancient place
1808    1,   39, 3 |                  of earth, and through the fissures of the rocks.~
1809    6,   47, 30|                   misfortune: thou art the Fist of Indra: show thy firmness.~
1810    4,   44, 1 |                   ample, rich in treasure, fitted with seats, the car that
1811    2,   40, 3 |                    moves to every quarter, fivc-reined and harnessed by the thought,
1812    1,   89, 10|                   Aditi is all Gods, Aditi five-classed men, Aditi all that hath
1813    1,  164, 12|                    half of heaven the Sire five-footed, of twelve forms, wealthy
1814    1,  164, 13|                               13 Upon this five-spoked wheel revolving ever all
1815   10,   52, 4 |                    us the worship, whether five-wayed, threefold, or seven-threaded.~
1816   10,   68, 5 |                 gale blows a lily from the fiver.~Like the wind grasping
1817    3,   55, 18|               Sixfold they bear him, or by fives are harnessed. Great is
1818   10,   87, 20|                above and under, protect us fl-om behind us and before us;~
1819    7,   69, 7 |                 horses,~Uninjured, winged, flagging not, undaunted, with deeds
1820   10,  103, 11|                  May Indra aid us when our flags are gathered: victorious
1821    7,    3, 1 |                   among mankind, the Holy, flame-crowned and fed with oil, the Purifier.~
1822    3,   17, 1 |                    balmed with unguents, -~Flame-haired, oil-clad, the purifying
1823    5,   17, 2 |               glory, set to hold~Apart yon flame-hued vault of heaven, lovely
1824    3,    7, 5 |                   and are joyful under the flaming-coloured Lord's dominion:~They who
1825    1,   92, 6 |               clear perception.~She like a flatterer smiles in light for glory,
1826    1,  135, 4 |                     Drink of the pleasant -flavoured juice the first draught
1827    9,   97, 14|                   milk, abounding in sweet flavours, urging the meath-rich plant
1828    1,   58, 7 |                friends, a refuge without a flaw this day to us thy praisers.~
1829    5,   11, 6 |                   time thou layest hidden, fleeing back from wood to wood.~
1830    4,   26, 4 |                 supreme of falcons be this fleet-winged Falcon,~Because, strong-
1831    5,   41, 4 |                   as they whose steeds are fleetest seek the contest.~
1832    1,   84, 17|                                     17 Who fleeth forth? who suffereth? who
1833    5,   78, 4 |               freshest and most auspicious fleetness of a falcon.~
1834    7,   78, 4 |                   Dawn as she is breaking.~fler car that moves self-harnessed
1835    1,  162, 13|                   13 The trial-fork of the flesh-cooking caldron, the vessels out
1836   10,   87, 19|                   up the foolish ones, the flesh-devourers: let none of them escape
1837   10,   16, 10|                   for Father-worship Agni, flesh-eater, who hath past within your
1838   10,   87, 5 |                    let the cater of flesh, flesh-seeking, track his mangled body.~
1839    9,   22, 2 |          rain-storms of Parjanya, like~The flickering flames of burning fire.~
1840    2,   16, 3 |                when with swift steeds thou fliest over many a league.~
1841    6,   75, 17|                         17 There where the flights of Arrows fall like boys
1842    6,   75, 7 |                    the foemen, they, never flinching, trample and destroy them.~
1843    8,   64, 8 |                   fail us, like Dawns that float away,~Like cows who leave
1844   10,  155, 3 |                             3 Yon log that floats without a man to guide it
1845    1,   49, 3 |               bipeds stir,~And round about flock winged birds from all theboundaries
1846    4,   17, 2 |              flowed, and desert spots were flooded.~
1847   10,   93, 5 |                    settled down upon their floors.~
1848   10,   60, 4 |                     4 Him in whose service flourishes Iksvaku, rich and dazzling-bright.~
1849    9,   61, 25|              driving off the godless, Soma flowcth on,~Going to Indra's special
1850   10,  142, 8 |                   hitherward and hence let flowery Durva grass spring up~Let
1851    8,   45, 29|                    lauds,~Indra beside the flowingjuice;~
1852    4,   58, 7 |                 streams of oil in swelling fluctuation like a red courser bursting
1853    6,   22, 5 |                  craving, deeply-piercing, fluent,~Who sends a song effectual,
1854    7,   75, 1 |                  the heavens the Dawn hath flushed, and showing her majesty
1855    5,   64, 7 |                             7 When morning flushes, Holy Ones! in the Gods'
1856    8,   20, 15|                   O Maruts, at the earlier flushings of the morn,~And even now
1857   10,  135, 7 |                    Here minstrels blow the flute for him here he is glorified
1858   10,   33, 2 |                  press me sore: my mind is fluttering like a bird's.~
1859    8,   81, 22|                rivers flow into the sea:~O fndra, naught excelleth thee.~
1860    6,    7, 3 |               treasures worthy to belonged fo r.~
1861    1,  124, 3 |                light, appeareth.~Truly she fo1loweth the path of Order, nor faileth,
1862    1,  113, 12|                                         12 Foe-chaser, born of Law, the Law's
1863    1,    2, 7 |                 holy strength, I call, and foe-destroying Varuna,~Who make the oil-fed
1864    9,   11, 7 |                                    7 Soma, foe-que chief o'er men, doing the
1865    9,    1, 8 |          musician-like and fuse~The triple foe-repelling meath.~
1866    3,   12, 4 |       joint-victors, bounteous, unsubdued,~Foe-slayers, best to win the spoil.~
1867    1,   91, 18|              united, and powers and mighty foe-subduing vigour,~Waxing to immortality,
1868    1,   32, 6 |                   weapons, crushed-Indra's foe-the shattered forts in falling.~
1869    5,   64, 1 |                                    1. You, foeman-slaying Varuna and Mitra, we invoke
1870   10,   25, 7 |             deceived.~King, drive away our foemen-at your glad carouse:-let not
1871    5,   67, 2 |                     supporters of mankind, foeslayers, give felicity.~
1872    6,   45, 9 |                    forts built by men,~And foil their arts, unbending God!~
1873    6,   44, 22|                   the warlike weapons, and foiled the arts of his malignant
1874   10,   71, 3 |            sacrifice the trace of Vak they foIlowed, and found her harbouring
1875   10,   51, 1 |             covering, and firm of texture, folded wherein thou enteredst the
1876   10,   68, 10|                            10 As trees for foliage robbed by winter, Vala mourned
1877    7,   39, 2 |                   band around them,~At the folks early call on Night and
1878    1,  167, 5 |                   chose immortal Rodasi to follow- she with loose tresses and
1879    5,   12, 2 |                           3 How hast thou, follower of the Law eternal, become
1880    1,   73, 7 |                  and air's mid-region, and followest the whole world like a shadow.~
1881    1,  185, 2 |                  and moving.~Like your own fon upon his parents' bosom,
1882    9,   91, 5 |                    gain from thee, Active! Food-bestower!~
1883    7,   69, 1 |               while its way drops fatness, food-laden, rich in coursers, man's
1884   10,   71, 10|                    is their blame-averter, food-provider prepared is he and fit for
1885   10,   46, 2 |                   creature followed by its footprints,~Wise Bhrgus, yearning in
1886   10,  132, 4 |                   s Lord was well content, forbearing to anger Death by sin so
1887    7,    9, 2 |                     2 Most wise is he who, forcing doors of Panis, brought
1888   10,  138, 5 |                  whets his darts and deals fordi wounds.~Bright Usas was
1889   10,  106, 9 |              depths, like feet for one who fords a shallow.~Like cars ye
1890   10,   18, 5 |                    successor fails not his foregoer, so form the lives of these,
1891    8,   10, 4 |                 without the Sun:~These who foreknow the holy work of sacrifice,
1892   10,   78, 2 |                   your aid;~As best of all foreknowers, excellent to guide, like
1893    2,    9, 1 |            splendid, passing mighty,~Whose foresight keeps the Law from violation,
1894    1,   39, 5 |                    and reel, they rend the forest-kings apart.~onward, ye Maruts,
1895    8,   98, 4 |                     the Mountains, and the Forest-Lord, and Earth give ear unto
1896    7,   34, 23|                   Earth accordant with the Forest-Sovrans, and both the World-halves
1897    7,   35, 5 |                    on.~To us may Herbs and Forest-Trees be gracious, gracious the
1898    7,  104, 4 |                   and from the earth.~Yea, forge out of the mountains your
1899    6,   54, 4 |                                    4 Pusan forgetteth not the man who serveth
1900    1,  145, 2 |                  twere, with his own mind.~Forgetting not the former nor the later
1901    7,   28, 4 |                Wondrous-Wise hath long ago forgiven.~
1902    3,   52, 4 |                   libation poured at dawn,~Forgreat, O Indra, is thy power.~
1903    8,   56, 16|                                         16 Fori Bountiful Adityas, we have
1904    5,   33, 4 |                  his own abode thou, Hero, formedst in fights even a Dasa's
1905    9,   44, 1 |                Unwearied, thou art flowing forQh.~
1906   10,  102, 11|                                11 Like one forsaken, she hath found a husband,
1907    8,   85, 7 |               Deities who were thy friends forsook thee.~So, Indra, be thy
1908    1,  140, 9 |                  around, a blackened path, forsooth, he leaves where'er he goes.~
1909    3,   54, 15|               heaven.~Lord of brave hosts, Fort-crusher, Vrtra-slayer, gather thou
1910    2,   18, 8 |                  his arms, succeed in each forth-going.~
1911    8,    6, 7 |                    are-we sing them loudly forth-our thoughts among-the best
1912    1,  100, 3 |                    great might resistless, forthmilking, as it were, heaven's genial
1913    2,   12, 11|                   He who discovered in the fortieth autumn Sambara as he dwelt
1914    2,   17, 2 |            increased his majesty;~Hero who fortified his body in the wars, and
1915    9,  109, 18|                    directed by the men, go fortli, O Soma, into Indra's throat.~
1916    1,   71, 2 |               lauds burst e'en the firmset fortress, yea, the Angirases, with
1917    2,   43, 2 |                  mare, announce to us good forturue, Bird, on every side, proclaim
1918    1,  113, 19|                    Mother of Gods, Aditi's forui of glory, ensign of sacrifice,
1919    1,  164, 41|                                         40 Forunate mayst thou be with goodly
1920    4,   31, 13|                  like an archer, open thou forus~The stables that are filled
1921    2,   17, 5 |                    his might made firm the forward-bending hills, the downward rushing
1922   10,   36, 6 |                Offered with holy oil, with forward-speeding rein. We crave the gracious
1923    5,   31, 8 |                 Indra, on the farther bank forYadu and Turvaga didst stay the
1924    4,   24, 6 |                 presses, for him who longs fot it, the Soma,~Not disaffected,
1925   10,  155, 4 |                                    4 When, foul with secret stain and spot,
1926    5,   30, 2 |                    longing have sought the Founder's habitation.~I asked of
1927    5,   32, 2 |                                      2 The fountain-depths obstructed in their seasons,
1928    8,   76, 1 |               Asvins, is your praise. Come fountain-like, to pour the stream.~Of
1929   10,   92, 11|                  with their abundant seed, four-bodied Narasmsa, Yama, Aditi,~God
1930   10,   58, 3 |                 went far away, away to the four-cornered earth,~We cause to come
1931    5,   48, 5 |                                          5 Four-faced and nobly clad, Varuna,
1932    1,  164, 24|                   triplet witli the two or four-foot measure, and with the syllable
1933    4,   58, 2 |                    we utter. This hath the four-horned Buffalo emitted.~
1934    8,    6, 48|               bestowing buffaloes yoked in fours,~And matched in fame the
1935    3,   45, 1 |                    men cheek thy course as fowlers stay the bird: pass o'er
1936   10,   28, 4 |               swelling water backward:~The fox steals up to the approaching
1937 AppI          |                  precedes, and look like a fragment of a liberal shepherd's
1938    9,  110, 5 |                 drink,~Borne on thy way in fragments from the presser's arms.~
1939   10,   34, 7 |                    grievous woe.~They give frail gifts and then destroy the
1940    9,    5, 5 |                Doors are lifted with their frames on high,~By Pavamana glorified.~
1941    1,   56, 4 |                  thou with might, upon the framework of the heaven, didst fix,
1942    5,   41, 9 |                  even they, for offspring, free-moving, who are Heroes like the
1943    1,  132, 2 |               which wins the light, at the freegiver's call, at due oblation
1944    4,    1, 20|                                     20 The freest God of all who should be
1945    5,   46, 7 |                Spouses aid us of their own freewill, aid us to offspring and
1946    1,   95, 10|                    and moves among the new fresh-sprouting grasses.~
1947    6,    8, 1 |                 red-hued Steer.~A pure and fresher hymn flows to Vaisvanara,
1948    7,    4, 8 |                  May our strong hero come, freshly triumphant.~
1949   10,   93, 11|                     Indra-for thou art our Friend-wherever he may be, guard thou, Victor!
1950    1,   53, 8 |                 came in arms to fight with friendless Susravas.~
1951    5,   64, 2 |                    forth your evergracious friendliness.~
1952    4,   24, 7 |                Soma, prepares the brew and fries the grains of barley -~Loving
1953    4,    1, 12|             far-resplendent: and sevendear frieuds sprang up unto the Mighty.~
1954    8,   64, 13|                 let this plague pursue and fright another and not us:~Make
1955    6,   27, 5 |                Vrcivans, and the rear fled frighted.~
1956   10,  155, 1 |           ever-screeching, to the hill.~We frighten thee away with these, the
1957    4,   17, 9 |                    Maghavan in battles, he frighteneth away assembled armies.~He
1958   10,   85, 35|                                     35 The fringe, the cloth that decks her
1959    7,   56, 16|                   about the dwelling, like frisking calves, these who pour down
1960    4,   25, 2 |                   morning?~Who seeks bond, fritridship, brotherhood with Indra?
1961    4,    5, 14|               devoid of vigour, scanty and frivolous and inconclusive,~Wherefore
1962    7,   13, 2 |           Jatavedas, settest the Gods free frodi the curse that bound them.~
1963   10,    8, 2 |              youngling with the hump, hath frolicked, the strong and never-ceasing
1964    9,   71, 3 |                   water makes him wild.~He frolics and draws near, completes
1965    9,   21, 1 |                 running drops, these Somas frolicsome in mood.~Exhilarating, finding
1966    5,   11, 3 |                 art thou born: thou camest fromVivasvan as a charming Sage.~With
1967    1,  173, 6 |               wears the heaven as 'twere a frontlet,~
1968    1,  124, 6 |              turneth not from the high nor froom the humble.~
1969    9,   39, 5 |                             5 Inviting him frorh far away, and even from
1970    8,   32, 26|               pierced th:rough Arbuda with frost.~
1971   10,  155, 4 |                 slain and passed away like froth and foam.~
1972    1,   65, 3 |                wide dwelling place, like a fruit-bearing hill, a wholesome stream.~
1973    8,   75, 5 |                  war. Break ye not off our ftiendship, come and act me free.~
1974    1,  152, 3 |           supporteth this world's burthen, fuIfilleth Law and overcometh falsehood.~
1975    5,   54, 13|               drivers of the car of riches ful I of life that have been
1976    2,   30, 1 |                   Ahi, Savitar, God, Law's fulfiller,~Day after day goes on the
1977    3,    1, 7 |                  stood the milch-kine with full-laden udders, and both paired
1978    6,   11, 5 |                    when the trimmed ladle, fullof oil, is lifted,~Firm on
1979    6,   48, 6 |                    hath filled both worlds fult with his brilliant shine,
1980    5,   40, 6 |                   in gloom that stayed his function.~
1981    1,  117, 17|                             17 He whom for furnishing a hundred wethers to the
1982    7,   82, 6 |                enemy; the Other with a few furthereth many a man.~
1983    9,    1, 8 |                 the skin musician-like and fuse~The triple foe-repelling
1984    8,   62, 6 |                              6 The Asvins, fust to hear our prayer, for
1985 AppI          |              rock-inscription mentions the Ga(n)dara together with the
1986    9,   61, 20|                   winning booty every day,~Gainer art thou of steeds and kine.~
1987    6,   71, 6 |             through this our song be happy gainers, God, of a fair and spacious
1988    3,   59, 6 |                                      6 The gainful grace of Mitra,. God, supporter
1989    8,   75, 2 |                  Twain give wisdom for the gainof what is good.~Visvaka calls
1990    5,   33, 8 |                brightness shall convey me. Gairiksita willed it and so came I
1991    3,   34, 5 |               songs he taught the bard who gaised him, and widely spread these
1992    6,    3, 4 |                            4 Fierce is his gait and vast his wondrous body:
1993   10,   68, 5 |                 dravc the darkness, as the gale blows a lily from the fiver.~
1994   10,   78, 3 |                     3 Shakers of all, like gales of wind they travel, like
1995   10,   30, 6 |                    bow before the youthful gallant who comes with love to them
1996    9,   61, 2 |                   Smote swiftly forts, and gambara, then Yadu and that Turvaga,~
1997   10,   34, 6 |                   6 The gamester seeks the gambling-house, and wonders, his body all
1998    4,    6, 10|                  10 These brightly-shining games of thine, O Agni, that move
1999    5,   85, 8 |                                8 If we, as gamesters cheat at play, have cheated,
2000   10,   31, 10|                    and mother, cast up the gami, that which men were seeking.~
2001   10,   27, 17|                 thrown by way of sport and gaming.~Two reach the plain amid
 
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