Rig Veda Mandal - 1 (Part - 1) HYMN 164. Visvedevas1 OF this benignant Priest, with eld grey-coloured, the brother midmost of the three is lightning. 2 Seven to the one-wheeled chariot yoke the Courser; bearing seven names the single Courser draws it. 3 The seven who on the seven-wheeled car are mounted have horses, seven in tale, who draw them onward. 4 Who hath beheld him as he sprang to being, seen how the boneless One supports the bony? 5 Unripe in mind, in spirit undiscerning, I ask of these the Gods' established places; For up above the 6 I ask, unknowing, those who know, the sages, as one all ignorant for sake of knowledge, 7 Let him who knoweth presently declare it , this lovely Bird's securely founded station. 8 The Mother gave the Sire his share of Order: with thought, at first, she wedded him in spirit. 9 10 Bearing three Mothers and three Fathers, single he stood erect: they never make him weary. 11 Formed with twelve spokes, by length of time, unweakened, rolls round the heaven this wheel of 12 They call him in the farther half of heaven the Sire five-footed, of twelve forms, wealthy in watery 13 Upon this five-spoked wheel revolving ever all living creatures rest and are dependent. 14 The wheel revolves, unwasting, with its felly: ten draw it, yoked to the far-stretching car-pole. 15 Of the co-born they call the seventh single-born; the six twin pairs are called Rsis, Children of 16 They told me these were males, though truly females: he who hath eyes sees this, the blind 17 Beneath the upper realm, above this lower, bearing her calf at foot the Cow hath risen. 18 Who, that the father of this Calf discerneth beneath the upper realm, above the lower, 19 Those that come hitherward they call departing, those that depart they call directed hither. 20 Two Birds with fair wings, knit with bonds of friendship, in the same sheltering tree have found a 21 Where those fine Birds hymn ceaselessly their portion of life eternal, and the sacred synods, 22 The, tree whereon the fine Birds eat the sweetness, where they all rest and procreate their 23 How on the Gayatri. the Gayatri was based, how from the Tristup they fashioned the Tristup forth, 24 With Gayatri he measures out the praise-song, Sama with praise-song, triplet with the Tristup. 25 With Jagati the flood in heaven he stablished, and saw the Sun in the Rathantara Saman. 26 I invocate the milch-cow good for milking so that the milker, deft of hand, may drain her. 27 She, lady of all treasure, is come hither yearning in spirit for her calf and lowing. 28 The cow hath lowed after her blinking youngling; she licks his forehead, as she lows, to form it. 29 He also snorts, by whom encompassed round the Cow laws as she clings unto the shedder of the 30 That which hath breath and speed and life and motion lies firmly stablished in the midst of 31 I saw the Herdsman, him who never stumbles, approaching by his pathways and departing. 32 He who hath made him cloth not comprehend him: from him who saw him surely is he hidden. 33 Dyaus is my Father, my begetter: kinship is here. This great earth is my kin and Mother. 34 I ask thee of the earth's extremest limit, where is the centre of the world, I ask 35 This altar is the earth's extremest limit; this sacrifice of ours is the world's centre. 36 Seven germs unripened yet are heaven's prolific, seed: their functions they maintain by Visnu's 37 What thing I truly am I know not clearly: mysterious, fettered in my mind I wander. 38 Back, forward goes he, grasped by strength inherent, the Immortal born the brother of the mortal 39 Upon what syllable of holy praise-song, as twere their highest heaven, the Gods repose them,- 40 Forunate mayst thou be with goodly pasture, and may we also be exceeding wealthy. 41 Forming the water-floods, the buffalo hath lowed, one-footed or two-footed or fourfooted, 42 From her descend in streams the seas of water; thereby the world's four regions have their being, 43 I saw from far away the smoke of fuel with spires that rose on high o'er that beneath it. 44 Three with long tresses show in ordered season. One of them sheareth when the year is ended. 45 Speech hath been measured out in four divisions, the Brahmans who have understanding know 46 They call him Indra, Mitra, Varuna, Agni, and he is heavenly nobly-winged Garutman. 47 Dark the descent: the birds are golden-coloured; up to the heaven they fly robed in the waters. 48 Twelve are the fellies, and the wheel is single; three are the naves. What man hath understood it? 49 That breast of thine exhaustless, spring of pleasure, wherewith thou feedest all things that are 50 By means of sacrifice the Gods accomplished their sacrifice: these were the earliest ordinances. 51 Uniform, with the passing days, this water mounts and fails again. 52 The Bird Celestial, vast with noble pinion, the lovely germ of plants, the germ of waters,
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