The Special Sacrifices (continued)
ii. 4. 1.
The gods, men, and the Pitrs were on one side, the Asuras, Raksases, and
Piçacas on the other. Of the gods the little blood they drew the Raksases
smothered by the nights and dawn dawned on them smothered and dead. The gods
understood, 'Him who of us dies, it is the Raksases who kill.' They invited the
Raksases; they said, 'Let us choose a boon; what we win from the Asuras, let
that be shared between us.' Then indeed did the gods conquer the Asuras, and
having conquered the Asuras, they drove away the Raksases. The Raksases
(saying), 'Ye have done falsely', surrounded the gods on all sides. The gods
found a protector in Agni; they offered to Agni, the forward, a cake on eight
potsherds, to Agni, the overcomer, to Agni with the face. In that they offered
to Agni, the forward, the Raksases in front they repelled thereby; in that
(they offered) to Agni, the overcomer, the Raksases that were around they
repelled thereby; in that (they offered) to Agni with the face, the Raksases
behind were repelled thereby. That the gods prospered, the Raksases were
defeated. He who has foes should in conflict sacrifice with this offering; he
should offer to Agni, the forward, a cake on eight potsherds, to Agni, the
overcomer , to Agni with the face. In that he offers to Agni, the forward, he
repels thereby the foe who is superior to him; in that (he offers) to Agni, the
overcomer, he repels thereby (the foe) who is equal to him; in that (he offers)
to Agni with the face, he repels thereby the foe which is inferior to him. He
repels the foe who is superior, he surpasses him who is like, the inferior does
not equal him who knowing thus sacrifices with this offering.
ii. 4. 2.
The gods and the Asuras were in conflict; the gods said, 'Let us hold on to
the strongest of us'; they said to Indra, 'Thou art the strongest of us; let us
hold on to thee.' He said, 'Three are these forms of my own that have strength;
satiate them, and then shall ye overcome the Asuras.' They said, 'Name (them).'
He said, 'This is that which frees from tribulation; this is that which drives
away the foe; this is that which has power' . They offered to Indra, the
freer from tribulation, a cake on eleven potsherds, to Indra, the driver away of
the foe, to Indra, the powerful. In that they offered to Indra, the freer from
tribulation, thereby they were freed from tribulation; in that they offered to
Indra, the driver away of foes, thereby they drove away foes; in that they
offered to Indra, the powerful, thereby they bestowed power upon themselves.
They offered a cake on thirty-three potsherds; the gods are thirty-three; verily
Indra takes hold of them in himself, for prosperity . That was the highest
victory that the gods won over the Asuras. He who has foes should in conflict
sacrifice with this offering; to Indra, the freer from tribulation, he should
offer a cake on eleven potsherds, to Indra, the driver away of the foe, to
Indra, the powerful; by tribulation is he seized whose foe is superior to him;
in that he offers to Indra, the freer from tribulation, he is freed thereby from
tribulation; by foes is he beset, to whom one of his equals is superior, even
if no foe; in that (he offers) to Indra, the driver away of the foe, he
smites away thereby his foes; in that (he offers) to Indra, the powerful, he
bestows thereby power upon himself; he offers a cake on thirty-three potsherds;
the gods are thirty-three; verily the sacrificer takes hold of them in himself,
for prosperity, Thus is the sacrifice called 'the victorious'; he who knowing
thus sacrifices with this offering wins thus the highest victory over his
foe.
ii. 4. 3.
The gods and the Asuras were in conflict; the Gayatri, grasping and taking
their force, might, power, strength, offspring, and cattle, remained away; they
reflected, I Whomsoever of us she shall resort to, they shall become this
(world)'; they hailed her in rivalry, 'O All worker', said the gods; 'O
Deceiver', said the Asuras; neither did she resort to. The gods saw this
formula, 'Thou art force, thou art strength, thou art might , thou are
blazing, thou art by name the home of the gods, thou art all, of all life thou
art everything, thou art of every life, the overcoming.' (So saying) the gods
appropriated the force, might, power, strength, offspring, and cattle of the
Asuras. Because the Gayatri remained away, therefore they style this offering
the Gayatri; the Gayatri is the year, so the year remained away; because the
gods thereby appropriated the force, might, power, strength , offspring, and
cattle of the Asuras, therefore they style this offering the gatherer. He who
has foes should in conflict sacrifice with this offering. To Agni, the gatherer,
he should offer a cake on eight potsherds; this when cooked and put in place he
should stroke with this formula; verily he appropriates the force, might, power,
strength, offspring, and cattle of his foe; he prospers with himself, his foe is
defeated.
ii. 4. 4.
Prajapati created offspring; they created went away from him; where they
stayed, thence sprung the bean. Those he followed with Brhaspati; Brhaspati
said, 'With this will I go before thee, then shall offspring have resort to
thee.' He went before him; then indeed did offspring resort to Prajapati. For
him who desires offspring he should offer this oblation of beans to Prajapati
verily he has recourse to Prajapati with his own share ; verily he produces
offspring for him. Prajapati created cattle; they created went away from him;
where they stayed, thence sprung the bean; those he followed with Pusan; Pusan
said, 'With this do thou go before me; then shall cattle resort to thee.' 'Do
thou go before me', said Soma, 'mine is what grows on untilled (land).'
'Both of you shall I go before', he said; he went before them both; then indeed
did cattle resort to Prajapati. For him who desires cattle should he offer this
oblation of beans to Soma and Pusan; verily he has recourse to Soma and Pusan
with their own share; verily they produce cattle for him. Soma is the
impregnator of seed, Pusan the producer of cattle; verily Soma bestows seed upon
him, Pusan produces cattle.
ii. 4. 5.
O Agni come to us with kine; O drop, delight us with increase; Indra
is the supporter in our homes. Savitr, the thousandfold, May he delight
us in our homes; May Pusan come, may wealth (be ours). May Dhatr give us
wealth, The lord, the ruler of the world; May he favour us with a full
(gift). Tvastr the bull, the strong, May he delight us in our
homes, With a thousand, with ten thousand. Thou whereby the gods moved
immortality , Enduring fame, in the sky, O increase of wealth,
vouchsafe us A herd of kine for life. Agni, lord of the house, Soma,
all-winning, Savitr the wise; hail! O Agni, lord of the house, with thy
ghee portion do thou vouchsafe strength and force to him who advanceth; may I
not wander from the highest of the path; may I become the head; hail!
ii. 4. 6.
He who desires cattle should sacrifice with the Çitra (offering); Çitra is
this (earth); in that in this (earth) all things are produced, thereby is this
(earth) variegated (citra); he who knowing thus sacrifices with the Çitra
desirous of cattle is propagated with offspring, with cattle, with pairings.
With the offering to Agni he strews, with that to Soma he impregnates seed, the
seed impregnated Tvastr develops into forms; there are (offerings) to Sarasvant
and Sarasvati; that is the divine pair; verily in the midst he bestows upon him
a divine pair, for growth, for propagation. There is an oblation to
Sinivali; Sinivali is speech, speech is growth; verily he approaches speech and
growth. The last is to Indra, and thereby there is a pair. Seven are these
offerings, the tame animals are seven, the wild seven; the metres are seven, for
the winning of both. Then he offers these oblations; these gods are the lords of
growth; verily they bestow growth upon him, he grows with offspring and cattle;
moreover in that he offers these oblations, (they serve) for support.
ii. 4. 7.
Thou I art connected with the Maruts, thou art the force of the Maruts,
cleave the stream of the waters. Stay, O Maruts, the speeding falcon,
Swift as mind, the strong, the glorious; That whereby the dread host
goeth set loose, Do ye, O Açvins, put around; hail! East wind, raining,
quicken; Ravat! Hail! Storming, raining, dread; Ravat! Hail! Thundering,
raining, formidable; Ravat! Hail! Thundering without lightning, lightning,
raining, resplendent; Ravat! Hail! Raining over night, satisfying; Ravat!
Hail! Famed as having rained I much; Ravat! Hail! Raining while the sun shines,
radiant; Ravat! Hail! Thundering, lightning, raining, waxing great; Ravat!
Hail! Gladdening, obedient, purifying, agile, Full of light, full of
darkness, flooding, with fair foam, Supporting friends, supporting the
warrior caste, With fair realms, do ye help me. Thou art the fetter of
the strong steed; for rain I yoke thee.
ii. 4. 8.
O gods granting protection, O Mitra and Varuna, Aryaman; O gods who
drink together, O son of the waters, with swift onset, Give of the water,
cleave the holder of the waters; from the sky, from Parjanya, from the
atmosphere, from the earth, thence do ye help us with rain. Even by day
they make the darkness, With Parjanya, water bearer; What time they
inundate the earth. The treasure-house of sky which the heroes rich in
dew Make to shake for the generous giver, The Parjanyas set thee free from
along the firmaments; The rains pour over the desert . From the
ocean, O Maruts, ye make (the rain) to start, Ye make the rain to fall, O ye
that are rich in moisture; Your cows, O ye wondrous, fail not; As ye fly
swiftly your chariots turned. Set free the rain from heaven; With waters
fill the ocean; Thou art born of waters, first-born; Thou art the might of
the ocean. Flood the earth, Break this divine cloud; Give to us of
the divine water, Ruling loosen the water bag. The gods whose portion is
in the sky, the gods whose portion is in the atmosphere, the gods whose portion
is on earth, may they aid this sacrifice, may they enter this place, may they
inhabit this place.
Continued...
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ii. 4. 9.
'Thou art connected with the Maruts, thou art the force of the Maruts', (with
these words) he puts on a black garment with a black fringe; that is the hue of
rain; verily becoming of like hue he causes Parjanya to rain. 'Stay, O Maruts,
the speeding falcon', (with these words) he pushes back the west wind; verily he
produces the east wind, to win the rains. He makes offering to the names of the
wind; the wind rules the rain; verily he has recourse to the wind with its own
share; verily it makes Parjanya rain for him. Eight offerings he makes; the
quarters are four, the intermediate quarters are four; verily from the quarters
he makes the rain to move. He unites (them) on a black antelope skin; verily he
makes the offering; he unites within the Vedi, for accomplishment. When the
Yatis were being eaten, their heads fell away; they became Kharjuras; their sap
rose upwards, they became Kariras; the Kariras are connected with Soma; the
offering connected with Soma makes rain to move from the sky; in that there are
Kariras (in the sacrifice) , by means of an offering which is connected with
Soma he wins the rain from the sky. With honey he unites (them); honey is the
sap of the waters and the plants; verily it rains from the waters and the
plants; verily also he brings down rain from the waters and the plants.
'Gladdening, obedient', (with these words) he unites (them); verily he
approaches them by their names; just as one may say, 'Come hither, N. N.', so by
their names he makes them move forward. Thou art the fetter of the strong
horse; for rain I yoke thee', he says the horse is strong, Parjanya is strong;
becoming black as it were he rains; verily he unites him with his hue, to win
the rains.
ii. 4. 10.
'O gods having wealth, O gods granting protection, O gods drinking together',
(with these words) he ties on; verily by means of the gods he daily seeks rain.
If it should rain, so much only should be offered; if it should not rain, on the
next day he should offer an oblation. Mitra and Varuna are day and night, by day
and night Parjanya rains, for by night or by day he rains; verily he has
recourse to Mitra and Varuna with their own share; verily they make Parjanya
rain for him by day and night. To Agni, hiding his abode, he should offer a cake
on eight potsherds, to the Maruts on seven potsherds, to Surya on one potsherd;
Agni thence causes the rain to arise, the Maruts lead it out when produced; when
yonder Sun Moves low with his rays, then he rains; becoming a hider of his
abode, as it were, he rains; these deities are the lords of rain; them he has
recourse to with their own share; they make Parjanya rain for him; even if
he is not minded to rain yet he rains. 'Let free the rain from heaven; with
waters fill the ocean', he says; verily these and yonder waters he unites; then
with these he approaches yonder (waters). 'Thou art born of waters, first-born;
thou art the might of the ocean', he says; that is according to the text. 'Flood
the earth', (with these words) he offers in a Boerhavia procumbens; this
of plants is that which wins rain, and thereby he causes rain to fall. 'The gods
whose portion is in the sky', (with these words) he shakes the black antelope
skin; verily to him these worlds become dear and desired.
ii. 4. 11.
'All' the metres are to be recited in this sacrifice', they say; the Kakubh
is the strength of the Tristubh, the Usnih of the Jagati; in that he repeats the
Usnih and the Kakubh, thereby he wins all the metres. The Usnih is the Gayatri;
the four syllables over are fourfooted cattle; just as cake is over cake, so it
is with the syllables which are over the verse; if he were to close with a
Jagati , he would end the sacrifice; he closes with a Tristubh, the Tristubh
is power and strength; verily he establishes the sacrifice on power and
strength, he does not end it. 'O Agni, three are thy strengths, three thy
abodes', with this (verse) containing the word 'three' he closes, for similarity
of form: that which has three constituents is the whole of the sacrifice; for
every desire it is employed, for the sacrifice is employed for all desires. He
who is practising witchcraft should sacrifice with that of three constituents;
that which has three constituents is the whole of the sacrifice ; verily with
the whole of the sacrifice he bewitches him, and lays him low. With the same
(offering) should he sacrifice who is practised against, that which has three
constituents is the whole of the sacrifice; verily he sacrifices with the whole
of the sacrifice, and he who practises witchcraft does not lay him low. With the
same (offering) should he sacrifice who is going to sacrifice with a thousand;
verily he produces and gives (it). He who has sacrificed with a thousand should
sacrifice with the same (offering) he goes to the end of cattle who
sacrifices with a thousand; Prajapati created cattle; he created them with (the
offering) of three constituents; he who knowing thus sacrifices, desirous of
cattle, with (the offering) of three constituents, creates cattle from the very
source whence Prajapati created them; and the thousand resorts to him. He
becomes a prey to the gods who having said, 'I shall sacrifice', does not
sacrifice; he should sacrifice with (the offering) of three constituents; (the
offering) of three constituents is the whole of the sacrifice; verily he
sacrifices with the whole of the sacrifice, and does not become a prey to the
gods. The cake is on twelve potsherds; these are three (sets of) four potsherds,
to bring about the three. There are three cakes, these worlds are three; (verily
they serve) to win these worlds. Each one above the other is larger, for so as
it were are these worlds. The middle one is made of barley, that is the form of
the atmosphere; (verily it serves) for prosperity. He cuts off from all (the
cakes) as he sets them up without making a failure. He gives gold; verily he
wins brilliance ; he gives the silken garment; verily he wins cattle; he
gives a cow; verily he wins his prayers; gold is the colour of the Saman, the
silken garment of the formulae, the cow of the praises and rejoicings; verily he
wins all these colours.
ii. 4. 12.
Tvastr, his son slain, offered Soma excluding Indra. Indra desired an
invitation to the rite, but he did not invite him, (saying), 'Thou hast slain my
son.' He made a disturbance of the sacrifice, and forcibly drank the Soma. The
remains of it Tvastr cast upon the Ahavaniya (fire), saying, 'Hail! wax great,
Indra's foe. While (the fire) was flaming upwards to strike, just then of itself
it stayed; whether so much was before , or so much was over the fire, be
sprang up alive and came into union with Agni and Soma. He grew on all sides an
arrow(shot), he enveloped these worlds. Because he enveloped these worlds,
therefore is Vrtra, Vrtra. Indra feared him, and Tvastr too; Tvastr dipped his
bolt for him; the bolt was fervour; he could not restrain it. Visnu was
another god; he said, 'Visnu, come hither; we will grasp that by which he is
this world. Visnu deposited himself in three places, a third on the earth, a
third in the atmosphere, a third in the sky, for he was afraid of his growth. By
means of the third on earth Indra raised his bolt, aided by Visnu. He said,
'Hurl it not at me; there is this strength in me; I will give it to you.' He
gave it to him, he accepted it, and (saying), 'Thou didst further me', gave it
to Visnu. Visnu accepted it (saying), 'Let Indra place power (indriya) in
us.' By means of the third in the atmosphere Indra raised his bolt, aided by
Visnu. He said, 'Hurl it not at me; there is this strength in me; I will
give it to you.' He gave it to him; he accepted it, and (saying), 'Twice hast
thou furthered me', gave it to Visnu. Visnu accepted it (saying), 'Let Indra
place power in us.' By means of the third in the sky Indra raised his bolt,
aided by Visnu. He said, 'Hurl it not at me; I will give to thee that by which I
am this world! He said, 'Yes.' (He replied), 'Let us make a compact; let me
enter thee.' 'If thou dost enter me, in what way wilt thou enjoy me?' 'I will
kindle thee; I will enter thee for thine enjoyment', he answered. Vrtra entered
him. Vrtra is the belly; hunger is man's enemy; he who knows this slays the
enemy hunger. He gave it to him; he accepted it, and (saying), 'Thrice hast thou
furthered me', gave it to Visnu. Visnu accepted it (saying), 'Let Indra place
power in us.' In that thrice he gave and thrice he accepted, that is the reason
of the threefold character of the threefold. In that Visnu aided him and he gave
(it) to Visnu, therefore the offering belongs to Indra and Visnu. Whatever there
is here he gave to him, the Rces, the Samans, the Yajuses. A thousand he gave to
him; therefore there are a thousand gifts.
ii. 4. 13.
The gods were afraid of the warrior on his birth. While still within (the
womb) they fettered him with a bond. The warrior thus is born fettered; if he
were born not fettered he would continually slay his foes. If one desire of a
warrior, 'May he be born not fettered, may he continually slay his foes', one
should offer for him the offering for Indra and Brhaspati, for the warrior is
connected with Indra, Brhaspati is the holy power (Brahman); verily by the holy
power (Brahman) he frees him from the bond that fetters him. The sacrificial
present is a golden bond; verily manifestly he frees him from the bond that
fetters him.
ii. 4. 14.
He is born ever new; The banner of the days goeth before the
dawns. He appointeth their portion to the gods as he advanceth The moon
extendeth length of days. The drop which the Adityas make to swell, The
imperishable which the imperishable drink, With that may king Varuna,
Brhaspati, The guardians of the world make us to swell. In the eastern
quarter thou art king, O Indra In the northern, O slayer of Vrtra, thou art
slayer of foes Where the streams go, thou hast conquered; On the south
be the bull whom we invoke. Indra shall conquer, he shall not be
conquered; Over-lord among kings shall he rule; In all conflicts shall he
be a protector, That he may be reverenced and honoured. His greatness
surpasseth Sky or earth or heaven; Indra sole lord, hailed by all, in his
home Boisterous and brave, waxeth great for the conflict. We call on
thee, O hero, in praise, Like kine unmilked, Lord of this moving
world, seeing the heavenly light, Lord, O Indra, of what standeth. We
call on thee, We poets, to gain the prize; Men call on thee, lord of
heroes, O Indra, amongst foes, On thee in the racing of the horse. If, O
Indra, a hundred skies, A hundred earths were thine, Not a thousand suns
could match thee at birth, Nor the two worlds. Drink the Soma, O Indra;
let it gladden thee, (The Soma) which for thee, O lord of bays, the
stone Through the arms of the presser , like a horse well guided hath
expressed. With Indra may splendid feasts be ours, Rich in
strength, Wherewith we may rejoice in food. O Agni, thy pure. With
the light. Thee, Jatavedas. Seven bays in thy chariot Bear thee, O
god Surya, With hair of light, O wise one. The radiant countenance of
the gods hath arisen, The eye of Mitra, Varuna, and Agni; He hath filled
the sky, the earth, and the atmosphere; Surya is the soul of that which
moveth and standeth . May the All-gods who further right, Who hearken
to the call in due season, Find pleasure in this proper drink. O ye
All-gods, hear my invocation, Ye that are in the atmosphere, ye that are in
the sky; Ye with Agni as your tongue, worthy of sacrifice, Sit on this
strew and rejoice.
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