Hinduism is believed
to be one of the oldest
living religions on Earth,
with origins tracing
back to the ancient Vedic
civilization in India.
The earliest
Hindu spiritual text,
the Rig Veda,
was compiled in
approximately 900 B.C.
Other sacred
Hindu scriptures include
the Upanishads,
the Bhagavad Gita,
and the Ramayana,
among others.
With its deep spiritual
roots, Hinduism
is a vastly diverse
and colorful religion.
Hindus believe in
reincarnation, the law of
cause and effect (karma),
a single Divine Being
with multiple
manifestations, and
the desire of all beings
for liberation from the
cycle of birth and death.
One of the most
cherished values
of Hinduism is “ahimsa,”
or non-violence.
According to Hinduism,
religious belief and the
practices of everyday life
are inseparable.
An example of this is
how ahimsa is honored
through a vegetarian diet,
which shows compassion
to all beings.
We now present
an excerpt of
Hinduism’s sacred text,
the Samaveda,
First Part, Book III.
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spontaneous viewers,
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May divine blessings
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with wonder and peace.
HYMNS
OF THE SAMAVEDA
FIRST PART
BOOK III
CHAPTER I
DECADE I Indra
Let Soma juices
(a sacred drink)
make thee glad!
Display thy bounty,
Thunderer:
Drive off the enemies
of prayer!
Drink our libation,
Lord of hymns!
with streams of meath
thou art bedewed:
Yea, Indra
(king of the devas),
glory is thy gift.
Indra hath ever
thought of you and
tended you with care.
The God, Heroic Indra,
is not checked.
Let the drops pass
within thee as the rivers
flow into the sea
O Indra,
naught excelleth thee!
Indra, the singers
with high praise, Indra
reciters with their lauds,
Indra the choirs
have glorified.
May Indra give,
to aid us wealth handy
that rules the skillful ones!
Yea, may the Strong
give potent wealth
Verily Indra,
conquering all, drives
even mighty fear away,
For firm is he
and swift to act.
These songs with
every draught we pour
come, lover of the song,
to thee
As milch-kine hasten
to their calves.
Indra and Wishan
will we call for
friendship and prosperity,
And for the winning
of the spoil.
O Indra, Vritra-slayer
(drought slayer),
naught is better,
mightier than thou
Verily there is none
like thee!
DECADE II Indra
Him have I magnified,
our Lord in common,
guardian of your folk,
Songs have outpoured
themselves to thee,
Indra (king of the devas),
the strong,
the guardian Lord,
And with one
will have risen to thee!
Good guidance
hath the mortal man
whom Aryaman (chief
of the solar divinities),
the Marut host
(host of storm deities),
And Mitras (god of
friendship and alliances),
void of guile, protect.
Bring us the wealth
for which we long,
O Indra,
that which is concealed
In strong firm place
precipitous.
Him your best
Vritra-slayer
(drought slayer),
him the famous champion
of mankind I urge
to great munificence.
Indra, may we adorn
thy fame, fame of one
like thee, hero! deck,
Sakra (ruler of Heaven)!
thy fame at highest feast!
Indra,
accept at break of day
our Soma mixt
with roasted corn,
With groats, with cake,
with eulogies!
With waters' foam
thou torest off, Indra,
the head of Namuchi
(a demon),
When thou o'ercamest
all the foes.
Thine are these
Soma juices, thine, Indra,
those still to be expressed:
Enjoy them,
Lord of princely wealth!
For thee,
O Indra, Lord of light,
Somas (sacred drink)
are pressed
and grass is strewn:
Be gracious
to thy worshippers!
We seeking strength,
with Soma drops fill full
your Indra like a well,
Most liberal,
Lord of boundless might.
O Indra,
even from that place
come unto us
with food that gives
A hundred, yea,
a thousand powers!
The new-born
Vritra-slayer
asked his mother,
as he seized his shaft,
Who are the,
fierce and famous ones?
Let us call him to aid
whose hands stretch far,
the highly-lauded, who
Fulfills the work
to favor us
Mitra who knoweth
leadeth us, and Varuna
(god of natural
and moral law)
who guideth straight,
And Aryaman
in accord with Gods.
When, even as
she were present here,
red Dawn hath shone
from far away,
She spreadeth light
on every side.
Varuna, Mitra,
sapient pair, pour fatness
on our pastures,
pour Meath
on the regions of the air!
And, at our sacrifices
(offerings of cereal,
fruits, various powders,
vegetables, and flowers,
etc.), these, sons, singers,
have enlarged their bounds.
Through all this world
strode Vishnu
(a Hindu Trinity,
the preserver
of the universe):
thrice his foot he planted,
and the whole
Was gathered
in his footstep's dust.
DECADE V Indra
We call aloud, hero,
to thee, and sing thy praise,
Looker on heavenly light,
Lord of this moving world,
Lord, Indra
(king of the devas),
of what moveth not!
That we may win us
wealth and power we poets,
verily, call on thee…
To you will I sing
Indra's praise
who gives good gifts
as well we know;
The praise
of Maghavan (Indra)
who, rich in treasure,
aids his singers with
wealth thousandfold.
As cows
low to their calves in stalls,
so with our songs
we glorify
This Indra,
even your wondrous God
who checks attack,
who takes delight
in precious juice.
Loud singing
at the sacred rite where
Soma (sacred drink) flows
we priests invoke
With haste,
that he may help,
as the bard's cherisher,
Indra who findeth wealth
for you
With Plenty
for his true ally
the active man
will gain the spoil.
Your Indra, much-invoked,
I bend with song,
as bends a wright
his wheel of solid wood.
Drink, Indra,
of the savory juice,
and cheer thee
with our milky draught!
Be, for our weal, our friend
and sharer of the feast,
and let thy wisdom
guard us well!
For thou –
come to the worshipper! -
wilt find great wealth
to make us rich.
Vasishtha will not
overlook the lowliest one
among you all
Beside our Soma juice
effused today
let all the Maruts
(storm deities)
drink with eager haste!
Glorify naught besides,
O friends; so shall
no sorrow trouble you!
Praise only mighty Indra
when the juice is shed,
and say your lauds
repeatedly!
CHAPTER II
DECADE I Indra
No one by deed
attains to him who works
and strengthens evermore:
No, not by sacrifice,
to Indra (king of the devas).
praised of all, resistless,
daring, bold in might.
He without ligature,
before making incision
in the neck,
Closed up the wound again,
most wealthy Maghavan,
who healeth
the dissevered parts.
A thousand
and a hundred steeds
are harnessed
to thy golden car:
Yoked by devotion, Indra,
let the long-maned bays
bring thee
to drink the Soma juice!
Come hither, Indra,
with bay steeds, joyous,
with tails
like peacock's plumes!
Thou as a God,
O mightiest, verily
blessest mortal man.
O Maghavan,
there is no comforter
but thou: Indra,
I speak my words to thee.
O Indra,
thou art far-renowned,
impetuous Lord
of power and might.
May these my songs
of praise exalt thee, Lord,
who hast abundant wealth!
Men skilled
in holy hymns, pure,
with the hues of fire,
have sung them
with their lauds to thee.
These songs of ours
exceeding sweet,
these hymns of praise
ascend to thee,
Like
ever-conquering chariots
that display their strength
gain wealth
and give unfailing help.
Even as the wild-bull,
when he thirsts, goes to
the desert's watery pool,
Come to us quickly both
at morning and at eve,
and with the Kanvas
(ancient sage)
drink thy fill!
DECADE II
Indra and others
Indra
(king of the devas),
with all thy saving
helps assist us,
Lord of power and might!
For after thee we follow
even as glorious bliss,
thee, hero, finder
out of wealth.
O Indra, Lord of light,
what joys thou broughtest
from the Asuras
(demi-gods),
Prosper therewith,
O Maghavan,
him who lauds that deed,
and those whose grass
is trimmed for thee!
To Aryaman
(chief of the solar deities)
and Mitra (god of
friendship and alliances)
sing a reverent song,
O pious one,
A pleasant hymn
to Varuna (god
of natural and moral law)
who shelters us: sing
ye a laud unto the Kings!
Men with their lauds
are urging thee, Indra,
to drink the Soma first.
The Ribhus
(one of the three artisans
of the gods) in accord
have lifted up their voice,
and Rudras
(atmospheric gods)
sung thee as the first.
Sing to your lofty Indra,
sing, Maruts,
a holy hymn of praise
Let Satakratu,
Vritra-slayer
(drought slayer),
slay the foe
with hundred-knotted
thunderbolt!
To Indra
sing the lofty hymn,
Maruts (storm deities)!
that slays the Vritras
(droughts) best,
Whereby the holy ones
created for the God
the light divine
that ever wakes.
O Indra, give us wisdom
as a sire gives wisdom
to his sons
Guide us, O much-invoked,
in this our way:
may we still live
and look upon the light!
O Indra, turn us not away:
be present with us
at our feast
For thou art our protection,
yea, thou art our kin:
O Indra, turn us not away!
We compass these
like waters, we
whose grass is trimmed
and Soma pressed.
Here where the filter
pours its stream,
thy worshippers round thee,
O Vritra-slayer, sit.
All strength and valor
that is found, Indra,
in tribes of Nahushas,
And all the splendid fame
that the Five Tribes
enjoy, bring, yea,
all manly powers at once!
DECADE III Indra
Yea, verily thou art
a Bull, our guardian,
rushing like a bull:
Thou, mighty one,
art celebrated as a Bull,
famed as a Bull
both near and far.
Whether, O Sakra
(ruler of Heaven),
thou be far, or,
Vritra-slayer, near at hand,
Thence by
Heaven-reaching songs
he who hath
pressed the juice
invites thee with
thy long-maned steeds.
In the wild raptures
of the juice
sing to your hero
with high laud,
to him the wise,
To Indra
(king of the devas)
glorious in his name,
the mighty one, even as
the hymn alloweth it!
O Indra,
give us for our weal
a triple refuge, triply strong!
Bestow a dwelling-place
on our rich lords and me,
and keep thy dart afar
from these!
Turning, as 'twere,
to meet the Sun
enjoy from Indra
all good things!
When he who will be born
is born with power
we look to treasures
as our heritage.
The godless mortal
gaineth not this food,
O thou whose life is long!
But one who yokes
the bright-hued horses,
Etasas; then Indra yokes
his tawny steeds.
Come, thou most mighty
Vritra-slayer
(drought slayer),
meet for praise, come to,
libations and to hymns!
Thine, Indra,
is the lowest wealth,
thou cherishest
the midmost wealth,
Thou ever rulest
all the highest.
Where art thou?
Whither art thou gone?
For many
a place attracts thy mind.
Here, verily, yesterday
we let the thunder-wielder
drink his fill.
Bring him the juice
poured forth in sacrifice
(offerings of cereal,
fruits, various powders,
vegetables, and flowers,
etc.) today.
Now range you
by the glorious one!
DECADE IV Indra
He who as sovran Lord
of men moves with
his chariots unrestrained,
The Vritra-slayer
(drought slayer),
vanquisher
of fighting hosts,
pre-eminent,
is praised in song.
Indra (king of the devas),
give us security from that
whereof we are afraid
Help us, O Maghavan,
let thy favor aid us thus;
drive away foes
and enemies!
Strong pillar thou,
Lord of the home!
armor of Soma-offerers!
The drop of Soma
(sacred drink) breaketh
all the strongholds down,
and Indra is
the Rishis' friend.
Verily, Surya (Sun god),
thou art great; truly,
Aditya (seven celestial
deities), thou art great!
O most admired for
greatness of thy majesty,
God, by thy greatness
thou art great!
Indra! thy friend,
when fair of form and
rich in chariots, steeds,
Hath ever vital power
that gives him strength,
and joins the company
with radiant men.
O Indra,
if a hundred Heavens
and if a hundred Earths
were thine –
No, not a hundred suns
could match thee
at thy birth,
not both the worlds,
O Thunderer!
Though, Indra,
thou art called by men
eastward and west ward,
north and south,
Thou chiefly art
with Anava and Turvasa,
brave champion
urged by men to come.
Indra whose wealth is
in thyself, what mortal
will attack this man?
The strong
will win the spoil
on the decisive day
through faith in thee,
O Maghavan!
First, Indra!
Agni (god of fire)!
hath this Maid
come footless
unto those with feet.
Stretching her head
and speaking loudly
with her tongue,
she hath gone downward
thirty steps.
Come, Indra,
very near to us with aids
of firmly-based resolve
Come, most auspicious,
with thy most auspicious
help; good kinsman,
with good kinsmen come!