First Quote Added
April 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"Favour ye this my laud, O GangÄ, YamunÄ, O Sutudri, Paruį¹£į¹Ä« and SarasvatÄ«: With Asikni, Vitasta, O Marudvrdha, O ÄrjÄ«kÄ«ya with Susoma hear my call. First with Trstama thou art eager to flow forth, with RasÄ, and Susartu, and with Svetya here, With Kubha; and with these, Sindhu and Mehatnu, thou seekest in thy course Krumu and Gomati."
"So let not RasÄ, Krumu, or AnitabhÄ, KubhÄ, or Sindhu hold you back. Let not the watery Sarayu obstruct your way. With us be all the bliss ye give."
"With those aids by which you make the Rasa overflow with a flood of water, with those aids come to us, oh Ashwins (I.112.12)."
"Wherewith ye made RasÄ swell full with water-floods, and urged to victory the car without a horse; Wherewith TriÅoka drove forth his recovered cows,āCome hither unto us, O AÅvins, with those aids.ā"
"āDuly to each one hath my laud been offered. Strong be VarÅ«trÄ« with her powers to succour. May the great Mother RasÄ here befriend us, straight-handed, with the princes, striving forward.ā"
"āOn every side, O Soma, flow round us with thy protecting stream, As RasÄ flows around the world.ā"
"Your wide vehicle encompasses Heaven, when from the ocean it returns you. Let the Indus with the Rasa anoint your horses (IV.43.5-6)."
"āInto the pressed soma pour glory {= milk}, the full glory of the two world-halves. The RasÄ (River {= water} should receive the bull.ā"
"āHis, through his might, are these snow-covered mountains, and men call sea and RasÄ his possession: His arms are these, his are these heavenly regions. What God shall we adore with our oblation?ā"
"āWhat wish of SaramÄ hath brought her hither? The path leads far away to distant places. What charge hast thou for us? Where turns thy journey? How hast thou made thy way oāer RasÄās waters.ā"
"Whose they say are the Himalayas with their majesty, and the ocean with the Rasa, whose are these five directions, whose are these two arms, to the unknown God may we give our offering (X.121.4)."
"āSo let not RasÄ, Krumu, or AnitabhÄ, KubhÄ, or Sindhu hold you back. Let not the watery Sarayu obstruct your way. With us be all the bliss ye give.ā"
"āI come appointed messenger of Indra, seeking your ample stores of wealth, O Paį¹is. This hath preserved me from the fear of crossing: thus have I made my way oāer RasÄās waters.ā"
"May the Rasa, the Mighty Mother, flow for us (V.41.15)."
"Clear-seeing Soma flow, fill great Heaven and Earth, like the dawn the Sun with his rays. Flow to us from all sides with your most peaceful current, like the river Rasa around the world (IX.41.6)."
"āLet Sindhu with his wave bedew your horses: in fiery glow have the red birds come hither. Observed of all was that your rapid going, whereby ye were the Lords of SÅ«ryaās Daughter.ā"
"āForth from the bosom of the mountains, eager as two swift mares with loosened rein contending, Like two bright mother cows who lick their youngling, VipÄÅ and ÅutudrÄ« speed down their waters.ā"
"I have driven to the best motherly river (ÅutudrÄ«). We have come to the well-formed VipÄÅ. Like a cow licking a calf both proceeding together along the same river bed (yoni)."
"āSo there this car of Uį¹£as lay, broken to pieces, in VipÄÅ, And she herself fled far away.ā"
"āFor fear of thee forth fled the dark-hued races, scattered abroad, deserting their possessions, When, glowing, O VaiÅvÄnara, for PÅ«ru, thou Agni didst light up and rend their castles.ā"
"That land, created by the gods, which lies between the two divine rivers Sarasvati and Drishadvati, the (sages) call Brahmavarta."
"He set thee in the earthās most lovely station, in Iįø·Äās place, in days of fair bright weather. On man, on ÄpayÄ, Agni! on the rivers Dį¹į¹£advati, SarasvatÄ«, shine richly."
"There is no doubt that the Rawi, even more than some of the other rivers constituting the Panch Nad or Panj Ab, has changed more or less from one side to the other and back again time after time; and thus to attempt to āidentify" places along its present banks with others supposed to have existed more than twenty-two centuries ago, is so absurd as to require no further comment."
"āThe very truth do I declare to thee, Paruį¹£į¹Ä«, mighty flood. Waters! No man is there who gives more horses than Åaviį¹£į¹ha gives.ā"
"Holy Maruts, what medicine is on the Indus, in the Asikni, in the oceans or in the mountains, with that bless us."
"āBull, hurler of the four-edged rain-producer with both his arms, strong, mighty, most heroic; Wearing as wool Paruį¹£į¹Ä« for adornment, whose joints for sake of friendship he hath covered.ā"
"If the river Drsadvati is full of water, they should perform the Aponaptriya Isti near its confluence (in the Sarasvati). Dhanamjaya maintains that it may be performed there, even if it (the Drsadvati) has no water."
"āFools, in their folly fain to waste her waters, they parted inexhaustible Paruį¹£į¹Ä«. Lord of the Earth, he with his might repressed them: still lay the herd and the affrighted herdsman.ā āAs to their goal they sped to their destruction: they sought Paruį¹£į¹Ä«; eāen the swift returned not. Indra abandoned, to SudÄs the manly, the swiftly flying foes, unmanly babblers.ā"
"āFair-gleaming, on Paruį¹£į¹Ä« they have clothed themselves in robes of wool, And with their chariot tires they cleave the rock asunder in their might.ā"
"From fear of you, Agni, the Asikni people fled and abandoned their possessions"
"O GangÄ, YamunÄ, SarasvatÄ«, ShutudrÄ« (Sutlej), ParushnÄ« (Ravi), hear my praise! Hear my call, O AsiknÄ« (Chenab), MarudvridhÄ (Maruvardhvan), VitastÄ (Jhelum) with ÄrjÄ«kiyÄ and SushomÄ. First you flow united with TrishtÄmÄ, with Susartu and RasÄ, and with SvetyÄ, O Sindhu (Indus) with KubhÄ (Kabul) to Gomati (Gumal or Gomal), with MehatnÅ« to Krumu (Kurram), with whom you proceed together."
"The mighty ones, the seven times seven, have singly given me hundred gifts. I have obtained on Yamuna famed wealth in kine and wealth in steeds."
"Finding some divine liquor in a forest near Vrindavan one day, he (BalarÄma) became so inebriated that he was taken over by the fancy to summon the YamunÄ to himself so that he could bathe in her. The lady was less than enthusiastic, however, and turned a deaf ear. Furious, BalarÄma seized his ploughshare, plunged it into her bank, and dragged her to him: āHe compelled the dark river to quit its ordinary course,ā says the Vishnu PurÄna."
"Yamuna and the Trtsus aided Indra."
"the Sutlej āflowed southwards from the HimalÄya . . . and onwards, through Sind, to the seaāāuntil, for some reason, a prince-turned-ascetic named Puran, a hero of many Punjabi legends, cursed the river to leave its bed and move westward. āThe stream, in consequence, changed its course more and more towards the west, until, six hundred and fifty years ago, it entered the Beas valley . . .ā, which would take us to the thirteenth century CE; but leaving aside the date, the consequence was āa terrible drought and famine in the country on the banks of the Hakra, where [large] numbers of men and cattle perished. The survivors then migrated to the banks of the Indus, and the country has ever since been desertā"
"This early confluence of the Sutlej and Beas was by no means the end of the matter. Both rivers have separated and rejoined several times in the last 2000 years."
"The YamunÄ was thus a double riverāwhich would conveniently explain the root meaning of the word yamunÄ: ātwinā."
"Even to this day, the YamunÄ is seen to flow through the track (river bed) through which [she] was dragged."
"To reconstruct the main stages in the [Sarasvati] riverās lifeāin a manner which, I believe, respects all the strands of our webāI will begin with a useful clue in the MahÄbhÄrata. In two places at least, the epic tells us that the SarasvatÄ«ās course in the mountain was close to the YamunÄās. In the more precise passage of the two, BalarÄma climbs to a tÄ«rtha on the SarasvatÄ« called āPlakshaprÄsravanaā (the name of the riverās source as we saw earlier) and, from there, soon reaches the YamunÄ."
"The MahÄbhÄrata tells us how the great rishi Vasishtha, sorely distressed when he found that all his sons had been killed by his arch rival VishvÄmitra, wished to end his life. He tried various ways, but the elements always refused to cooperate; the sea or rivers into which he repeatedly hurled himself, bound with ropes or weighed with stones, stubbornly cast him back ashore. Thinking he was a ball of fire, the last river he plunged into āimmediately flew in a hundred different directions, and has been known ever since by the name of the Shatadru, the river of a hundred coursesā. Here again, the textual tradition is in accordance with what we find on the ground in the form of the Sutlejās multiple channels."
"I am convinced that everything has come down to us from the banks of the Ganges, ā astronomy, astrology, metempsychosis, etc."
"For India's devout Hindus, the sacred River Ganges is always clean and always pure -- even if its waters are a toxic mix of human sewage, discarded garbage and factory waste. ... Ganges water is well known for its extraordinary resilience and recuperative capacity."
"Jaharnavi (Jahnavi) was brought by the ascetic Bhagiratha..."
"If the wine is made from the waters of Sursuri (Ganges), the saintly persons do not drink it; if the impure wine or any ,jf other water, mixes with Sursuri, it becomes the Sursuri itself."