Now she discloses heaven’s farthest horizons, chasing far away her sister the Night. She reflects the splendor of the Sun, her lover, and makes the score of days of all creatures to dwindle.
Rig Veda I, 92, 11
Bright Dawn, the blessed One, spreads forth her rays like grazing cattle or expanding floodwaters; never infringing divine precepts, she appears with escorting sunbeams, visible to all.
Rig Veda I, 92, 12
Ample, O Dawn, is your store of treasure. Grant us your wondrous boons that we may nourish our children and our children’s sons.
Rig Veda I, 92, 13
The sages, absorbed in meditation through one-pointedness of mind, discovered the creative power, belonging to the Lord Himself and hidden in its own gunas. That non-dual Lord rules over all those causes-time, the self and the rest.
Yajur Veda, Svetasvatara Upanishad, Part I, Chapter 1, 3
The sages saw the wheel of Brahman, which has one felly, a triple tire, sixteen end-parts, fifty spokes with twenty counter-spokes and six sets of eight; whose one rope is manifold; which moves on three different roads; and whose illusion arises from two causes.
Yajur Veda, Svetasvatara Upanishad, Part I, Chapter 1, 4
