[The Religions of India by Edward Washburn Hopkins]@TWC D-Link book
The Religions of India

CHAPTER III
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Each has its own mark of lateness.

In 37, the dream; in 158, the triad; in 170, the sun as _asurah[=a]_; in 177, the mystic tone and the bird-sun (compare Garutman, I.164; X.149); in 189, the thirty stations.] [Footnote 21: See Whitney in _Colebrooke's Essays_, revised edition, ii.p.

111.] [Footnote 22: iv.

54] [Footnote 23: Two 'laps' below, besides that above, the word meaning 'middle' but also 'under-place.' The explanation of this much-disputed passage will be found by comparing I.
154.

5 and VII.99.1.The sun's three places are where he appears on both horizons and in the zenith.


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