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Theories of Creation in the Rig Veda

Author(s): W. Norman Brown


Source: Journal of the American Oriental Society, Vol. 85, No. 1 (Jan. - Mar., 1965), pp. 23-34
Published by: American Oriental Society
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THEORIES OF CREATION IN THE RIG VEDA

WY.NORMAN BROWN
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA

THE BEGINNINGS OF SPECULATIVE THOUGHT in by the Aryans after leaving their Indo-European
India, as in Greece, lie in notions of cosmogony. homeland. Another bit of mythology concerns the
How did everything begin? The earliest recorded twins Yama and Yam! (RV 10. 10),1 who are the
Indian notions are preserved in well known hymns progenitors of the human race. This myth is at
of the Rig Veda and the Atharva Veda, which least Indo-Iranian, possibly Indo-European.
have been studied by many scholars. The present None of these myths, whether separately or in
paper is an attempt to deal with those cosmogonic combination, is the prevailing creation myth of
ideas, especially those appearing in the Rig Veda, the Rig Veda. That place belongs to the myth of
in an ordered and, as far as possible, related se- the god Indra and the demon Vrtra. This I have
quence; if successful, this should add to our under- discussed elsewhere2 and I shall only summarize it
standing of Indian philosophic origins. here.
The ideas of creation which are to be mentioned The Indra myth opens with the state of precrea-
here have their bases in various intellectual atti- tion. The material constituents of the universe
tudes or assumptions, namely, myth, theology, seem already to have been in existence then, but
ritual, magic, evolution of a self-contained im- there was no warmth in the universe, no moisture,
personal entity, and the existence of an all-envelop- nor any organization of the material elements, that
ing mechanism or shell. The theories derived from is, no order or system. There was only chaos, with-
these various bases are not mutually reconciled in out the principles of cosmic truth or order or
the Rig Veda, nor is there any intimation, for the ordered movement (eta) to regulate all. There
most part, that they are considered or even sus- existed, however, powerful beings with life who
pected to be incompatible. were called Asura,3 apparently living in a house
The most conspicuous theories are those ex- consisting of Sky and Earth, which at that time
pressed in myth, and of these there are several. were not separated but were joined together. Pre-
The oldest, and at the same time the least promi- sumably Sky and Earth had been fashioned by
nent and shortest-lived in Indo-Aryan speculation, Tvastr. The Asuras were of two kinds, the
is an Indo-European myth, guaranteed as such by Adityas, led by Varuna, and the Danavas or the
the wider general Indo-European character of the Ddnava, led by Vrtra, who in some passages ap-
proper names and the ideas which are employed. pears alone, while in others he seems to have allies
This is the myth that Father Sky (dyaus pitr) or supporters. The Adityas and the Ddnavas were
and Mother Earth (prthvi matr) have as their in a state of mortal enmity, engaged in a struggle
children the gods (deva), namely Dawn (usas) with each other; we might call it war. The Asuras
and the two heavenly Horseman (asvinau, divo have mothers but no fathers, because the mothers
napam t). are personifications of feminine abstractions.4 The
With this bit of mythology about Sky and Earth Adityas are the sons of Aditi (aditeh putrih),
come to be associated other bits of mythology. whose name means " non-restraint'" (a-diti, de-
One concerns Tvastr, the artificer of the gods, who rived with the suffix -ti from the root da "bind")
is called the one born at the beginning (agriya) or or " expansion, release, progressivism, development,
the first-going (puroyavan). At the beginning he
1 The most recent discussion I have seen of this well
was the counterpart of the cosmic waters (AV
known myth is in a paper by Stella Kramrisch, " Two:
9. 4. 2) or, as is stated elsewhere, combined in him- Its Significance in the R.gveda," in Indological Studies in
self both male and female qualities (AV 9. 4. 3-6). [Ionor of TV. Norman Brown, edited by Ernest Bender,
He it was who created Sky and Earth and all American Oriental Series, vol. 47, see pp. 118-123.
creatures (RRV 3.55.19; 10.110.9; 1.160.4), 2 Journal of the American Oriental Society, Vol. 62,

though how he did so and out of what material is 1942, pp. 85-98.
3 JAOS 62. 88-89; cf. Neisser, Zum Wbrterbuch des
not made clear. The myth of Tvastr is not Indo- Jjgveda, AKM 16.139-146; 18.29-32.
European in origin but seems to have been acquired 4 JAOS 62. 90.

23
24 BROWN:Theories of Creation in the Rig Veda

growth," and the like. The Ddnavas are the de- of Varuna; in the Asat there is no such truth and
scendants of Ddnu, whose name is another abstract law, for it is without truth and law (anrta).
primary derivative from the root Xct"bind," this This myth was doubtless viewed in two ways in
time with the suffix -nu, and means "bondage, re- Vedic times, depending upon the degree of intel-
straint, conservatism, inertia," and the name of lectual sophistication of the viewers. To some it
their leader Vrtra means " covering, lid," from the was an account to be taken at its face value, which
root vr. The war between the Adityas and the was essentially theological. A great divine hero,
Danavas had come to a standstill or possibly we an anthropomorphicdemiurge, slew a fierce wicked
should understand that the Adityas were being theriomorphic demon in the form of a dragon.
worsted. They arranged, however, for a champion Thus he won the Waters and the Sun. He sepa-
to be born, namely Indra, whose parents appear to rated the Sat from the Asat, spread out the earth,
be Sky and Earth,5 the parents of the devas, as propped up the sky, and organized and assigned
distinguished from the Asuras.6 The name of duties to the gods.
Indra has no obvious or generally accepted ety- But to the more sophisticated the myth was a
mology, but the god is often designated by terms symbolic representation of Potentiality striving
which indicate that he too is a personification of with Inertia, and overcoming Inertia through the
an abstraction, namely power; thus he is called aid of the Power or Energy existing in the uni-
"son of might" (sahcasahputrah) or "lord of verse, especially in the atmosphere, where the
power" (sacipatih). Before agreeing to be the mighty winds blow, the thunder rolls, and the
champion of the Adityas, he was foresighted lightning strikes. Truth has by nature its home
enough, though only just born, to extract a promise in a free and lighted world, while Evil comes from
from them that he should be their king. darkness and bondage, and the two are engaged in
The battle between Indra and Vrtra now takes a never-ceasing opposition in our universe. Con-
place. Armed with a weapon (vajra) forged by stant alertness and strenuous unrelaxed effort is
Tvastr and fortified with three great draughts of the price of freedom and justice, which can best be
soma, Indra attacked Vrtra and after a fierce fight aided by cooperation between gods and men in the
slew him, and, as the texts sometimes put it, burst sacrifice. This understanding of the Indra-Vrtra
his belly. Thereupon out flowed the cosmic waters myth as an allegory, verified for us by the etymo-
(&pah), called the seven streams (sapta sindha- logical significance of the terms Asura, Aditya,
vah). It was they whom Vrtra and the Ddnavas Danava, and some of the epithets applied to Indra
had been restraining and whose release the Adityas such as Son of Might and others, may be regarded
had been seeking. When the Waters were released as the first recorded philosophic speculation in
and came flowing out with sounds of satisfaction India. But at the same time the origin of the
like the lowing of cattle, and made their way to material substance of the universe is not a subject
the ocean in the sky, they were found to be jointly of inquiry or is ascribed in some unspecified way
pregnant, and their embryo was the Sun. The to Tvastr; rather the elements of the problem
universe now had the moisture, heat, and light it posed are how the Sat came to be differentiated
needed and creation could take place. The earth from the Asat; which of the two existed first;
was spread out, the sky was supported above it; in whence came the water, the light, and the warmth
short, as it is put in one passage (RV 6. 24. 5), by which the Sat lives; and finally how it was all
Indra separated the Sat from the Asat. The Sat given the organization by which it operates.
is the sky, the earth, and the intervening atmos- Following the Indra-Vrtra myth come the other,
phere, the regions where gods and men live and later, cosmogonic theories of the Rig Veda (in
move. The Asat is a place of horror, darkness, and Books I and X) and the Atharva Veda. Some of
drought below the earth, reached by a fearful these deal with or proceed from or deny theological
chasm, where the demons (raksas) dwell and or theistic items appearing in the myth, rectifying
breed.7 In the Sat the body of truth, cosmic law features of it which later theologues seem to have
(rta), was established and put under the direction considered naive or untenable. They may even
echo phraseology used in the myth.8 Other theories
5 JAOS 62. 92 f. seem related to the allegorical understanding of
8 JAOS 62. 88.
7 Cf. JAOS 61. 76 ff. 8 RV 10. 121 and 10. 129.
BROWN: Theories of Creation in the Rig Veda 25

the myth as describing a mechanistic process of other, superior, deity, whether Prajdpati or
conflict and these theories present new views of another.
creation as an impersonal non-anthropomorphic Another theistic figure is Visvakarman, who is
process. Both kinds of speculation indicate dis- celebrated in two hymns (RV 10. 81; 10. 82). His
satisfaction with the Indra-Vrtra myth, whether it name meaning "All-maker" (Artifex Maximus)
is taken literally or symbolically. Sometimes both is elsewhere an epithet of Indra (RV 8. 98. 2), and
views appear in the same hymn. possibly of the Sun (RV 10. 170), but he is not
Let us look first at the hymns which emphasize credited in his two hymns with many of Indra's
the theistic approach. Here an attack is made specific deeds and qualities. Rather, he is con-
directly upon Indra. We may suppose that skepti- ceived in loftier, more monotheistic terms. As our
cism about him was not infrequent, skepticism father he celebrated or instructed the sages (Tris)
such as is indicated in RV 8. 100. 3, "Bring lovely how to celebrate the first sacrifice, which was that
praise to Indra, vying with one another, truthful of creation (and where, by the way, did these rsis
praise, if he himself be true -even though one or come from -there is no answer in the text). Thus
the other says, 'Indra is not! Who ever saw him? he created heaven and earth, though where he stood
Who is he that we should praise him.?"' The when doing so and what the material was which
adjectives anindra and as'raddha,employedto mean he used is a question posed for answer. He is
those who deny Indra or lack faith in him, also supreme, and where he is, there the pious dead
testify to the existence of such doubt. The most enjoy the fruit of their sacrifices. He seems to
obvious illustration is RV 10. 121, a riddle-type have created the gods, for he gave them their
(brahmodya) hymn to the god Ka (Who), not names (RV 10.82.3). Where all the gods were
otherwise named until the final stanza of the hymn, assembled the waters set down the primeval germ
where the answer to the riddle is given and the (garbhar prathamamn),which was beyond (that is,
god is called Prajdpati (" Lord of Creatures"). To above) heaven and earth, beyond the asuras and
the god are ascribed powers and feats which regu- the devas, and this germ the gods sacrificed in the
larly are Indra's: the making firm of earth and sacrificial fire (ajasya nabhacu). The primeval
sky, the rulership over the gods, the giving of germ contained all the material of the universe
victory to one of two rival armies, the release of (like the purusa in RV 10. 90), and this is the
the waters, the instituting of the sacrifice, the answer to part of the question asked above; but the
status of sole god (eka deva). If we accept the material was all inanimate and had to be organized
authenticity of the final stanza, in which Prajdpati by the gods in the sacrifice which Visvakarman
is named as the supreme god, the hymn is a direct taught them. This hymn further brings up the
refutation of Indra's position and an assertion of a epistemological question, asserting that all crea-
super-deity in his place and of course above him. tures go to Visvakarman to question him, that is,
If, on the other hand, we should accept the other he is the ultimate source of knowledge. Nowadays,
view of the final stanza, namely, that it is spurious, says the final stanza of RV 10. 82, priests do not
and therefore consider that the hymn remains a know who created all things; something other than
riddle with no answer definitely and clearly given such knowledge exists within them; covered with
but with the unexpressed answer being that Indra mist and muttering and addicted to creature com-
is the supreme god, then the false and later addi- forts (asutrp), do the chanters of hymns spend
tion of the final stanza still would be positive their time. This latter notion is similar to the
evidence that in someone's view (not the author contempt expressed in RV 10. 71 for priests who
of the hymn) Indra was to be supplanted by mechanically perform the ceremony but have no
another deity. In the one case the two hymns RV true insight. For knowledge let men of mystic
10. 121 and RV 2.12 (the sa janisa indra hymn), insight inquire with their own minds (RV 10.
which latter is an unambiguous passionate asser- 81. 4). The epistemological question recurs in
tion of Indra's preeminence, would be in harmony other speculative hymns (RV 10. 72. 1 and 10.
and would convey an identical rebuke of infidelity. 129. 4), where again the answer is that sages per-
By the other interpretation the two hymns would ceive the truth by looking in their own hearts, that
be vigorously polemical with each other. In either is, by introspection. The figure and name of
case we find proof that there was disbelief in Visvakarman do not endure, as do those of
Indra's supremacy and instead advocacy of some Prajdpati, but the ideas contained in the two
26 BROWN: Theories of Creation in the Rig Veda

hymns to him are frequently echoed in other in concert with, each other. From Aditi were born
speculative hymns of the Rig Veda. the gods, who fashioned the worlds out of the in-
A less direct displacement of Indra takes place sentient material. The gods labored in unison
through Brahmanaspati or Brhaspati. The first with joined hands in the primordial chaos (salila),
name means " Lord of the Brahman," which is the where they found the sun which had been concealed
mystic power that pervades the universe. The in the ocean. These gods, the hymn says, were the
other name, Brhaspati, means "Lord of the Brh," Adityas and they were seven. They had a brother,
which is the prayer by means of which that power Aditi's eighth son, called Mdrtdnd.a,the one sprung
is evoked. This deity is an innovation of the from the egg of mortals. He was subject to birth
priests, and he is credited with some of Indra's followed by death; as the hymn puts it Aditi bore
feats. He and Indra are represented as cooperat- him "to be born and then to die again." It was
ing to perform some of the greatest of these: A2artdndawho was concealed in the ocean as the
winning the light for the universe, spreading out Sun and was found there by the gods (cf. the epic
the earth, and others. The hieratic point of view story of the churning of the ocean by the devas and
leading to the creation of Brahmanaspati seems to the Asuras, to produce the sun, moon, and many
be that the great deeds which Indra was said to other things). MArtdndathus brought death into
have performed could not have been performed the universe. At the beginning of this hymn the
through mere physical might but were really made epistemological question was raised, as we have
possible through the mystic power in the universe seen above. The answer to it is that sages can
which was put into application through the sacri- gain knowledge by introspection. Another im-
fice. Hence Indra and Brahmanaspati are viewed portant point in this hymn is that Brahmanaspati,
as operating jointly (RV 2. 24). The next step as master of the sacrifice, is the ultimate origin of
was to ascribe the action to Brahmanaspati alone all. From him, we must surely understand, came
with Indra ignored (RV 10. 68). Then comes the the knowledge of the sacrifice by which the gods
ascription of all to Brahmanaspati, and in terms put order into the universe and produced the sun.
that transcend the Indra-Vrtra range of achieve- The hymn RV 10. 72 lays emphasis on the sacri-
ment. fice, which has already appeared less conspicuously
Brahmanaspati is depicted as Creator in RV in the Indra myth, where the slaying of Vrtra is
10. 72. Here also the question is at last raised sometimes spoken of as a sacrifice, and in the
concerning the origin not only of sentient beings, Visvakarman hymns. In one of these latter (RV
gods and men, but also of the insentient material 10. 81) Visvakarman's activity is almost entirely
of which the universe is constructed. The material expressed in terms of the sacrifice, and Visvakar-
part, we are told, was made by Brahmanaspati, man is besought to teach its ritual to his friends.
lord of prayer, high priest of the sacrifice, as that is, to the priests addressing him. Another
though blown up by a smith at his forge. First hymn, the Purusa-sfikta (RV 10. 90),9 puts even
came the Asat (uncreated and unordered chaos), greater emphasis upon the ritual used by the gods
as in the Indra-Vrtra myth. The Asat in 10. 72 is in effecting creation by sacrificing Purusa and
also called Uttdnapad (she with legs outspread as speaks only briefly (stanza 5) about the origin of
in parturition). From the Asat was born the Sat, Purusa. Purusa, Male, appears to be a collective
the ordered universe of Earth, Atmosphere, and term for all the material elements of the universe
Sky. The hymn also says Tat or Bha (Earth) was (cf. 10. 81 above), designated here, perhaps meta-
born from Uttdnapad. From the Sat were born phorically, as a sacrificial offering. Purusa, says
the Directions (&ash). Parallel to the origin of the hymn, is the cosmos with all its contents and
the material substance of the world was the origin is more besides. It includes not only the inani-
of animate beings. These came from Daksa (male mate world, but also all mortal creatures. Even
potentiality) and Aditi (female creative power). VirirAjwas born of Purusa, though Piurusa is also
Each of this pair was produced from the other,
which seems to be a way of saying that the two
"This hymn has recently received a long, thoughtful,
are interdependent. Where Daksa and Aditi came and most illuminating study by Professor Paul Mus,
from is not made clear. Possibly we are to under- " Du nouveau sur Rgveda 10. 90? " in Indological Studies
stand that Brahman.iaspaticreated them, or possibly in Honor of W. Norman Brown, edited by Ernest Bender,
they were self-existent forces which acted upon, or American Oriental Series, vol. 47, pp. 165-185.
BROWN: Theories of Creation inr the Rig Veda 27

born of Viraj, a paradoxical statement which is emanation of himself. Nothing monistic has ap-
possibly a way of saying that space and its contents peared. Rather, each hymn merely tries to identify
are interdependent in origin. Only the gods seem a more remote active agent than any assumed in
to be external to Purusa, but where they came from other theories. Also the hymns either explicitly
is not indicated in the hymn. Two-thirds of the say or else imply that before creation the universe
hymn is given to an account of the sacrifice and contained two kinds of constituents, or principles.
an enumeration of all its constituents (including One was animate, psychical, and having the power
the Brdhmana as Purusa's mouth, the Rajanya as of will; it consisted of the gods or an overgod. The
the arms, the Vaisya as the thighs) and an enu- other was inanimate, material, insentient, non-
meration of all that was produced from it, men- psychical, without the power of will, being the
tioning not only the kudras and the animals; object upon which the first acts as subject. Thus
earth, sky, and atmosphere; the moon and the sun; creation took place. In the hymn RV 10. 129,
but also the hymns, the chants, the metres, and the however, both the will of a deity and the power of
prose formulae, and even the gods Indra, Agni, the sacrifice are ignored, tacitly rejected, and in-
and VYyu. Who the gods were who performed the stead there appears the idea of a single principle
sacrifice (stanza 6) we cannot say with certainty from which our entire universe is evolved. The
for they are not named in the hymn. The point of idea is perhaps implied, though not explicitly
view of the hymn is hieratic and ritualistic; the stated, in the well known stanza RV 1. 164. 46,
hymn is an exaltation of the sacrifice, which is "They call it Indra, Mitra, Varuna, and Agni, or
more important and powerful than the beings who the heavenly bird Garutmant. The sages speak of
celebrated it. This is the notion which later domi- the One Existent in many ways; they call it Agni,
nates the Brthmanas. In this hymn, more ex- Yama, Mdtarisvan." The Vedic term for the
plicitly than in any other of the cosmogonic hymns, One Existent is ekam sat, which is neuter. In RV
creation is a product of the ritual. 10. 129, the idea of a single neuter principle from
The close relation between ritual and magic which all evolves is explicitly expressed under the
leads to what is essentially an ascription of creative term tad ekam, That One. This existed before
action to the power of words or sound. That is, the Sat and the Asat, when there was only dark-
the potency of words is considered to be the effec- ness, an unillumined flood, chaos. That One came
tive creative force. When the gods utter the names to life spontaneously, though uninspired by breath,
of things, at the time of the first sacrifice, these through its own potentiality. It was born out of
things come into existence (RV 10. 71. 1; 10. 82. 3). its shell through the power of its own inner creative
In the self-praise hymn to Vac (RV 10. 125), who incubating heat, not needing any warmth from
is a deification of the sounds of the sacrifice, she outside. Once born and animate, it experienced
claims control of the universe for herself, and tells desire, says the hymn, and this desire became the
us her birthplace was in the waters, the ocean first seed of mind. Our knowledge that this was
(stanza 7), as is elsewhere that of hiranyagarbha the origin of things, the manner of creation, the
(RV 10. 121. 1), whence she spread out on all sides nature of the cosmogonic process, has not come by
over the world and reached the sky. She says she a line of transmission starting from the beginning.
surpasses all the universe (stanza 8), using words Nor lhas it come to man by a communication from
that recall the description of Purusa (RV 10. the gods, who are all this side of creation, that is,
90. 3). We may possibly be justified in thinking they were themselves created and are ignorant of
that Vac is conceived as being the creative force origins. Possibly, the hymn says, the highest over-
of the universe, though there is no explicit state- seer of our universe, who resides in heaven, knows
ment to that effect. If this is meant, then we have the facts about creation, but perhaps-meaning
the apotheosis of the spell, the final exaltation of more likely -he does not. Rather, knowledge of
the magic sound. the beginnings was acquired by the sages who dis-
Up to this point none of the hymns discussed covered it by pious insight into their own hearts,
has contained any explicit statement or even hint that is, by introspection. Knowledge, we see, is
that our universe, both the psychical and the mate- won through this mystical means, and epistemology
rial, has its origin in some single principle or is an is frankly an expression of mysticism.
evolution from some primeval germ or is the ex- Here then is our first clear presentation of the
pression of the will of some absolute deity as an monistic idea, which is later elaborated in the
28 BROWN: Theories of Creation in the Rig Veda

Upanishads. So far has the evolution of thought cept, however, seems to have been regarded as
brought us from the Indra-Vrtra myth! There is coping not only with the antinomy of the infinity
still something lacking, which is the conception of of cause and effect but also with the two other
the soul, or self, the atman. This has not been antinomies as well, viewing them all from the view-
mentioned in the hymns, though possibly hinted point of a realistic monism.
at in 10. 129, while later in the monistic Upani- Thus, the personal anthropomorphic demiurge
shads it is to be identified with brahman. Brahman of the Indra-Vrtra myth was replaced in various
is indeed mentioned in the Rig Veda as the power ways by a definitely specified supreme deity operat-
pervading the universe, to be reached or utilized by ing with a dualistic universe, that is, on the basis
means of the sacrifice or by true, that is mystical of a superdeity (adhidaiva) approach to the prob-
suprasensual, perception (cf. RV 10. 71. 6), the lem of cosmogony. This was succeeded, ideologi-
sages' pious insight of RV 10. 129. By the time of cally speaking, by a view of the sacrifice as
the Upanishads the idea of brahman had attained supreme, again in a dualistic universe. This might
a new quality, including the properties it had in be designated a supersacrifice (adhiyajiha) concept.
the Rig Veda but with the added feature of being Finally, so far as the Rig and Atharva Vedas carry
the one reality, the Absolute. But this is merely us, there developed the notion of a monistic
to say that Hindu speculative thought had only (advaita) basis for the universe, impersonal in
passed through its early stages by the end of the character, neuter, mechanistic in operation, which
Rig Veda, a point about which there can be little might also have had an oversoul (adhyatma) com-
argument. ponent. At this point speculation in the Rig and
The effort to find some single unifying principle Atharva Vedas reached its culmination. It re-
of the universe also appears in the idea of Time mained for the Upanishads to proceed further.
and the idea of Skambha (the Frame) in the
Atharva Veda. Time (kala) is celebrated as the
APPENDIX *
primordial power in AV 19. 53 and 19. 54.10 In it
lie the worlds and the sun. By it was the uni- RV 2. 12. To Indra - in reply to those who doubt
verse urged forth. It is brahman. In it are the him (anindra, ascraddha). A reply to this hymn
waters; from it arose brahman, the hymns, the appears in RV 10. 121.
prose formulae. Time contains and conquers all, 1. He who, the moment he was born, possessing
and still continues onward. mystic insight, the god, enriched the gods with his
The idea of a framework (skambha) containing mystical power, before whose fiery breath the two
within it all that is in the universe is the subject worlds shook in fear at the might of his valor -he,
of the two long hymns to Skambha (AV 10. 7 and o folk, is Indra.
10. 8), a notion somewhat analogous to the purusa 2. He who steadied the wavering earth, who
idea of RV 10. 90, but even more inclusive, for stabilized the quaking mountains, who measured
nothing is considered to exist outside it. out the wide expanse of the atmosphere, who fixed
Neither the idea of all-containing Time nor that a support for heaven -he, 0 folk, is Indra.
of an all-enveloping Frame stood up in later 3. He who slew the serpent and set free the
competition with the Sole Existent (tad ekam) seven streams, who drove the cows forth from the
concept of RV 10. 129. The notion of Time as cave ( ?) where Vala had hidden them, who pro-
all-container, which may have been considered by duced the fire between the stones (the sun or the
its authors to answer the antinomy of temporal lightning between heaven and earth), the booty-
infinity, did not deal with the antinomies of space winner ( ?) in the battles -he, 0 folk, is Indra.
and of cause and effect. So, too, the idea of an
all-enveloping Frame, which may have been meant apadhda(cave?) and sarnvr'k,samnvi/j(booty-
to answer the antinomy of spatial infinity, did not winner?) are a7rae Xry. of uncertain meaning.
deal with the antinomies of the infinity of time 4. He by whom all these [creations?] were made
and of cause and effect. The Sole Existent con- to tremble, who drove down into hiding the Ddsa
10 For a vigorous translation see
Maurice Bloomfield, * This Appendix contains translations of the hymns
Hymns of the Atharva-Veda (Sacred Books of the East, which have the greatest bearing upon the ideas discussed
Vol. 42), pp. 224-225. in this paper.
BROWN: Theories of Creation in the Rig Veda, 29

race, who like a winning gambler taking the stake, could flow, who, bolt in hand, pushed down Rau-
took his foe's wealth -he, 0 folk, is Indra. hina when scaling heaven -he, 0 folk, is Indra.
5. The terrible one, concerning whom they ask 13. He before whom both sky and earth bow
"Where is he? " Or they say of him " He is not! " down, from whose hot breath the mountains fear,
He who like a bird (?) snatches away his foe's who is known as the soma-drinker, the one with
wealth, put your faith in him - he, 0 folk, is the vajra as his arm, with the vajra in his hand-
Indra. he, 0 folk, is Indra.
vi] (bird?) occurs only twice in the RV and 14. He who favors with help the soma-presser,
is of uncertain meaning. the soma-brewer,his praiser, his devotee, he whose
6. He who incites the weary and emaciate, the pious spell gives increase, whose is the soma, whose
priest and the singer who seeks his help, the fair- is this gift-he, 0 folk, is Indra.
lipped one (good drinker) who gives his favor to brahhmavatrdhanam,cf. 6. 23. 5.
the soma-presserwhen he has prepared the pressing 15. You, who rend out booty for the soma-
stones - he, 0 folk, is Indra. presser, the soma-brewer, 0 terrible one, you are
7. He in whose control are the horses, the cows, of course true (to your function) in being so. May
the villages, all the chariots, who produced the we, 0 Indra, ever being your friends, possessed of
sun and the dawn, who led forth the waters -he, many hero sons, address the sacrificial session.
0 folk, is Indra. RV 10. 72. The problem is the origin of the gods
8. He whom two armies met in battle invoke [and of the universe]. The method of solution is
in rivalry, the far and the near, who are enemies, by mystic revelation in trance or by introspection.
(who call upon him) in both cases. Mounted upon 1. Let us now with skill proclaim the origins of
a similar chariot (or, launched upon the same the gods so that in a later age someone may see
purpose), the two call to him - he, 0 folk, is them (origins) when the hymns are being chanted.
Indra. Mystic revelation or introspection also gives
krandasi, " the Roarers," is also used of the exceptional priest special power in 10. 71
Heaven and Earth; cf. note to 10. 121. 6. (which seems to have affinities of authorship
9. He without whom folk do not conquer; whom with 10. 72).
they invoke for aid when in the battle, who is a 2. These (creations, worlds) Brahmanaspati
match for all the universe, who shakes the un- fanned up like a smith. In the first age of the
shakeable-he, 0 folk, is Indra. gods the Sat was generated from the Asat.
yo visvasya pratimanam: "architect of the Variantly, eta might be dual masc. referring
universe (heaven and earth" or "match for to the two worlds (10. 81.3 sam bdhzubhyJtn
the universe " - which ? dhadmati sadmpatatrair dyavabhiimi janatyan
deva 6kah) or neut. pl. referring to jana in
10. He who with his weapon slew all those
stanza 1.
lacking effective ritual spells who committed the
great sin (of withholding the waters), who does 3. In the first age of the gods, the Sat was born
not permit the presumptuous to practise presump- from the Asat. From that (Sat) were produced
tion, who is the slayer of the Dasyu -he, 0 folk, the directions. That (Sat) [was produced] from
is Indra. UTttdnapad.
uttdndpad (fem.) is one whose legs are
rna'hyenas, the great sin. stretched apart in parturition and refers to
amanyamanin: cf. a4manyamanan abhi many- the Asat as the source from which all parts of
amrn&airnir brahmnabhis, 1. 33. 9.
the cosmos came.
11. He who in the fortieth autumn found 4. The earth was born from Uttdnapad; the
Sambara dwelling in the mountains, who slew the directions were born from the earth. Daksa (male
serpent as it put forth its strength, Danu lying potentiality) was born from Aditi (female active
there -he, 0 folk, is Indra. power), and Aditi from Daksa (that is, the two
djnu, cff. 1. 32. 8. are interdependent).
12. He who with seven guiding reins, the bull, 5. For Aditi was born, 0 Daksa, she who is
the mighty, let loose the seven rivers so that they your daughter. After (= from) her were born the
30 BROWN: Theories of Creation in the Rig Veda

gods, the blessed (fortunate) ones, linked to im- For Aditi and Daksa, Sat and Asat, cf. 10. 5. 7
mortality. (note also BAU 1. 4.3). The notion implicit in
6. When, 0 gods, you took your places there [in eta in stanza 2, if the word is dual, might be that
a ring] in the salila (tumultuous chaos) with your Brahmanaspati, as first cause, created both the
hands firmly linked, a thick dust spread out as material cause of the universe (Sat and Asat) and
from dancers. the efficient cause (Aditi/Daksa).
Cf. of Visnu in 1. 22. 17, where all this world
[idaim] is held in the dust of his footstep. RV 10. 81. To Visvakarman as creator. The
7. When, 0 gods, like zealous priests, you name is used of " the All-fashioner " in RV 10. 81
caused the worlds to develop, you produced from and 10.82; of the Sun (?) in 10. 170; of Indra
there the sun which was concealed in the ocean. in 7. 98. 2. It means artifex, as the name Prajd-
pati means genitor.
8. Eight sons had been born from Aditi's body.
With seven she went to the gods. [The eighth] 1. He, our father, who as rsi, as invoking priest,
Ailrtanda she cast aside. sat down to offer in sacrifice all creations [then in
their unorganized state], he, seeking wealth
9. With seven sons Aditi went [where?] in the
through his wish, concealing all the primordial
earliest age. But she bore Mdrtdnda to be born
form, has entered into their later (or evolved)
and then to die again. (Thus death was brought
forms.
to the world, causing the existence of mortals.)
This stanza poses the problem: what was the
Daksa is male potentiality, Aditi is female active
beginning of things? The stanza says that
power. The two are coordinate, of equal impor-
Our Father did it all at the beginning by
tance, interdependent. From Aditi, impregnated
sacrifice. But he has covered over all the
by Daksa, are born seven gods, who effect creation
original form, has entered into the later
from the chaos of unorganized material, especially
evolved forms.
by causing the Sun to emerge. The Sun is their
brother, whom Aditi had cast away. When the 2. What now was his standing place (7roi -TG) ?
gods churned the salila they caused the Sun to What was his support? How was it? That from
appear, but the Sun goes through a continuous which Visvakarman created the earth, and, looking
process of birth and death again. The Sun's name far away, uncovered the sky by his power?
here is Martinda which means "born of a lifeless 3. Eyes he had on all sides, mouths on all sides,
egg" (rnrtynda). From it are descended mortals. arms on all sides, feet on all sides, when by using
The material part of the cosmos was blown up his two arms like fans he blew up heaven and earth
by Brahmanaspati " Lord of the mystical essence of (as a smith would) as he, the sole god, created
the universe." The material part of the cosmos is them.
given ordered form by the gods. For this stanza cf. 10. 90. 1.
sam bdhuibhyjm dhamati . . . Cf. 10. 72. 1.
Creative Power Material of the Cosmos At base a Tvastr idea.
(created by Brahmanaspati) visvatascaksus . . . i. e., all parts of all bodies
Aditi/Dakea Vs. 2 Vs. 3 Vs. 3 Vs. 4 were in him.
| Asat = Asat = Uttanapad = Uttanapad deva'e'kahis usually an epithet of Indra.
Aditi l l l l 4. What was the wood, what was the tree from
| Sat = Sat = Tat (Sat) = Bhfi
which they fashioned heaven and earth. 0 men
Devah Martanda Agah = Agah = Asah of mystic insight, inquire with your mind (by
introspection) about that on which he took his
Mdrtdnda was mortal. His mother Aditi cast stand when establishing the worlds.
him away. His immortal brothers the Devah, look- kim svid vatnam . . . same padas (secon-
ing for him, agitated (or churned) the unorganized darily?) in 10.31.7.
chaos (salila) and found him. He is the Sun. The manisino manasa prchated u; cf. 10. 129.4;
hymn does not continue an account of the process 10. 72.1.
of creation beyond this point, but the implication 5. Your highest, lowest, middlemost sacrificial
is that, after causing the Sun to emerge, the Devdh stations, 0 Visvakarman, teach to your friends in
continued the rest of creation. their sacrifices, 0 you who are self-powerful (ob-
BROWN: Theories of Creation in the Rig Veda, 31

serve laws of your own devising). Do you your- 6. The waters set down that first embryo where
self celebrate the sacrifice, increasing yourself. all the gods were assembled. In the navel of the
tanvam vrdhinaih, cf. 1. 1. 8 (of Agni). unborn (Agni) was proffered the One, in which
6. 0 Visvakarman, grown great through the were all creatures.
offering, do you yourself celebrate the sacrifice to ajasya nabhau, cf. 1. 164.14.
earth and heaven! Let other folk (priests) round 7. You do not know him who created these
about be deceived (about the right way to sacri- things. Another thing [than true knowledge] has
fice) ! Here let us have a generous patron! come to exist within you. Covered with mist and
7. Let us today [successfully] invoke for our aid muttering, addicted to creature comforts (asutrp),
the chanters of hymns spend their time.
in the [sacrificial] contest the lord of [sacrificial]
utterance, Visvakarman, who is as swift as thought. For the theme of incapable and unperceptive
May he rejoice in all our offerings for our aid, he priests, see RV 10. 71.
who gives all prosperity, he whose works are The subject matter of the separate stanzas is as
righteous. follows: (1) Visvakarman created Heaven and
vdcas patim = master of utterance, husband of Earth and spread them out. (2) He is supreme;
Vac. where he is the pious dead enjoy the fruit of their
sacrifices. (3) All creatures have to go to him to
RV 10. 82. To Visvakarman as creator. learn ultimate truth. (4) In the beginning, the
1. The father of the eye (creator of the Sun), rsis performed the sacrifice to produce creations.
wise (in sacrificial performance), created these (5) What was the original germ of the cosmos?
two (Heaven and Earth) [as though by churning] (6) The waters set it down before the gods, The
butter, all crumpled together. When their ends One in which were all creations. (7) The hymn-
were firmly fastened together in the east, he spread chanters of our time, an unworthy lot, do not know
out Sky and Earth. this.
yaded dnta addadrhantap'rve, cf. AV 5. 6. 1.
2. Visvakarman is the all-wise, the all-mighty, RV 10. 90. (On this hymn see Professor Paul
the Creator, the Disposer, and indeed the loftiest Mus, op. cit.)
Manifestation. Their (the pious dead's) offerings 1. Purusa has a thousand heads, a thousand
with the drink they have proffered (to the gods) eyes, a thousand feet. Having covered the earth
rejoice them where they say he dwells as the One, on all sides, he extended beyond it by ten fingers'
beyond the seven rsis. length.
Allusion to the realm where the pious dead si bhImim v "vato vrtv'; cf. RV 10. 81. 1, 10.
rejoicce with Yama, cf RV 10. 14-18, and 129. 1; AV 10. 2. 18.
1. 154.5. 2. Purusa alone is this entire world, both past
3. He who as our Father, our Progenitor, the and future; he is also the lord of immortality when
Disposer, knows the foundations and all the worlds he mounts above (to heaven) through (sacrificial)
(or, all creations), who alone is the sole name- food.
giver of the gods - to him go all the other crea- 3. As great as is his greatness (as described in
tures to question him [about origins]. stanza 2), yet greater than that is Purusa. One-
4. They sacrificed wealth to him-the r.sis of fourth of him is all creatures; three-fourths of him
old in great number, like singers, they who when are immortality in heaven.
the illumined atmosphere (rajas) was still im- VYc, like Purusa, has four parts, three being
mersed in the unillumined (Asat?) set themselves concealed, the fourth being known to humans
down and made these things that have been (RV 1. 164. 45). Brahmans with real insight
created. know this (cf. RV 10. 72. 1 and 10. 129. 4; cf.
5. That which is beyond the heaven, beyond this 10. 82. 7).
earth, beyond the gods and the asuras-what pri- 4. With three-fourths Purusa rose upwards;
meval germ indeed did the waters set down where one-fourth of him was reborn here. Thence he
all the gods perceived it? strode across in all directions above earth and
Cf. 10. 129. 1, etc. garbham prathamam, cf. 10. heaven (or, by day and night?).
121. 7; 10. 129. 2-3. sasandnas'ane`"the eater and the noneater"
32 BROWN: Theories of Creation in the Rig Veda

cf. 1. 164. 20). This might refer to Agni his eye was born the sun; from his mouth Indra
and Sfirya, Agni being " the eater " par excel- and Agni; from his breath Vdyu was born.
lence and Sfirya "the observer." 14. From his navel the atmosphere, from his
5. From him was born Virdj, and from VirAj head the sky was evolved, from his feet the earth,
was born Purusa. When born he overpassed the the directions from his ear. Thus they fashioned
earth both in the west and in the east. the regions.
For children begetting their parents or for 15. Seven were the enclosing-sticks of it; thrice
two primordial entities begetting each other, seven were the sticks of firewood, when the gods
cf. Indra and his parents (RV 10. 54. 3), earth conducting the sacrifice bound Purusa as the ani-
and sky and their sons (RV 1.159. 2, 3), mal (victim).
Daksa and Aditi (RV 10. 72.4, 5), Agni and 16. With the sacrifice the gods produced the
his mothers (RV 1. 95. 4, cf. 6. 16. 35). sacrifice; these were the first ordinances. These
6. When the gods performed the sacrifice with powers (arising from the sacrifice) reach the sky,
Purusa as oblation, the spring was its melted where are the Sadhyas and the gods.
butter, the summer its fuel, the autumn its
oblation. RV 10. 121. To Ka, Prajdpati. The background
is disbelief in Indra as Creator and Sole God; as
" Oblation" in its first usage here is a set and
the hymn stands, and assuming that the final
solemn act, the type of oblation, not "any
stanza is original, it could be a polemic against RV
old " oblation, but at the end of the stanza the
2. 12, with the purpose of establishing Prajdpati as
word is denuded of its pointedness and means
the Sole God, i. e., it is monotheistic. In form it
only an ordinary oblation. is a Brahmodya with the answer in st. 10. AV
7. Him, Purusa, born at the beginning, they 4. 2 is a version of this hymn.
besprinkled on the straw; the gods (Adityas?) 1. Hiranyagarbha came into existence in the
sacrificed with him, and the Sddhyas and the Rsis. beginning born as the sole lord of all that has come
sddhyd r'sayas ca ye might mean " full of into existence. He made firm (fixed) the earth
power and being Tsis." and sky as well-to what god shall we give worship
8. From that sacrifice, when it was fully offered, with oblation ?
the speckled (clotted) butter was collected; it con- hiranyagarbha: cf. 10. 129.3 (though in 10.
stituted the birds and the wild and domestic 121. 1 without specific mention or implica-
animals. tion of egg).
9. From that sacrifice, when it was fully offered, sam avartata: cf. 10. 129. 2, 4, 6; 10. 121. 7.
the hymns were born, and the chants; the metres p'tir e1cahis in contrast to Indra as dev6 6lkah.
were born from it, and from it the prose formula Later the neuter tad ekam is in contrast to
was born. both, as is also ekcamsat (1. 164. 46). Cf. also
10. From that were born horses and whatever in stanza 2 (eka id raja jaigato babhi'va) of
(other) animals have (incisor) teeth in both this hymn.
(upper and lower) jaws. Cows were born from it; 2. He who gives breath and strength, whose
from it were born goats and sheep. command all the gods observe, whose shadow is
The reference is to the sacrificial animals (see immortality and death -to what god etc.?
JAOS 51. 117). yasya chjyamftam yasya mrtyt'h; cf. 10. 129. 2.
11. When they divided Purusa, into how many 3. He who by his greatness has become the sole
parts did they separate him? What was his mouth? ruler of this breathing, winking world, who is the
What were his arms? What were the thighs and ruler of this world consisting of bipeds and quadru-
feet called? peds -to what god, etc.?
12. The Brahmana was his mouth; the Rdjanya 4. He who, by his power, they say, has these
was made into his arms; as for his thighs, that snowy mountains, whose is the ocean with Rasa,
was what the Vaisya became; from his feet the whose are the directions as his arms - to what
kidra was born. god, etc. ?
13. The moon was born from his mind; from yasyemdh pradigo yasya bdh; cf. 6. 47. 8.
BROWN: Theories of Creation in the Rig Veda 33

5. He by whom the sky was made strong and 3. I am the queen, the confluence of wealth, the
the earth made firm, by whom the heaven and the one with penetrating perception, the first of those
celestial vault were set in place, who measured out who should be worshipped. Me have the gods dis-
the regions in the atmosphere-to what god, etc. ? tributed manifoldly, me who dwell in many homes,
6. He whom the two roaring [armies], who have who have caused [the chants] to enter many places.
sought support with his help, look upon trembling tam ma deva vy Adadhuh purutra, cf. 10.
in mind when the risen sun is shining -to what 71.3c.
god, etc.? bhiArydvesayantim, cf. 10. 81. 1. Also note
krandasi: cf. 6. 25. 4; 2. 12. 8. The two roar- the expression d vis giras, which occurs fre-
ing (armies?) could conceivably be the armies quently.
of the Adityas and the Ddnavas or they might 4. Through me that one eats his food who really
be any pair of armies in array against each sees, who breathes, who hears [me as] that which is
other. Or the two Roarers might be Heaven spoken. Though knowing it not, they dwell with
and Earth, since the verb krand is used of me. Hear, you man of renown, I tell you what you
Dyaus and Parjanya, and in that case the dual must believe !
would mean the Sky and the Other One ya im 'rn'ty uktadm,cf. 10. 71. 6c (note also
(= Earth). The mythic allusion could then 10. 71. 4).
be to Indra's forceful separation of Heaven 5. Only I myself say this in which gods and
and Earth after he had drunk the soma before men rejoice. Whomever I give my favor to, him I
going to battle with Vrtra. But this stanza make powerful, a true knower of the mystical
seems to be a contradiction of 2. 12. 8, where power, a rsi, a successful sacrificer.
a translation of krdndasi as " Heaven and 6. I stretch the bow for Rudra so that his arrow
Earth " seems impossible. may reach the hater of religion and destroy him.
7. When the mighty waters came bearing the I rouse the battle fury for the people. I have
embryo (Sun) and giving birth to Agni, then the penetrated Heaven and Earth.
life spirit of the gods came into existence - to ahadmdyavdprthivf a vivesa, cf. 10. 81. 1.
what god, etc.? 7. On the brow of this universe I give birth to
8. He who in his might looked upon the waters the father. My birthplace is in the waters, in the
which bore ritual skill (daksa) and created the ocean. Thence I spread out over the worlds on all
sacrifice, he who was the sole god over the gods- sides. I touch yonder sky with the crown of my
to what god, etc.? head.
9. May not he harm us, he who is the progenitor tato vi tisthe bhu'vananuvisvatah, cf. 10. 90. 1.
of the earth, he who with truth as his function 8. I breathe like the wind supporting all the
created heaven and caused the bright and mighty worlds. Beyond the sky, beyond this earth so great
waters to be born - to what god, etc. ? have I become by my might. 7

10. Prajapati, other than you no one has en- paro diva pard en4, cf. 10. 82. 5; 10. 129. 6.
compassed all these creations. Whatever we desire etavati mahind sarmbabhiiva, cf. 10. 90. 3a.
when we invoke you, let that be ours! May we be
lords of wealth! RV 10. 129. To cosmogony.
1. There was not then either the Non-existent
RV 10. 125. To Vdc as a hymn of self-praise (asat) or the Existent (sat). There was no atmos-
(&tmastuti), a glorification of the Sacred Utter- phere nor heavenly vault beyond it. What covered
ance. For Vac cf. 10. 71. all? Where? What was its protection? Was
1. I travel with the Rudras and the Vasus, the there a fathomless depth of the waters?
Adityas and the Visve Devi1h. Both Varuna and What covered all (kim 6varivah) ? In the old
Mlitra do I support, Indra and Agni, and the myth it was Vrtra: . . . neha y6 vo avivarit /
Asvins. nt snm vrtra'syamarmani vajram indro apipa-
2. I uphold the swelling Soma, Tvastr, Pusan, tat, "he (Vrtra) who covered you (waters)
and Bhaga. I bestow wealth on the zealous patron Indra has hurled his vajra into Vrtra's vitals"
of the sacrifice, who makes the oblation and presses (RV 8. 100. 7).
the soma. 2. There was neither death nor immortality
34 BrtOWN: Theories of Creation in the Rig Veda

then. There was the sheen neither of day nor sages by their pious insight in their heart (i. e., by
night. That One breathed (came to life), though introspection) found the relation of the Existent
uninspired by breath, by its own potentiality. with the Non-existent.
Besides it nothing existed. In RV 10. 72. 1 the rsis mystically perceive the
"neither death nor immortality"; cf. RV cosmogonic process.
10.72.9; AV 10.7.15. 5. A line of demarcation was extended hori-
" by its own potentiality "; cf. RV 10. 72. 1. zontally for them (the sages). What was below it,
3. There was darkness hidden by darkness at what above it? There were seed-depositors, there
the beginning. This all was an unillumined flood. were powers; there was potentiality here below;
The force (with power of evolution) which was there was emanation above.
enclosed in emptiness (a shell), That One, was
born through the power of its own (creative incu- 6. Who is there who knows, who here (iha) can
bating) heat. tell whence was the origin, and whence this crea-
tion ? The gods are this side of the creation. Who
cf. RV 10. 190. 1. knows, then, whence it came into being?
tuchyena . . . apihitam. Possibly there is
implied here the idea of a universe contained In RV 10. 72. 6 the gods, as secondary crea-
in an egg-shaped container or shell (cf. ChU tors, stir up the dust, as though in dancing;
3. 19, Maitri U 6. 36, and the later expression cf. Indra in RV 1. 56. 4 and 10. 124. 9, per-
brahminda). The developing power (dbhu) haps also RV 4. 17. 13 and 4.42. a.
is to put in it the sat and the asat, and in the 7. This creation, whence it came into being,
sat will put the r"jas and the vy6man (st. 1). whether spontaneously or not -he who is its high-
4. In the beginning desire came over That est overseer in heaven, he surely knows, or perhaps
[One], which became the first seed of mind. The he knows not.

A MIORPHOPHONEMIC PROBLEM IN THE SPOKEN TIBETAN OF LHASA

KUN CHANG and BETTY SHEFTS


UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA,BERKELEY

THERE ARE IN THE SPOKCENTIBETAN of Lhasa components regularly end in an oral vowel, q, or
compounds in which the first member ends in a p. The second member of such compounds, when
nasal vowel, rj, or m.1 Other alternants of these it occurs independently or as the first member of
other compounds, has no nasal initial. In every
I We gathered the data we cite during the course of compound in which it is the second member, how-
our work on the N. D. E. A. Spoken Tibetan project at ever, it is preceded by a nasal vowel, rj, or mn,
the University of Washington, 1960-63. Our informants, depending on the phonological makeup of the
Mr. Nawang Nornang and Mrs. Lhadon Karsip, were
both from Lhasa. first member. We analyze these occurrences of
The phonemes and phoneme sequences we use in our nasal vowels, ij, or m as belonging to two morphs,
transcription are: q, qh, rj, :jh, h; k, kh; c,5Ch fiAih,
, the oral features to the prior morph, the nasal
g; t, th, r, rh; t, th, n, 1, lh, s; ts, tsh; p, ph, Ur, mh; feature to the latter. This latter morph is thus
y, uw; i, e, e, e; A, a; il, 6; u, o, 3, and z. Vowels are made up of a sequence of phonemes preceded by
either oral or nasal, single or geminate. Syllables with
single vowels not followed by xj or m have either high or
a phonemic feature, nasality.
low tone; syllables with geminate vowels or single vowels Whenever ij occurs in these compounds, we have
followed by xj or m have high, high-falling, low, or low-
falling tones. In our Manual of Spoken Tibetan (Uni- In this article we indicate nasalized vowels by N follow-
versity of Washington Press, 1964) we indicated nasal- ing the vowel sign. We indicate the tones for a whole
ized vowels by a tilde over the vowel sign, and tones by form by raised capitals following the form, with a
an overline for high tone, an underline for low tone, and hyphen separating the tone of one syllable from that of
a grave accent for falling tone. The exigencies of print- the following one. Abbreviations for the tones are: H,
ing make it necessary for us to adopt a new system here. high; L, low; F, falling; 0, zero (minimal stress).

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