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[Footnote 14: 1. 56,4; IX. 84. 2; Compare I. 92. 11; 115, 2; 123. 10-12. V. 44. 7, and perhaps 47.6, are late. VII. 75.5, is an exception (or late).]
[Footnote 15: La Religion Védique, 1.6; II. 2.]
[Footnote 16: Ehni, Yama, p. 134.]
[Footnote 17: RV., IV. 54. 2. Here the sun gives life even to the gods.]
[Footnote 18: Ten hundred and twenty-eight hymns are contained in the 'Rig Veda Collection.']
[Footnote 19: IV. 14.]
[Footnote 20: X. 37; 158; 170; 177; 189. Each has its own mark of lateness. In 37, the dream; in 158, the triad; in 170, the sun as asurah[=al, 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. The last is the abode of the dead where Yama reigns. Compare IV. 53. The bracketed verses are probably a late puzzle attached to the word 'lap' of the preceding verse.]
[Footnote 24: Doubtful.]