[219] Aruṇo mâ sakṛid vṛikaḥ pathâ yantam dadarça hi uǵ ǵihîte nićâyya; Ṛigv. i. 105, 18.
[220] Yâvayâ vṛikyaṁ vṛikaṁ yavaya stenam ûrmya; Ṛigv. x. 127, 6.—A wolf seen in a dream, according to Cardano, announces a robber.
[221] Yo naḥ pûshann agho vṛiko duḥçeva âdideçati apa sma tvam patho ǵahi—Paripanthinam mashîvâṇaṁ huraçćitam—Dvayâvinaḥ; Ṛigv. i. 42, 2-4.
[222] Svayaṁ ripus tanvaṁ rîrishîshṭa; Ṛigv. vi. 51, 6, 7.
[223] Mâyinam mṛigaṁ; Ṛigv. i. 80, 7.
[224] Te na âsno vṛikâṇâm âdityâso mumoćata; Ṛigv. viii. 56, 14.—Parshi dîne gabhîra âṅ ugraputre ǵighâṅsataḥ; Ṛigv. viii. 56, 11.
[225] Matsyaṁ na dîna udani kshiyantam; Ṛigv. x. 68, 8.
[226] iii. 45.—In the twenty-second night of the Tuti-Name, the wolf enters, on the contrary, into the house of the jackal; here wolf and jackal are already distinguished in it from one another,—that is, as red wolf and black wolf.
[227] i. 253.
[228] i. 271.