[11] "The haughty Indra takes precedence of all gods." R. V., 1, 55.
[12] "These two personages [Indra and Varuna] sum up the two conceptions of divinity, between which the religious consciousness of the Vedic Aryans seems to oscillate."—Bergaigne, La Religion Védique, vol. iii, p. 149.
[13] The meaning of the term is not quite certain. Sessions, or Instructions, may perhaps be the rendering. So Monier Williams.
[14] For example, Wordsworth:
"Thou, Thou alone
Art everlasting, and the blessed Spirits
Which Thou includest, as the sea her waves."
—Excursion, book iv.
[15] Or, the thing that really is—the οντως ον.
[16] Ekamadvitiyam.
[17] This illustration is in the mouth of every Hindu disputant at the present day.
[18] Barth, p. 75.
[19] Ekamadvitiyam.