Creation
1.
THEN was not non-existent nor existent: there was no realm of air, no
sky beyond it.
What covered in, and where? and what gave shelter? Was water there,
unfathomed depth of water?
2.
Death was not then, nor was there aught immortal: no sign was there,
the day's and night's divider.
That One Thing, breathless, breathed by its own nature: apart from it
was nothing whatsoever.
3.
Darkness there was: at first concealed in darkness this All was
indiscriminated chaos.
All that existed then was void and formless: by the great power of
Warmth was born that Unit.
4.
Thereafter rose Desire in the beginning, Desire, the primal seed and
germ of Spirit.
Sages who searched with their heart's thought discovered the existent's
kinship in the non-existent.
5.
Transversely was their severing line extended: what was above it then,
and what below it?
There were begetters, there were mighty forces, free action here and
energy up yonder.
6.
Who verily knows and who can here declare it, whence it was born and
whence comes this creation?
The Gods are later than this world's production. Who knows then whence
it first came into being?
7.
He, the first origin of this creation, whether he formed it all or did
not form it,
Whose eye controls this world in highest heaven, he verily knows it, or
perhaps he knows not.
Creation, em The
hymns of Rig Veda, de Ralph Thomas Hotchkin
Griffith, Delhi, 1973.
Rig Veda, Mandala 10, Sukta 129,
em sânscrito, escrita devanagari. Transliteração do devanagari para o alfabeto
latino. Tradução
para o inglês no Mitos da Criação.