Hymns of the Atharva Veda, by Ralph T.H. Griffith, [1895], at sacred-texts.com
1Indra the Shaker shake them up, brave, hero, fortdemolisher,
   That into thousand fragments we may strike the armies of our
    foes!
 2Let Pūtirajju with her breath corrupt and putrefy that host,
   And terror smite our foemen's heart when fire and smoke are
    seen afar.
 3Asvattha, rend those men; do thou devour them quickly,
   Khadira!
   Like reeds let them be broken through, down-smitten by a lifted
    rush.
 4Let Parushāhva make them reeds, and let the bulrush strike
    them down:
   Bound in a mighty net let them break quickly like an arrow's
    shaft.
 5Air was the net; the poles thereof were the great quarters of the
    sky: p. a344
   Sakra therewith enveloped and cast on the ground the Dasyus'
    host.
 6Verily mighty is the net of mighty Sakra rich in wealth:
   Therewith press all the foemen down so that not one of them
    escape!
 7Great is thy net, brave Indra, thine the mighty match for a
    thousand, Lord of Hundred Powers!
   Holding them, with his host, therewith hath Indra slaughtered
   Dasyus a hundred, thousand, myriad, hundred millions.
 8This world so mighty was the net of Sakra, of the Mighty One:
   With this, the net of Indra, I envelop all those men with gloom.
 9Great weakness and misfortune, pain which words can never
    charm away,
   Languor, fatigue, bewilderment, with these I compass all the
    foes.
 10I give those foemen up to Death: bound in the bonds of Death
    are they.
   I bind and carry them away to meet Death's wicked messengers.
 11Bear them away, Death's messengers! envoys of Yama! bind
    them fast.
   More than a thousand be their slain: the club of Bhava pierce
    them through!
 12Forth go the Sādhyas in their might bearing one netpole raised
    aloft.
   One pole the Rudras carry, one the Vasus, and the Ādityas one.
 13The Visve Devas from above shall come depressing it with
    might,
   And in the midst the Angirases, slaying the mighty host, shall go.
 14Trees of the forest, trees that bear flower and fruit, and herbs
    and plants,
   Quadruped, biped send I forth that they may strike this army
    dead,
 15Gandharvas, and Apsarases, Gods, Serpents, Fathers, Holy
   Men,
   Seen and unseen, I send them forth that they may strike this
    army dead.
 16Here spread are snares of Death wherefrom thou, once within
    them, ne'er art freed:
   Full many a thousand of the host yonder this horn shall smite
    and slay. p. a345
 17The Gharma hath been warmed with fire: this Homa slays a
    thousand men.
   Let Bhava, Prisnibāhu, and Sarva destroy that armament.
 18Their portion be the fire of Death, hunger, exhaustion, slaughter,
    fear.
   With your entangling snares and nets, Sarva and Indra! slay that
    host.
 19Fly, conquered, in alarm, ye foes, run driven by the spell away!
   Let not one man escape of those when routed by Brihaspati.
 20Down fall their weapons on the ground: no strength be theirs
    to point a shaft:
   Then in their dreadful terror let their arrows wound their vital
    parts.
 21Let Heaven and Earth roar out in wrath against them, and Air
    with all the Deities in concert,
   Let them not find a surety or a refuge, but torn away go down
    to Death together.
 22The mules of the Gods' car are heaven's four quarters; their
    hooves are sacred cakes, the air its body.
   Its sides are Heaven and Earth, its reins the Seasons, Voice is its
    hood, its grooms are sky's mid-regions.
 23Year is the car, Full Year the seat for driving, Virāj the pole,
    the chariot's front is Agni, Indra the warrior, and the Moon
    the driver.
 24Hence conquer, conquer, Hail! be thou the victor! Let these be
    conquerors and those be conquered.
   Good luck to these, ill luck to those men yonder! With the
    dark-blue-and-red our foes I cover.