Hymns of the Atharva Veda, by Ralph T.H. Griffith, [1895], at sacred-texts.com
2The first of all is Indra's car, next is the chariot of the Gods
    the third is Varuna's alone.
   The last, the Serpents' chariot, struck the pillar and then sped
    away. p. 12
 2Their lustre is the Darbha-grass, its young shoots are their
    horse's tail: the reed's plume is their chariot seat.
 3Strike out, white courser! with thy foot, strike both with fore
    and hinder foot,
   Stay the dire poison of the Snakes, and make it weak as soaking
    wood.
   -4. Loud neighing he hath dived below, and rising up again replied,
   Stayed the dire poison of the Snakes, and made it weak as
    soaking wood.
 5Paidva kills Kasarnila, kills both the white Serpent and the
    black,
   Paidva hath struck and cleft in twain Ratharvi's and the Viper's
    head.
 6Go onward, horse of Pedu! go thou first: we follow after thee.
   Cast thou aside the Serpents from the pathway whereupon we
    tread.
 7Here was the horse of Pedu born: this is the way that takes him
    hence.
   These are the tracks the courser left, the mighty slayer of the
   Snakes.
 8Let him not close the opened mouth, nor open that which now
    is closed.
   Two snakes are in this field, and both, female and male, are
    powerless.
 9Powerless are the serpents here, those that are near and those
    afar.
   I kill the scorpion with a club, and with a staff the new-come
    snake.
 10This is the remedy against Aghāsva and the adder, both:
   Indra and Paidva have subdued and tamed the vicious snake for
    me.
 11We fix our thoughts on Pedu's horse, strong, off-spring of a
    stedfast line.
   Behind our backs the vipers here crouch down and lie in wait
    for us.
 12Bereft of life and poison they lie slain by bolt-armed Indra's
    hand. Indra and we have slaughtered them.
 013. Tiraschirājis have been slain, and vipers crushed and brayed to
    bits. p. 13
   Slay Darvi in the Darbha-grass, Karikrata, and White and
   Black.
 14The young maid of Kirāta race, a little damsel, digs the drug,
   Digs it with shovels wrought of gold on the high ridges of the
    hills.
 15Hither the young uuconquered leech who slays the speckled
    snake hath come.
   He verily demolishes adder and scorpion; both of them.
 16Indra, Mitra and Varuna, and Vāta and Parjanya both have
    given the serpent up to me.
 17Indra hath given him up to me, the female viper and the male,
   The adder, him with stripes athwart. Kasarnila, Dasonasi.
 18O Serpent, Indra hath destroyed the sire who first engendered
    thee:
   And when these snakes are pierced and bored what sap and
    vigour will be theirs?
 19Their heads have I seized firmly as a fisher grasps the spotted
    prey,
   Waded half through the stream and washed the poison of the
    serpents off.
 20Let the floods hurry on and bear the poison of all snakes afar.
   Tiraschirājis have been slain and vipers crushed and brayed to
    bits.
 21As from the salutary plants I deftly pick the fibres out, And
    guide them skilfully like mares, so let thy venom, Snake!
    depart,
 22All poison that the sun and fire, all that the earth and plants
    contain,
   Poison of most effectual power—let all thy venom pass away.
 23Serpents which fire or plants have generated, those which have
    sprung from waters or the lightning,
   Whose mighty broods are found in many places, these serpents
    we will reverently worship.
 24Thou art a maid called Taudi, or Ghritāchi is thy name. Thy
    place;
   Is underneath my foot. I take the poison-killing remedy.
 25From every member drive away the venom, and avoid the heart.
   Then let the poison's burning heat pass downward and away-
    from thee. p. 14
 26The bane hath fled afar. It wept, and asked the poison how it
    fared.
 27Agni hath found the venom of the serpent, Soma drawn it out.
   Back to the biter hath returned the poison, and the snake hath
    died.