Rig Veda, tr. by Ralph T.H. Griffith, [1896], at sacred-texts.com
1. SAVITAR, golden-haired, hath lifted eastward, bright With the sunbeams, his eternal lustre;
 He in whose energy wise Pūṣan marches, surveying all existence like a herdsman.
 2 Beholding men he sits amid the heaven filling the two world-halves and air's wide region.
 He looks upon the rich far-spreading pastures between the eastern and the western limit.
 3 He, root of wealth, the gatherer-up of treasures, looks with his might on every form and figure.
 Savitar, like a Godẉhose Law is constant, stands in the battle for the spoil like Indra.
 4 Waters from sacrifice came to the Gandharva Visvavasu, O Soma, when they saw him.
 Indra, approaching quickly, marked their going, and looked around upon the Sun's enclosures.
 5 This song Visvavasu shall sing us, meter of air's mid-realm celestial Gandharva,
 That we may know aright both truth and falsehood: may he inspire our thoughts and help our praises.
 6 In the floods' track he found the bootyseeker: the rocky cow-pen's doors he threw wide open.
 These, the Gandharva told him, Rowed with Amṛta. Indra knew well the puissancc of the dragons.