Howard--
Thanks to the Brāhmaṇa obsession with making correlations/identifications/correspondences, you can get some idea of what the Bṛhat represents in the Veda by examining the entities with which it is correlated. The Bṛhat and Rathantara are treated as a pair
in some of these passages, so that you also get an idea of the entities to which each is opposed. For example (PB 7.6.17, trans. Caland): B is the mind, R voice; B is the melody, R the verse; B is expiration, R is inspiration; B is yonder world, R is this
world.
Caland's translation of the Pañcaviṃśa-Brāhmaṇa has an index of sāman names, so you can easily find all the passages that mention Bṛhat. The Jaiminīya-Brāhmaṇa also has a lot to say about the Bṛhat; an accessible example is in Caland's Das Jaiminīya-Brāhmaṇa
in Auswahl § 25 (p32).
yours,
Finn
Finnian Moore Gerety
Doctoral Candidate
Department of South Asian Studies
Harvard University
On 16-Jul-2013, at 3:53 PM, Howard Resnick wrote:
Thank you very much. Do you know why these verses were called the "Great Saman", brhat-saman?
Best,
Howard
Bṛhat and Rathantara are considered two important sāmans in the Pañcaviṃśabrāhmaṇa. Bṛhat is based on RV.6.46.1,2.
See PB 5.1.10ff, 5.2.1,8.9.11 etc.
Best
DB
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