come greeted the birth of children, as of those who brought joy to the home; and the love that should be felt between brother and sister was shown in the names given to them: bhrâtar (or brother) being he who sustains or helps; svâsar (or sister) she who pleases or consoles. The daughter of each household was called duhitâr from duh, a root which in Sanskrit means to milk, by which we know that the girls in those days were the milking-maids. Father comes from a root, pâ which means to protect or support; mother, mâtar, has the meaning of maker."[1]
Now we may sum up what we know of this ancient people and their ways; and we find
in them much that is to be found in their descendants—the love of parents and children, the closeness of family ties, the protection of life and property, the maintenance of law and order, and, as we shall see presently, a great reverence for God. Also, they were well versed in the arts of life—they built houses, formed villages or towns, made roads, cultivated the soil, raised great herds of cattle and other animals; they made boats and land-carriages, worked in metals for use and ornament, carried on trade with
- ↑ Clodd, Childhood of Religions, p. 77.