Mahabharata - Aranyaka Parva (महाभारत - आरण्यकपर्वम्)
03.208
Mārkaṇḍeya said.
O foremost of the Kuru lineage, the third son of Brahmā — his wife was Apavasu's daughter. Hear from me also of her children. (03-208-1)
O king, Bṛhaspati is called great light, great fame, great Brahman, of great mind, great mantra, and of great radiance. (03-208-2)
Among all those beings, she became unrivaled in beauty. The goddess named Bhānumatī was the daughter of Prathama Aṅgiras. (03-208-3)
Attachment then arose among all beings in her; because of this attachment, she is called 'Rāgā', whom they call the second daughter of Aṅgiras. (03-208-4)
Embodied beings call her Kāparda's daughter, 'the visible-invisible.' Because of her thinness, she is Sinīvālī, the third daughter of Angiras. (03-208-5)
She, radiant with brightness and oblations, the sixth auspicious maiden of the Angirases, is called Haviṣmatī. (03-208-6)
Mahāmatī, the daughter of the great sacrificial priest Aṅgiras among the radiant ones, is known as Mahāmatī; she is said to be the seventh daughter. (03-208-7)
But seeing that goddess, a person becomes bewildered; her whom they call 'Ekānanshā'—she is called Kuhū, the daughter of Aṅgiras. (03-208-8)

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ॐ असतो मा सद्गमय। तमसो मा ज्योतिर्गमय। मृत्योर्माऽमृतं गमय। ॐ शान्ति: शान्ति: शान्ति: ॥ - बृहदारण्यकोपनिषद् 1.3.28
"Ōm! Lead me from the unreal to the real, from darkness to light, and from death to immortality. Let there be peace, peace, and peace. Ōm!" - Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 1.3.28

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