The beginning of the Hindu list of moon stations was described in chapter Musca Australis and contains no evident sign of the star Hassaleh:
However, the Arabic manzil associated with the time of the heliacal rise of Hassaleh ('June 3) is Pleione, the last of the Pleiades sisters, and possibly the corresponding Hindu station could therefore be Krittika. From the Pleiades star cluster (M 45) to the right ascension day of Hassaleh there are 18 days (= 74 - 56) and if we look ahead searching for a possible Hindu station coordinated with right ascension day 74 + 18 = 92 we will arrive at the solstice:
Therefore it seems possible the Hindu structure has Hassaleh in the 22 (as in 7π) night (exceptionally) long and intermediary period which I named Moe. Between Betelgeuze (α Orionis) and Punarvasu lies the Milky Way with its myriads of small stars: ... In Hindu legend there was a mother goddess called Aditi, who had seven offspring. She is called 'Mother of the Gods'. Aditi, whose name means 'free, unbounded, infinity' was assigned in the ancient lists of constellations as the regent of the asterism Punarvasu. Punarvasu is dual in form and means 'The Doublegood Pair'. The singular form of this noun is used to refer to the star Pollux. It is not difficult to surmise that the other member of the Doublegood Pair was Castor ... The Moe label was my name after having considered the ideas which once were current in association with this part of the sky - it was a dormant period: ... Men's spirits were thought to dwell in the Milky Way between incarnations. This conception has been handed down as an Orphic and Pythagorean tradition fitting into the frame of the migration of the soul. Macrobius, who has provided the broadest report on the matter, has it that souls ascend by way of Capricorn, and then, in order to be reborn, descend again through the 'Gate of Cancer'. Macrobius talks of signs; the constellations rising at the solstices in his time (and still in ours) were Gemini and Sagittarius: the 'Gate of Cancer' means Gemini. In fact, he states explicitly (I,12.5) that this 'Gate' is 'where the Zodiac and the Milky Way intersect'. Far away, the Mangaians of old (Austral Islands, Polynesia), who kept the precessional clock running instead of switching over to 'signs', claim that only at the evening of the solstitial days can spirits enter heaven, the inhabitants of the northern parts of the island at one solstice, the dwellers in the south at the other ... Considering the fact that the crossroads of ecliptic and Galaxy are crisis-resistant, that is, not concerned with the Precession, the reader may want to know why the Mangaians thought they could go to heaven only on the two solstitial days. Because, in order to 'change trains' comfortably, the constellations that serve as 'gates' to the Milky Way must 'stand' upon the 'earth', meaning that they must rise heliacally either at the equinoxes or at the solstices. The Galaxy is a very broad highway, but even so there must have been some bitter millenia when neither gate was directly available any longer, the one hanging in midair, the other having turned into a submarine entrance ... Thus it seems natural to make Hassaleh - Chaucer's Alkab - the primary star, just in front of the Haedi twin kids:
Hassaleh is at the left foot of the Driver and the star at his right foot is the point (tara) of the Bull's horn, Elnath (β Tauri), rising a week later:
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