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The
Rakshasas
(The Rakshasas the
violent kinetic Ego, establishes his claim to mastery of the
world replacing the animal Soul, - to be followed by controlled and intellectualised
but unregenerated Ego, the Asura. Each such type and level of
consciousness sees the Divine in its own image and its level in Nature is
sustained by a differing form of the World-Mother.)
“Glory
and greatness and the joy of life,
Strength,
pride, victorious force, whatever man
Desires,
whatever the wild beast enjoys,
Bodies
of women and the lives of men–
I
claim to be my kingdom. I have force
My
title to substantiate, I seek,
No
crown unearned, no lordship undeserved.
Ask
what austerity Thou wilt, Maker of man,
Expense
of blood or labour or long years
Spent
in tremendous meditation, lives
Upon
Thy altar spent of brutes or men;
Or
if with gold Thy favour purchasable,
I
may command rich offerings to glut
Thy
triumphs and Thy priests. I have a heart,
A
hand for any mighty sacrifice,
A
fiery patience in my vehement mood;
I
will submit. But ask not this of me,
Meek
silence and a pale imprisoned soul
Made
colourless of its humanity,
Ask
not the heart that quakes, the hand that spares,
What
strength can give, not weakness, that demand.
O
Rudra! O eternal Mahadev!
Thou
too art fierce and mighty, wrathful, bold,
Snuffing
Thy winds for blood of sacrifice
And
angrily Thou rul’st a prostrate world.
O
Rakshasa Almighty, look on me,
Ravan,
the lord, of all Thy Rakshasas,
Give
me Thy high command to smite Thy foes;
But
most I would afflict, chase and destroy
Thy
devotees who traduce Thee, making Thee
A
God of Love, a God too sweet to rule.
I
have the knowledge, what Thou art I know
And
know myself, for Thou and I are one.”
So
prayed the Lord of Lanka, and in heaven
Sri
Krishna smiled, the friend of all mankind,
And
asked, “O masters of .the knowledge, Seers
Who
help me by your thoughts to help mankind,
Hearken
what Ravan cries against the stars
Demanding
earth for heritage. Advise,
Shall
he then have it?” And a cry arose,
“He
would root out the Brahmin from the earth,
Impose
his dreadful Yoga on mankind
And
make the violent heart, the iron hand
Sovereign
of all.” Sri Krishna made reply,
“From
out Myself he went to do My will.
He
has not lied, he has the knowledge. He
And
I are one. How then shall I refuse?
Does
it not say, the Veda that you know,
‘When
one knows That, then whatso he desires,
It
shall be his’?” And Atri sage replied,
“Let
him then rule a season and be slain.”
And
He who reigns, “Something you know, O Seers,
Not
all my purpose. It is long decreed,
The
Rakshasa shall rule the peopled earth.
He
takes the brute into himself for man
Yielding
it offerings, while with grandiose thoughts
And
violent aspirations he controls;
He
purifies the demon in the race
Slaying in wrath, not cruelty. Awhile
He puts the Vanara out of the world,
Accustoming
to grandeur all mankind;
The
Ifrit(The
Ifrit, the Djinn, is the demoniac element in Nature.) he rejects. Were he denied
His
period, man could not progress. But since
He sees himself as Me, not Me in him,
And
takes the life and body for the whole,
He
cannot last. Therefore is Atri’s word
Accepted.”
And before the Rakshasa,
Out
of the terror of the sacrifice,
Naked
and dark, with a blood-dripping sword
And
dreadful eyes that seemed to burn the world,
Kali
the Rakshasi in flames arose.
“Demand a boon,” she cried, and all
the gods
Trembled. “Give me the earth for my delight,
Her
gods to be my slaves”, the Rakshasa cried,
“Of strength and
pride.” “So Jet it be,”
She answered. “Shall it be
eternal then?”
Ravan demanded and she thundered, “No,
For neither thou nor I are best
nor last.
The Asuri shall
arise to fill my place,
The
Asura thy children shall dethrone.
An
aeon thou hast taken to evolve,
An aeon thou shalt rule. But since thy wish
I have denied, ask yet another boon.”
“Let
this be mine then, when at last I sink,
Nor brute nor demon, man nor Titan’s
hand,
Nor
any lesser creature shall
o’erthrow,
But only God
himself compel my fall.”
And Kali answered, smiling
terribly,
“It
is decreed,” and laughing loud she passed.
Then Ravan from his sacrifice arose.
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