Ramayana Page 17
and scuttling or quarried squeaky or soundless
thingybobs …
After circling the globe several times
over several non-stop hours
the duelling chariots resumed fighting
back in Lanka.
Till eventually a breakthrough:
Rama’s arrows so awesome they pierced Raavana’s armour.
Raavana winced and was forced to change tactics,
not now merely shooting arrows,
he called on the Astras, the supernatural forces,
to create weird effects. Rama could only imitate.
Raavana now stood atop a peak
and summoned from the far ends his deadliest weapon:
a trident that matched Death’s kill trajectory.
It was once gifted to Raavana by the gods!
Yes, the gods, who watched a tad shame-faced.
The trident could be heard whooping through abysms
and furthest cosmic ice-zones.
The noise was booming and the earth heating!
Rama uttered mantras
and realised one that turned the trident to dust.
The dust was thicker than a thousand mountains
and plugged the sea where it fell.
‘These are but kitchen pussy-footing utensils,’
yelled Raavana, who had tools galore.
He summoned an old gift, from Shiva, called Danda.
It was a comet that could zone on its target.
Target located:
instant explosion.
Raavana summoned the doolally Danda …
The gods feared for Rama.
This could be it for boy wonder.
No chance! Rama’s super-fired arrows,
so many and so boosted,
met mid-air the Danda:
full on explosion
blown into space!
Raavana brewed up Maya itself.
Maya created illusions that confused Rama.
Maya had apparently returned all Raavana’s army.
Charging towards Rama came some shy and retiring types.
Presently Rama watched all that once were belly-up
now armed
and stampeding at him.
Rama pleaded to his charioteer, Matali,
‘What is happening?’
Said Matali, ‘You know it not? You create all illusions.
You make dreams and dream-stuff
such as aught from envy to poetry.
Raavana has created phantoms to foil you
whilst you are a mortal. If at all you are doubting yourself
or weakening from your mantras: Maya kills you!’
Rama sat in pure focus and sought
the Naama, or wisdom fused with perception,
a super-rare rarely, if ever, usable weapon.
Rama held firm
and not a single negative distracting thought for a blink
entered.
It was as if Rama was vanishing from flesh into
one-compacted-atom-thought.
Raavana’s phantom crew was murderous breathing upon Rama
when Rama summoned Naama.
Naama instantly emptied the air of
Maya’s hurtling maniacs!
Raavana was convinced his Maya would mash up Rama.
He was sickened. He thought, who is Rama?
Not Shiva, for Shiva is my ally.
He could not be Brahma, who is four-faced,
and he is not Vishnu
for I am immune generally from the holy trinity.
Perhaps he is the primordial being.
The cause behind the universe?
Death’s elation would be to uncover
the spring, the source.
What then if I beat it?
Would I be killing myself in killing the source of creation?
Raavana went back to his mental kitchen, as it were.
He remained unfazed by Rama. Unfazed by death.
He focused again and unleashed an effect known as Thama.
Thama spun out arrows that orchestrated
darkness everywhere.
Thamas flew out from near Raavana’s body.
Each Thama had a head that spat up fangs and fiery tongues.
In no time, not a candle was lit in any nook.
But more, total darkness emptied all worlds.
All worlds! Starless end-to-end darkness.
Creation paralysed.
Amidst the darkness
rain deluge on one side
and stone-pour on the other.
Darkness and stone pelting in absolute torrent.
Add to this torrent tornadoes sweeping
the earth with hail-storms!
All earth, all cosmos was now near kaput.
In thickest thunder, storm and darkness
Rama was crouched in a cave
praying
summoning all sorts of remarkable forces
that the greatest sages would have barely imagined imaginable.
Still Rama and the cosmos were dying.
Somehow Rama survived those rocks
that tore at his cheeks? In surviving, he somehow focused
to summon a Shivasthra.
A Shivasthra understands the general apocalyptic mania
thriving in a Thama
so was able to annul Thama. Annul Thama in a stroke
as though the world’s end had come and gone!
Apocalypse abated and refulgence returned,
though many rare ones became extinct.
Raavana reacted with rage at this defeat.
He came down from his mountainous perch –
roaring at Rama on the battleground
by blindly emptying endless arrows at him.
Rama’s arrows met Raavana’s arrows halfway
and turned them all round
so they stacked in Raavana’s chest!
So they stacked in Raavana’s chest.
Chapter Ten: Ample Head over Heart lacking
Rama seeks a way to kill Raavana.
Rama went for the death
calmly slicing off Raavana’s heads,
one by one, hurling them into the ocean!
Rama’s blade thundered as it sliced
each dense-as-Time boon-bolstered head
YET
soon after lopping each exhausting head
Rama observed an exact-dense head
sprouting back on Raavana’s neck!
Each grown-back head threw up
foul-worded dares at Rama
but Rama calmly kept at his lumberjacking.
A hundred mighty heads fallen
and a hundred were back on
till eventually Raavana weakening …
fainted.
Matali whispered to Rama,
‘Finish him for good now. It is all over!’
But Rama panting, ‘It is unfair in combat
to attack a man who has fainted. I will let him recover.
Mareecha, Kara, Indrajit and Koombarkana were killed
but how do I end Raavana’s career?’
Matali, who was the god’s charioteer
and used to battles, simply said, ‘Raavana will grow
heads endless. You must now use the Brahmastra.’
When Raavana was back on his feet
he took out his sword, crying at his charioteer,
‘Why did you pull us away?
The gods will think I showed fear.’
Said the tearful charioteer,
‘But Lord, Rama stopped fighting.
Our horses needed shade from the sun’s rays.
My life, my duty is to your kind love.’
‘I am glad you serve me, would you take this?’
Raavana awarded his charioteer
a gem-encrusted bracelet given him by the gods.
With his chest already healed
Raavana lifted his many swords
&nbs
p; charging wildly at Rama
but Rama slapped all his swords cleanly away.
With nothing left to lose, Raavana threw
whatever came to hand
whether it be staves, cast-iron balls or boulders.
Pleaded Matali, ‘O Lord, he is becoming mighty again!
Could he war once more?
You must try summoning the Brahmastra.’
Rama worried about using this weapon originated by Brahma.
It was only to be used in the final event.
The shaft of the arrow bore the essence of the skies.
It was heavy as Mount Meru
and contained the combined energy of all beings.
Along annihilation’s path it could spray up
mountains and oceans innumerable.
If not used correct on the battlefield
it could blank all in its path from east to west as it went.
It was Yama’s role model, for sure.
It needed masterful sorcery-calling
and could only be summoned by one once in a lifetime.
Rama was fending off
Raavana’s lumbering
lumpen weapons
as he began his chant.
He chanted for the Brahmastra
nursing it concentratedly into its cleanest perceivable aim.
All creation sat up for a second
and Raavana’s ears pricked at a whizzing spear.
A fire hearse bombing through the billion galaxies
with all their ordered and remiss back-rooms and chambers
that formed the furthest span of the universe.
Raavana knew he was hearing the Brahmastra
clearing past the cosmic ceiling
and already clearing the mountains
and already booming for his heart
and he knew he was vulnerable
at heart
(something he had never sought protection for)
and the Brahmastra had already plunged him
into the blue
then burst him back
colossal up towards the stars
and the spatial doom
before he was speared back down to earth
upon the furrowed routes
with a black gap
a black gap chasming his chest. His smithereen heart.
In all the worlds, to all the gods from distant times
it must have been implausible
a god could be razed by a mortal.
Inconceivable that Raavana could not be inviolable.
Raavana’s hefty crowns and jewellery
scattered pell-mell about his black-as-collyrium body.
Chapter Eleven: Duty
Vibishana and Mandodari mourn.
Even in victory Lord Rama was pure
forgiveness. When Vibishana, so overwhelmed with grief,
pulled up a blade and was about to cut off his own head
Rama spoke through sighs,
‘Is there a home for hatred
after death has blown off the roof?
O bravest of all, Vibishana, your brother is now
our brother. We must honour him a funeral
so his spirit may course
for its place in heaven.
Will you not serve him, now?’
Vibishana was crowded with tears as he whispered,
‘What might he
have achieved?’
Mandodari ran to the battlefield
and fell upon her lord’s body sobbing.
Mandodari called blindly aloud,
‘Is all joy now gone
and we are manacled to the millstone?
My Lord, do you leave me
no sign?
In our lives to come
how will you know me?’
Mandodari fainted deep into a dream lane.
Chapter Twelve: Let’s have a Cak Party calling it Diwali!
Rama, Sita and Lakshmana return to Ayodhya.
Fourteen years had elapsed and Rama returned
at the spot, on the dot: Ayodhya.
He was a hero bringing home
a millennium reign of peace.
King Sugreeva, King Vibishana and Jambavan
made the long journey north to honour the king of all kings.
The journey to the palace was already lit
from every house and yard of the path with candles
and red cloth was draped from door to door along the streets.
Rama’s mothers and Bharat were at the palace gates
so the golden slippers on the throne meet the lord.
Alongside them waiting was Rama’s favourite elephant,
Shatrunjaya, already prostrated.
Dancing troupes wore khon-masks
for demons and heroes
or wore simple cottons
and were caught in the Cak dance – the trance dance
where a male choir hummed
ecak-ecak-ecak-ecak-ecak
and dancers mimed the already infamous abduction of Sita
and Rama’s victory
to which the capital cheered.
The capital overcome and ready to party, alright.
Let’s have a party calling it Diwali.
Home and at the palace gates … at last Rama was free,
free to act of his own accord. A king with the trappings
of power. But first,
queen would finally meet her king.
But where was Sita? And why had Rama not met her
after victory in Lanka?
Why had Sita been flown from the battle scene to Ayodhya
in Hanuman’s chariot?
And why now, here, finally, was Sita being escorted
before the palace gates? And before Rama in public?
And at last Rama looking in Sita’s direction,
looking at her as though for the first time
surely?
Yet Rama did not look as foot-rooted by Sita
as he had been on their first ever
encounter
when he had been struck by the vision on its balcony.
Rama raised a hand to
calm the jubilant gathering.
All awaited Rama’s speech.
Rama only said,
‘I want everyone to observe my reunion.
Please, Hanuman, bring down
Sita from her palanquin.’
Sita blushed
at being exposed
in this public way.
She held at the tip of her fingers the
RAMA-inscribed wedding ring for its elated return.
Sita’s fawn eyes looked at Rama’s hands:
they saw there no Choodamani.
Rama’s hands pointed down to the grooved earth.
He spoke not courtly but court-like with his wife
in full view,
‘Blessings on your salvation.
Our mission has been accomplished.
You have been freed from suffering.’
‘You never left my heart,
how could I suffer, Lord?’
Rama, still not looking at Sita for it would be a looking into
light.
He continued his judgement, ‘After all this
this residence
far from your rightful home
I must tell you, as you will know,
it is not in our custom
committing back to the marital contract
a wife
who has been resident
elsewhere, in a stranger’s home.
I have executed
what any man must.
I have wiped out
dishonour’s stain.’
Rama looked broken. In two.
‘Everyone here has seen I do not touch
you.
There can be no question of our
living together.
I leave you
free
to go wherever you p
lease. Look about you:
ten directions or more where you can be free.
I grant freedom to you there.’
Sita stood thunderbolted.
The crowd stunned. Yet the lord was brave to act correct
and not appear henpecked or a fool to take back a wife
so heavily desired by another man
whose house she had stayed alive in.
Correct indeed, Lord.
Almost to herself, ‘Why peril the earth?
Why not send word with Hanuman …