Page:Cradle Tales of Hinduism .djvu/228

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204 CRADLE TALES OF HINDUISM

peasants. For He, the Lord, is ever the same unto His devotees, and appears unto each one of them in that very form for which His inmost heart cries out.

Those were stirring days in India, and the position of Krishna in the powerful Vrishni State, placed him in the front of affairs. Kings sought His approval and the alliance of His people. He built the splendid city of Dwarka on the sea-coast. His presence was desired at every tournament and assembly. Under his guidance the Vrishnis and their government became one of the most important factors in the life of the period. They grew indeed to such strength that Krishna Himself is said to have seen the grave danger to the national life in the existence of so strong a military class as their nobles formed, and to have sought in His own mind for means of bringing this danger to an end. It was never His way, however, to interfere in affairs, in His own proper person, and in the assertion of His own will. Rather did He look on at the world as if it were all a play which he was watch- ing. Sometimes, at most, He would remove an obstacle, so that the will of the players might have tmimpeded scope. In this way He allowed events to work themselves out, striving ever to aid the course of destiny, though this leads in the end to the seif-destruction of all things.