Page:The Religion of the Veda.djvu/191

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Transparent and Opaque Gods I75

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He slays dragons and monsters; he is the typical slayer of the foes of the pious sacrificer. To these deeds of heroic valor he is stimulated by immense potations of intoxicating same. In order to accom- plish the slaughter of the arch-dragon Vritra he drank on one occasion three lakes of that delightful bevcn age, so that decidedly he had a jag on, which, it has been noted, rhymes well with dragon. Accordingly he has a tremendous body, strong jaws and lips. He is tawny-haired and bearded, carries a club in his hand, and fights on a chariot drawn by two bay steeds. In general the Vedic poets cannot be accused of coarseness; yet it seems that, in this instance, they were irresistibly attracted by the mighty deeds of this, “ Lord of Strength,” as they call him. This is probably owing to the fact that he is felt to be the national hero of the Aryan invaders in their struggles against the dark-skinned aborigines, whom they must overcome in order to hold possession of the land which they invaded. And nations are never coarser than when they put their own nationality into an- tagonism against another nation. In a recent war, familiar to all of us, a prominent warrior on the side of the stronger nation expressed his consuming de- sire to make, by his own valorous deeds, the language of the Weaker nation the vernacular of Hades. This is the spirit of the worship of Indra.

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