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Millennial Hymn to Lord Shiva

Kathleen Raine

KATHLEEN RAINE is a renowned poet and scholar whose work is specifically concerned with restoration of Learning of the "Perennial Philososphy". Editor of Temenos, a review of international standing devoted to 'the Arts of the Imagination', she is also the Founder of the Temenos Academy of Integral Studies, London, whose purpose is to serve as a seminal venture in education established on the premises of Perennial Philosophy.

I

Earth no longer

hymns the Creator,

the seven days of wonder,

the Garden is over —

all the stories are told,

the seven seals broken

all that begins

must have its ending,

our striving, desiring,

our living and dying,

for Time, the bringer

of abundant days

is Time the destroyer

In the Iron Age

the Kali Yuga

To whom can we pray

at the end of an era

but the Lord Shiva,

the Liberator, the purifier?

 

II

Our forests are felled,

our mountains eroded,

the wild places

where the beautiful animals

found food and sanctuary

we have desolated,

a third of our seas,

a third of our rivers

we have polluted

and the sea-creatures dying.

Our civilization's

blind progress

in wrong courses

through wrong choices

has brought us to nightmare

where what seems,

is, to the dreamer,

the collective mind

of the twentieth century —

this world of wonders

not divine creation

but a big bang

of blind chance,

purposeless accident,

mother earth's children,

their living and loving,

their delight in being

not joy but chemistry,

stimulus, reflex,

valueless, meaningless,

while to our machines

we impute intelligence,

in computers and robots

we store information

and call it knowledge,

we seek guidance

by dialling numbers,

pressing buttons,

throwing switches,

in place of family

our companions are shadows

cast on a screen,

bodiless voices, fleshless faces,

where was the Garden

a Disney-land

of virtual reality,

in place of angels

the human imagination

is peopled with foot-ballers

film-stars, media-men,

experts, know-all

television personalities,

animated puppets

with cartoon faces —

To whom can we pray

for release from illusion,

from the world-cave,

but Time the destroyer,

the liberator, the purifier?

III

The Curse of Midas

Has changed at a touch,

a golden handshake

earthly paradise

to lifeless matter,

where once was seed-time,

summer and winter,

food-chain, factory farming,

monocrops for supermarkets,

pesticides, weed-killers

birdless springs,

endangered species,

battery-hens, hormone injections,

artificial insemination,

implants, transplants, sterilization,

surrogate births, contraception,

cloning, genetic engineering, abortion,

and our days shall be short

in the land we have sown

with the Dragon's teeth

where our armies arise

fully armed on our killing-fields

with land-mines and missiles,

tanks and artillery,

gas-masks and body-bags,

our air-craft rain down

fire and destruction,

our space-craft broadcast

lies and corruption,

our elected parliaments

parrot their rhetoric

of peace and democracy

while the truth we deny

returns in our dreams

of Armageddon,

the death-wish, the arms-trade,

hatred and slaughter

profitable employment

of our thriving cities,

the arms-race

to the end of the world

of our postmodern, post-Christian,

post-human nations,

progress to the nihil

of our spent civilization.

But cause and effect,

just and inexorable

law of the universe

no fix of science,

nor amenable god

can save from ourselves

the selves we have become —

At the end of history

to whom can we pray

but to the destoryer,

the liberator, the purifier?

IV

In the beginning

the stars sang together

the cosmic harmony,

but Time, imperceptible

taker-away

of all that has been

all that will be,

our heart-beat your drum,

our dance of life

your dance of death

in the crematorium,

our high-rise dreams,

Valhalla, Utopia,

Xanadu, Shangri-la, world-revolution

Time has taken, and soon will be gone

Cambridge, Princeton and M.I.T.,

Nalanda, Athens and Alexandria

all for the holocaust

of civilization —

To whom shall we pray

when our vision has faded

but the world-destroyer,

the liberator, the purifier?

V

But great is the realm

of the world-creator,

the world-sustainer

from whom we come,

in whom we move

and have our being,

about us, within us

the wonders of wisdom,

the trees and the fountains,

the stars and the mountains,

all the children of joy,

the loved and the known,

the unknowable mystery

to whom we return

through the world-destroyer, --

Holy, holy

at the end of the world

the purging fire

of the purifier, the liberator!

 

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