Indra Suktam
Indra Suktam
Indra Suktam
Commentary:
Master E.K.
INDRA SŪKTAṂ
(Ṛgvēda - Mandalaṃ-I, Sūktaṃ-IV)
MEANING
STANZA 1:
Every day we call forth Indra who performs
deeds of grace. We call him every day just as we call
the cow with calf for milk.
STANZA 2:
Oh! Indra, the drinker of Soma! Drink from the
juice of our Soma cups. Oh! Wealthy being, your
bliss lies in giving out cows.
STANZA 3:
Oh! Indra, drink Soma. Then we know you
while you are being praised behind the back of
those who praise you. Let your speech not be
devoid of us. May you not abandon us any time.
Always be with us.
STANZA 4:
Indra is learned and wise. He is the best of all
those who are friends. Approach Him and always
speak of Him.
STANZA 5:
May those who hate us be expelled even from
others abodes. Those who are authorised to serve
Indra may praise Indra here itself.
STANZA 6:
Oh! Indra, the destroyer of enemies, may the
enemies also speak progressive and graceful of us
by your grace. Let us live witnessing this among
those who cultivate.
STANZA 7:
Oh! Indra, maintain us by taking the Soma juice
completely. It is the speed among the speedy, the
bliss among the blissful and it is like the friend who
causes pleasure. It is the very deity of protection. It
is the very wealth of Yajna.
STANZA 8:
Oh! The Lord of the hundred rites! Drink this
juice and dilute the dense nature of the layers that
surround us into total absence. By your splendour
you protect the speed among the speedy.
STANZA 9:
Oh! The Lord of the hundred rites! We make
you the Lord of Anna. You are the very Prana of the
powers of Prana that are speedy.
STANZA 10:
Great is Indra who accomplishes the deeds. He
is the very friend of the one who squeezes the Soma
juice. He is the protector of all the forms of wealth.
Sing in His glory.
INTRODUCTION
This fourth Suktam is composed in ten Mantrams
after the pattern of the Prajapathis or the Number
Gods. They are addressed by Madhucchandas, son
of Viswamitra, and are composed in the Gayatri
meter.
They are addressed to Indra as Gopala and
Karshaka. Gopala means one who looks after the
cows and the bulls. ‘Karshaka’ means one who
performs the act of cultivation.
Indra is the centre-forming deity of
consciousness and is formed from Agni and Vishnu
just like the other gods. He is the one among those
who preside over the utterance stage of the word.
In the ethereal phenomena He is one among the
Rudras, who preside over the formation of clouds,
thunder, lightning and rain. Hence He is described
many times in the Vedas as the cultivator of this
earth. Since the rays of the sun gather the clouds
and cause them shower the rain, they are called the
energies of the bull and the earth is called the cow
which receives them. Indra is also pictured as the
one who takes care of the agricultural cattle.
The First Mantram addresses Indra in the form
of a milk-cow whom the Rishi invites to perform
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