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August 18, 2007
As the morning continues, the sounds of noisy buzz saws trimming trees continue, the neighbor's TV is blaring, and I must consider what to do this day. I would like to read _The Presence of Siva_, but it hasn't arrived. I have a book on Dionysos, I could read that... With my learning a little about the contrasts between Odinn and Tyr, how it relates to Set and Horus and then Dionysos and Apollo, it is clear the Princes of Dark and Light have many archetypes in the various cultures, always contrasting, disagreeing, but both essential to the balance. (Now how does this fit with SHIVA?) Hmm, I am just looking randomly at the thick book, (_Dionysos, Archetypal Image of Indestructible Life_) and I come across the following:
"'Throughout its development the Dionysian cult preserved the character it had when it first entered into history. With its
sensuality and emphasis on sexual love, it presented a marked affinity to the feminine nature, and its appeal was primarily
to women; it was among women that it found its most loyal supporters, its most assiduous servants, and their enthusiasm was
the foundation of its power. Dionysus is a woman's god in the fullest sense of the word, the source of all woman's sensual
and transcendent hopes, the center of her whole existence. It was to women that he was first revealed in his glory, and it
was women who propagated his cult and brought about its triumph.'"
Kerényi is quoting J. J. Bachofen there on page 130
Wow, the feminine frenzy he elicited! I can't say this compares to Odinn, Set or Shiva, although I suspect a few females
might feel some sort of sexual adoration that way.
But apparently this feminine lust for Dionysos is something only emphasized by Bachofen, as other scholars don't stress that.
Otto and Nietzsche say things which are more like Shiva:
"In this context Nietzsche may be quoted to advantage: 'Dionysos is the frenzy which circles round wherever there is
conception and birth and which in its wildness is always ready to thrust forwards into destruction and death. it is
life." So it was for Otto, but life in only one particular state: 'life which, when it overflows, grows mad and in its
profoundest passion is intimately associated with death,' not zoë, which is tested (though not affected in its
innermost core) by its diametric opposite, thanatos." Page 132
"Setting aside Bachofen's picture of Dionysos, Nietzsche prepared the way for Otto's vision. I shall cite here those words
of his account that deviate most radically from the path taken by Muller and by Bachofen, which might have led to a true
understanding of the origin of the Dionysian religion. 'A tempest seizes everything that has outlived itself, everything that
is decayed, broken, and withered, and, whirling, shrouds it in a cloud of red dust to carry it into the air like a vulture.
Confused, our eyes look after what has disappeared; for what they see has been raised as from a depression into golden light,
so full and green, so amply alive, immeasurable and full of yearning.'" page 134
Now, in comparison, I have some quotes from _The Presence of Siva_, which I was able to nab off of the
Amazon Reader:
"Creation is an act of violence that infringes upon the Uncreate, the undifferentiated wholeness that is before the beginning
of things." page 4, "The Primordial Science"
"The brahman tells of the mystery and at the same time tells of its mode of telling. It shrouds and at the same time conveys
His name in the form it gives to him by calling itself a raudra brahman, a wild creation, or Rudraic creation, for
this poem and the creation are of Rudra, the Wild God. Raudra, an adjective from Rudra, means wild, of Rudra nature.
Rudra as the name of the god would signify 'the Wild One', or 'the Fierce God.' According to later Vedic tradition, however,
the word Rudra is derived from rud, to cry, howl (TS.1.5.1.1; MS.4.2.12;SB.6.1.3.19). While the words of the
mantras conjure up the primordial action and evoke the entire myth, they also carry the effect of this action on the
gods, that is, on the evoking consciousness." page 5
"The double meaning of the word raudra is intentional: the poem is about Rudra, the wild, formidable god, and it is
itself a fiercely wild creation charged with many meanings.
"It is of the very nature of Rudra, who creates in order to destroy, for he will create again in an inexhaustible renewal of
life on earth, where creation is the aeviternal answer to destruction, and both have their ground and antithesis in the
Uncreate. This is the course that Rudra set. More truly than any other god he could have said of himself: 'I am not a
puzzled-out book, I am a god with his contradictions." page 7-8
Now for me, the difference with Set, is that he destroys in order to _create_, for all that is "decayed, broken,
and withered" must undergo its transformation so that it can be reborn anew.
(You will not be the same!)
Go now, find your vision,
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