Aksha : eldest son of Rāvaṇa, slain in battle by Hanuman
... Moreover Batcha had nothing to do with Mohini. An image of the future?... But why suddenly that Mohini? It was all over, dead and buried! And I could still hear that same small voice: “Are you not Nil-Aksha, the blue-eyed one... I tell you, what is happening today was begun thousands and thousands of years ago and will continue for thousands and thousands of years to come.” Batcha looked at me. Suddenly ...
... of Vyasa's genius, when he was young and ardent, perhaps still under the _________ " Terminalia belerica. Sanskrit names: Bibheetaka or Vibheetaka (regular use eliminates fear of disease), Aksha (the seeds are used in a game of gambling, Kalivriksha (the tree of Kali), Bhootavas (animals take shelter in its shade). See Ayurvedic Pharmacology and Therapeutic Uses of Medicinal Plants by Vaidya ...
... Lanka. Silent is the lion roar. Into these ears used to be poured A torrent of delight, the trumpet call of victory, The wild war-cry, the leonine yell of my brother Kumbhakarna. But O Aksha, O Indrajit, why are you silent at this hour of peril! Why does not your ever victorious voice delight our ears anymore! O my children, is the embrace of Death so fast, so sweet! Pardon ...
... chase away death, invite the beautiful story and make it real. We could create a life of beauty together. Look, Nil, look well, a beautiful look, that is the look that creates, and are you not Nil-Aksha, the blue-eyed one? —I am Nil- rien-du-tout , nothing-at-all, and I hate complications. I am free, do you hear? And as for your Destiny, I spit in its face. At that very moment, a violent gust ...
... same way, walls are what creates death, otherwise it is the same flow of never-ending life. There is a vast gaze — I don’t know how they call it in Sanskrit: Anantaksha? (Ananta = the infinite, Aksha = the gaze). But it is not the pure “infinite” of Brahman (or not only), it is a gaze that is innumerable, in everything. Not only does it embrace everything, but it is exactly that which it rests ...
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