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XI
THE RIBHUS, ARTISANS OF IMMORTALITY
Rig-veda 1.20
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Lo, the affirmation made for the divine Birth with the breath
of the mouth by illumined minds, that gives perfectly the
bliss;
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Even they who fashioned by the mind for Indra his two
bright steeds that are yoked by Speech, and they enjoy the
sacrifice by their accomplishings of the work.
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They fashioned for the twin lords of the
voyage their happy car of the all-pervading movement, they fashioned the
fostering cow that yields the sweet milk.
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O Ribhus, in your pervasion you made young again the
Parents, you who seek the straight path and have the Truth
in your mentalisings.

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The raptures of the wine come to you entirely, to you with
Indra companioned by the Maruts and with the Kings, the
sons of Aditi.
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And this bowl of Twashtri new and perfected you made
again into four.
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So establish for us the thrice seven ecstasies, each separately by perfect expressings of them.
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They sustained and held in them, they divided by perfection
in their works the sacrificial share of the enjoyment among
the Gods.
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COMMENTARY
The Ribhus, it has been suggested, are rays of the Sun.
And it is true that like Varuna, Mitra, Bhaga and Aryaman
they are powers of the solar Light, the Truth. But their special
character in the Veda is that they are artisans of Immortality.
They are represented as human beings who have attained to
the condition of godhead by power of knowledge and perfection
in their works. Their function is to aid Indra in raising man towards the same
state of divine light and bliss which they themselves have earned as their own divine privilege. The hymns
addressed to them in the Veda are few and to the first glance exceedingly enigmatical; for they are full of certain figures and
symbols always repeated. But once the principal clues of the
Veda are known, they become on the contrary exceedingly clear
and simple and present a coherent and interesting idea which
sheds a clear light on the Vedic gospel of immortality.
The Ribhus are powers of the Light who have descended
into Matter and are there born as human faculties aspiring to become divine and immortal. In this character they are called
children of Sudhanwan,¹ a patronymic which is merely a parable
of their birth from the full capacities of Matter touched by the
luminous energy. But in their real nature they are descended
from this luminous Energy and are sometimes so addressed,
"Offspring of Indra, grandsons of luminous Force" (IV.37.4).
For Indra, the divine mind in man, is born out of luminous Force
as is Agni out of pure Force, and from Indra the divine Mind
spring the human aspirations after Immortality.
The names of the three Ribhus are, in the order of their
birth, ṛbhu or ṛbhukṣan, the skilful Knower or the Shaper
in knowledge, vibhva or vibhu, the Pervading, the self-diffusing,
and vāja, the Plenitude. Their names indicate their special nature
and function, but they are really a trinity, and therefore, although
usually termed the Ribhus, they are also called the Vibhus and
Vajas. Ribhu, the eldest is the first in man who begins to shape
¹"Dhanwan" in this name does not mean "bow" but the solid or desert field of Matter
otherwise typified as the hill or rock out of which the waters and the rays are delivered.
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by his thoughts and works the forms of immortality; Vibhwa
gives pervasiveness to this working; Vaja, the youngest, supplies
the plenitude of the divine light and substance by which the
complete work can be done. These works and formations of immortality they effect, it is continually repeated, by the force of
Thought, with the mind for field and material; they are done
with power; they are attended by a perfection in the creative and
effective act, svapasyayā, sukṛtyayā, which is the condition of the
working out of Immortality. These formations of the artisans of
Immortality are, as they are briefly summarised in the hymn
before us, the horses of Indra, the car of the Ashwins, the Cow
that gives the sweet milk, the youth of the universal Parents,
the multiplication into four of the one drinking-bowl of the gods
originally fashioned by Twashtri, the Framer of things.
The hymn opens with an indication of its objective. It is an
affirmation of the power of the Ribhus made for the divine
Birth, made by men whose minds have attained to illumination
and possess that energy of the Light from which the Ribhus were
born. It is made by the breath of the mouth, the life-power in
the world. Its object is to confirm in the human soul the entire
delight of the Beatitude, the thrice seven ecstasies of the divine
Life.¹
This divine Birth is represented by the Ribhus who, once
human, have become immortal. By their accomplishings of the
work, — the great work of upward human evolution which is the
summit of the world-sacrifice, — they have gained in that sacrifice their divine share and privilege along with the divine powers.
They are the sublimated human energies of formation and up-
ward progress who assist the gods in the divinising of man. And
of all their accomplishings that which is central is the formation
of the two brilliant horses of Indra, the horses yoked by speech
to "their movements, yoked by the Word and fashioned by the
mind. For the free movement of the luminous mind, the divine
mind in man, is the condition of all other immortalising works.²
The second work of the Ribhus is to fashion the chariot of
the Ashwins, lords of the human journey, — the happy movement
¹Ayam
devāya janmane, stomo viprebhir āsayā; akāri ratnadhatāmaḥ.
²Ya
indrāya vacoyujā tatakṣur
manasā harī; śamībhir yajñam āśata.
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of the Ananda in man which pervades with its action all
his worlds or planes of being, bringing health, youth, strength,
wholeness to the physical man, capacity of enjoyment and action
to the vital, glad energy of the light to the mental being, — in a
word, the force of the pure delight of being in all his members.¹
The third work of the Ribhus is to fashion the cow who gives
the sweet milk. It is said elsewhere that this cow has been delivered out of its
covering skin, — the veil of Nature's outward movement and action, — by the
Ribhus. The fostering cow her- self is she of the universal forms and universal
impetus of movement, viśvajuvam viśvarūpām, in other words she is the first
Radiance, Aditi, the infinite Consciousness of the infinite conscious Being which is the mother of the worlds. That conscious-
ness is brought out by the Ribhus from the veiling movement of
nature and a figure of her is fashioned here in us by them. She is,
by the action of the powers of the duality, separated from her
offspring, the soul in the lower world; the Ribhus restore it to constant
companionship with its infinite mother.²
Another great work of the Ribhus is — in the strength of
their previous deeds, of the light of Indra, the movement of the
Ashwins, the full yield of the fostering Cow — to restore youth
to the aged Parents of the world. Heaven and Earth. Heaven is
the mental consciousness, Earth the physical. These in their
union are represented as lying long—old and prostrate like fallen
sacrificial posts, worn-out and suffering. The Ribhus, it is said,
ascend to the house of the Sun where he lives in the unconcealed
splendour of his Truth and there slumbering for twelve days
afterwards traverse the heaven and the earth, filling them with
abundant rain of the streams of Truth, nourishing them, restoring them to youth and vigour.³ They pervade heaven with their
workings, they bring divine increase to the mentality,4 they give
to it and the physical being a fresh and young and immortal
movement.5 For from the home of the Truth they bring with
them the perfection of that which is the condition of their work,
the movement in the straight path of the Truth and the Truth
¹Takfan
nāsatyābhyām, parijmānam sukham ratham.
²Takṣan dhenum
sabardughām. For the other details see Rv. IV.33.4,8; IV.36.4 etc.
³Rv.
IV.33.2,3,7; IV.36.1,3; 1.161.7. 4Rv.
IV.33.1,2. 5Rv. V.36.3.
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itself with its absolute effectivity in all the thoughts and words
of the mentality. Carrying this power with them in their pervading entry into the lower world, they pour into it the immortal
essence.¹
It is the wine of that immortal essence with its ecstasies which
they win by their works and bring with them to man in his sacrifice. And with them come and sit Indra and the Maruts, the divine Mind and its Thought-forces, and the four great Kings,
sons of Aditi, children of the Infinite, Varuna, Mitra, Aryaman,
Bhaga, the purity and vastness of the Truth-Consciousness, its
law of love and light and harmony, its power and aspiration, its
pure and happy enjoyment of things.²
And there at the sacrifice the gods drink in the fourfold
bowl, camasam caturvayam (IV. 36.4), the pourings of the nectar.
For Twashtri, the Framer of things, has given man originally
only a single bowl, the physical consciousness, the physical body
in which to offer the delight of existence to the gods. The Ribhus,
powers of luminous knowledge, take it as renewed and perfected
by Twashtri's latter workings and build up in him from the material of the four planes three other bodies, vital, mental and the
causal or ideal body.³
Because they have made this fourfold cup of bliss and enabled
him thereby to live on the plane of the Truth-Consciousness
they are able to establish in the perfected human being the thrice
seven ecstasies of the supreme existence poured into the mind,
vitality and body. Each of these they can give perfectly by the
full expression of its separate absolute ecstasy even in the combination of the
whole.4
The Ribhus have power to support and contain all these
floods of the delight of being in the human consciousness; and
they are able to divide it in the perfection of their works among
the manifested gods, to each god his sacrificial share. For such
perfect division is the whole condition of the effective sacrifice,
the perfect work.5
¹Yuvānā
pitarā punaḥ,
satyamantrā rjūyavaḥ,
ṛbhavo viṣṭyakrata.
²Sam vo
madāso agmata, indreṇa ca
marutvatā; ādityebhiśca rājabhiḥ̣.
³Uta tyam camasam navam, tvaṣṭur devasya niṣkṛtam; akarta caturaḥ punaḥ.
4Te no ratnāni dhattana, trir
ā sāptāni sunvate; ekamekam suśastibhiḥ.
5Adhārayanta vahnayo'bhajanta
sukṛtyayā;
bhāgam deveṣu
yajñiyam.
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Such are the Ribhus and they are called to the human sacrifice to fashion for man the things of immortality even as they
fashioned them for themselves. "He becomes full of plenitude
and strength for the labour, he becomes a Rishi by power of self-
expression, he becomes a hero and a smiter hard to pierce in the
battles, he holds in himself increase of bliss and entire energy
whom Vaja and Vibhwa, the Ribhus foster.... For you are seers
and thinkers clear-discerning; as such with this thought of our soul we declare
to you our knowledge. Do you in your knowledge moving about our thoughts fashion
for us all human enjoyings, — luminous plenitude and fertilising force and supreme
felicity. Here issue, here felicity, here a great energy of inspiration fashion
for us in your delight. Give to us, O Ribhus, that richly-varied plenitude by
which we shall awaken in our consciousness to things beyond ordinary men."¹
¹Rv. IV.36.6-9.
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