English: East Pediment, North Library. At the top of the relief, India, riding Airavata and surrounded by pleading worshipers, produces rain in order to extinguish a fire in the Khandava forest. This action is opposed by Krishna and Balarama (bottom right and left, standing on chariots), who are sending their arrows skywards to prevent the rain from reaching the ground. The arrows fly so close together that they form a kind of roof, supported by a line of hamsas (geese), between Indra's waters (the horizontal wavy lines) and the forest below.
At the center of the photo, nagas attempt to escape the fire and
rejoin Indra's waters by climbing the roof of arrows, while forest
animals that include monkeys, elephants, lions, and deer cower
fearfully below.
Recalling that Krishna and Balarama are avatars
of Vishnu, a solar deity, the myth can be read as an allegory
of the sun's rays (Krishna's arrows) dispersing a storm, perhaps
at the end of the monsoon season. In allowing the forest fire to
burn unimpeded, the gods are also providing cleared land to
mankind for agriculture and settlement.
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