| During
the exile Early
in their exile, when Bharata enters the
forest with the royal entourage to persuade
Rama to return to rule Ayodhya, Lakshmana
initially mistakes his intentions; he
jumps to the conclusion that the former
was approaching with malicious intent.
Rama, however, knows of Bharata's love
for him and explains to Lakshmana that
Bharata would never try to harm them.
Lakshmana serves Rama and
Sita reverently during the exile, building
them a home in the forest and devotedly
standing guard during the night, and accompanying
them on tiring journeys and long passages
of lonely forest life without complaint
or care for himself.
The Lakshmana 'Rekha'
When Sita asks
Rama to fetch the magical, golden deer
for her, Rama asks Lakshmana to guard
Sita and their home, and to take special
care since he felt bad omens and sensed
danger and evil. The golden deer is in
fact the demon Maricha, who must distract
Rama and Lakshmana away from the hut so
as to allow Ravana to kidnap Sita.
When Rama kills the deer,
even as he is dying, Maricha cries out
in Rama's own voice, crying for Sita and
Lakshmana to help him. Although Lakshmana
knows that Rama is invincible and beyond
any danger, Sita panics and frantically
orders Lakshmana to go to Rama's aid immediately.
Unable to disobey the frightened and panicky
Sita, and genuinely beginning to fear
for Rama's safety, Lakshmana goes out
to search for him. He however uses his
mystical power to draw the Lakshmana
Rekha or Lakshmana's Limit,
a perimeter line across the hut that Sita
must not cross, and no other being save
Lakshmana or Rama may enter uninvited.
If any intruder enters, it will be instantly
killed.
Sita however, out of compulsion
of religious duty and compassion for a
poor brahmin, who is actually the disguised
Ravana, crosses the line to give him alms.
Thus Ravana is safely able to seize Sita.
The Lakshmana Rekha has
become a metaphor in situations where
a certain limit must not be transgressed
by human beings in no circumstance whatsoever.
Prowess in war
Lakshmana is considered
a powerful warrior nearly equal to Rama.
In the war against Ravana and his Lankan
army of rakshasas, Lakshmana slays thousands
of powerful demons such as Atikaya and
Prahasta, Ravana's chief commanders, and
his son Indrajit. With Rama, he also slays
Kumbhakarna, the great giant rakshasa.
Injury and revival
During the battle to rescue
Sita, Lakshmana is grievously injured
by a mystical weapon fired by Indrajit,
rendering him unconscious and approaching
death. Rama and the others are shocked
and in sorrow, when the army's physician
explains that only with the special herb
sanjivani that grows on the Dronagiri
mountain in the Himalayan ranges, can
Lakshmana be revived and brought back
to life.
Hanuman, the mighty vanara
follower of Rama flies all the way across
the length of Bharat to reach the mountain
in the Himalayan ranges. Unable to find
the magical herb, and knowing there was
no time to waste, Hanuman uses his incredible
might to lift the entire mountain and
bring it to Lanka, the scene of the battle.
The magical herb is retrieved and Lakshmana
is revived.
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