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I. The Relation of the Individual to the Universe
RABINDRANATH
TAGORE'S
SADHANA
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THE RELATION
OF THE INDIVIDUAL TO THE UNIVERSE
The civilisation of ancient Greece was nurtured within city walls. In fact,
all the modern civilisations have their cradles of brick and mortar.
These walls leave
their mark deep in the minds of men. They set up a principle of "divide
and rule" in our mental outlook, which begets in us a habit of securing
all our conquests by fortifying them and separating them from one another. We
divide nation and nation, knowledge and knowledge, man and nature. It breeds
in us a strong suspicion of whatever is beyond the barriers we have built, and
everything has to fight hard for its entrance into our recognition.
When the first
Aryan invaders appeared in India it was a vast land of forests, and the new-comers
rapidly took advantage of them. These forests afforded them shelter from the
fierce heat of the sun and the ravages of tropical storms, pastures for cattle,
fuel for sacrificial fire, and materials for building cottages. And the different
Aryan clans with their patriarchal heads settled in the different forest tracts
which had some special advantage of natural protection, and food and water in
plenty.
Thus in India it
was in the forests that our civilisation had its birth, and it took a distinct
character from this origin and environment. It was surrounded by the vast life
of nature, was fed and clothed by her, and had the closest and most constant
intercourse with her varying aspects.
Such a life, it
may be thought, tends to have the effect of dulling human intelligence and dwarfing
the incentives to progress by lowering the standards of existence. But in ancient
India we find that the circumstances of forest life did not overcome man's mind,
and did not enfeeble the current of his energies, but only gave to it a particular
direction. Having been in constant contact with the living growth of nature,
his mind was free from the desire to extend his dominion by erecting boundary
walls around his acquisitions. His aim was not to acquire but to realise, to
enlarge his consciousness by growing with and growing into his surroundings.
He felt that truth is all-comprehensive, that there is no such thing as absolute
isolation in existence, and the only way of attaining truth is through the interpenetration
of our being into all objects. To realise this great harmony between man's spirit
and the spirit of the world was the endeavour of the forest-dwelling sages of
ancient India.
In later days there
came a time when these primeval forests gave way to cultivated fields, and wealthy
cities sprang up on all sides. Mighty kingdoms were established, which had communications
with all the great powers of the world. But even in the heyday of its material
prosperity the heart of India ever looked back with adoration upon the early
ideal of strenuous self-realisation, and the dignity of the simple life of the
forest hermitage, and drew its best inspiration from the wisdom stored there.
The west seems
to take a pride in thinking that it is subduing nature; as if we are living
in a hostile world where we have to wrest everything we want from an unwilling
and alien arrangement of things. This sentiment is the product of the city-wall
habit and training of mind. For in the city life man naturally directs the concentrated
light of his mental vision upon his own life and works, and this creates an
artificial dissociation between himself and the Universal Nature within whose
bosom he lies.
But in India the
point of view was different; it included the world with the man as one great
truth. India put all her emphasis on the harmony that exists between the individual
and the universal. She felt we could have no communication whatever with our
surroundings if they were absolutely foreign to us. Man's complaint against
nature is that he has to acquire most of his necessaries by his own efforts.
Yes, but his efforts are not in vain; he is reaping success every day, and that
shows there is a rational connection between him and nature, for we never can
make anything our own except that which is truly related to us.
We can look upon
a road from two different points of view. One regards it as dividing us from
the object of our desire; in that case we count every step of our journey over
it as something attained by force in the face of obstruction. The other sees
it as the road which leads us to our destination; and as such it is part of
our goal. It is already the beginning of our attainment, and by journeying over
it we can only gain that which in itself it offers to us. This last point of
view is that of India with regard to nature. For her, the great fact is that
we are in harmony with nature; that man can think because his thoughts are in
harmony with things; that he can use the forces of nature for his own purpose
only because his power is in harmony with the power which is universal, and
that in the long run his purpose never can knock against the purpose which works
through nature.
In the west the
prevalent feeling is that nature belongs exclusively to inanimate things and
to beasts, that there is a sudden unaccountable break where human-nature begins.
According to it, everything that is low in the scale of beings is merely nature,
and whatever has the stamp of perfection on it, intellectual or moral, is human-nature.
It is like dividing the bud and the blossom into two separate categories, and
putting their grace to the credit of two different and antithetical principles.
But the Indian mind never has any hesitation in acknowledging its kinship with
nature, its unbroken relation with all.
The fundamental
unity of creation was not simply a philosophical speculation for India; it was
her life-object to realise this great harmony in feeling and in action. With
mediation and service, with a regulation of life, she cultivated her consciousness
in such a way that everything had a spiritual meaning to her. The earth, water
and light, fruits and flowers, to her were not merely physical phenomena to
be turned to use and then left aside. They were necessary to her in the attainment
of her ideal of perfection, as every note is necessary to the completeness of
the symphony. India intuitively felt that the essential fact of this world has
a vital meaning for us; we have to be fully alive to it and establish a conscious
relation with it, not merely impelled by scientific curiosity or greed of material
advantage, but realising it in the spirit of sympathy, with a large feeling
of joy and peace.
The man of science
knows, in one aspect, that the world is not merely what it appears to be to
our senses; he knows that earth and water are really the play of forces that
manifest themselves to us as earth and water--how, we can but partially apprehend.
Likewise the man who has his spiritual eyes open knows that the ultimate truth
about earth and water lies in our apprehension of the eternal will which works
in time and takes shape in the forces we realise under those aspects. This is
not mere knowledge, as science is, but it is a preception of the soul by the
soul. This does not lead us to power, as knowledge does, but it gives us joy,
which is the product of the union of kindred things. The man whose acquaintance
with the world does not lead him deeper than science leads him, will never understand
what it is that the man with the spiritual vision finds in these natural phenomena.
The water does not merely cleanse his limbs, but it purifies his heart; for
it touches his soul. The earth does not merely hold his body, but it gladdens
his mind; for its contact is more than a physical contact--it is a living presence.
When a man does not realise his kinship with the world, he lives in a prison-house
whose walls are alien to him. When he meets the eternal spirit in all objects,
then is he emancipated, for then he discovers the fullest significance of the
world into which he is born; then he finds himself in perfect truth, and his
harmony with the all is established. In India men are enjoined to be fully awake
to the fact that they are in the closest relation to things around them, body
and soul, and that they are to hail the morning sun, the flowing water, the
fruitful earth, as the manifestation of the same living truth which holds them
in its embrace. Thus the text of our everyday meditation is the Gayathri, a
verse which is considered to be the epitome of all the Vedas. By its help we
try to realise the essential unity of the world with the conscious soul of man;
we learn to perceive the unity held together by the one Eternal Spirit, whose
power creates the earth, the sky, and the stars, and at the same time irradiates
our minds with the light of a consciousness that moves and exists in unbroken
continuity with the outer world.
It is not true
that India has tried to ignore differences of value in different things, for
she knows that would make life impossible. The sense of the superiority of man
in the scale of creation has not been absent from her mind. But she has had
her own idea as to that in which his superiority really consists. It is not
in the power of possession but in the power of union. Therefore India chose
her places of pilgrimage wherever there was in nature some special grandeur
or beauty, so that her mind could come out of its world of narrow necessities
and realise its place in the infinite. This was the reason why in India a whole
people who once were meat-eaters gave up taking animal food to cultivate the
sentiment of universal sympathy for life, an event unique in the history of
mankind.
India knew that
when by physical and mental barriers we violently detach ourselves from the
inexhaustible life of nature; when we become merely man, but not man-in-the-universe,
we create bewildering problems, and having shut off the source of their solution,
we try all kinds of artificial methods each of which brings its own crop of
interminable difficulties. When man leaves his resting-place in universal nature,
when he walks on the single rope of humanity, it means either a dance or a fall
for him, he has ceaselessly to strain every nerve and muscle to keep his balance
at each step, and then, in the intervals of his weariness, he fulminates against
Providence and feels a secret pride and satisfaction in thinking that he has
been unfairly dealt with by the whole scheme of things.
But this cannot
go on for ever. Man must realise the wholeness of his existence, his place in
the infinite; he must know that hard as he may strive he can never create his
honey within the cells of his hive; for the perennial supply of his life food
is outside their walls. He must know that when man shuts himself out from the
vitalising and purifying touch of the infinite, and falls back upon himself
for his sustenance and his healing, then he goads himself into madness, tears
himself into shreds, and eats his own substance. Deprived of the background
of the whole, his poverty loses its one great quality, which is simplicity,
and becomes squalid and shamefaced. His wealth is no longer magnanimous; it
grows merely extravagant. His appetites do not minister to his life, keeping
to the limits of their purpose; they become an end in themselves and set fire
to his life and play the fiddle in the lurid light of the conflagration. Then
it is that in our self-expression we try to startle and not to attract; in art
we strive for originality and lose sight of truth which is old and yet ever
new; in literature we miss the complete view of man which is simple and yet
great, but he appears as a psychological problem or the embodiment of a passion
that is intense because abnormal and because exhibited in the glare of a fiercely
emphatic light which is artificial. When man's consciousness is restricted only
to the immediate vicinity of his human self, the deeper roots of his nature
do not find their permanent soil, his spirit is ever on the brink of starvation,
and in the place of healthful strength he substitutes rounds of stimulation.
Then it is that man misses his inner perspective and measures his greatness
by its bulk and not by its vital link with the infinite, judges his activity
by its movement and not by the repose of perfection--the repose which is in
the starry heavens, in the ever-flowing rhythmic dance of creation.
The first invasion
of India has its exact parallel in the invasion of America by the European settlers.
They also were confronted with primeval forests and a fierce struggle with aboriginal
races. But this struggle between man and man, and man and nature lasted till
the very end; they never came to any terms. In India the forests which were
the habitation of the barbarians became the sanctuary of sages, but in America
these great living cathedrals of nature had no deeper significance to man. The
brought wealth and power to him, and perhaps at times they ministered to his
enjoyment of beauty, and inspired a solitary poet. They never acquired a sacred
association in the hearts of men as the site of some great spiritual reconcilement
where man's soul has its meeting-place with the soul of the world.
I do not for a
moment wish to suggest that these things should have been otherwise. It would
be an utter waste of opportunities if history were to repeat itself exactly
in the same manner in every place. It is best for the commerce of the spirit
that people differently situated should bring their different products into
the market of humanity, each of which is complementary and necessary to the
others. All that I wish to say is that India at the outset of her career met
with a special combination of circumstances which was not lost upon her. She
had, according to her opportunities, thought and pondered, striven and suffered,
dived into the depths of existence, and achieved something which surely cannot
be without its value to people whose evolution in history took a different way
altogether. Man for his perfect growth requires all the living elements that
constitute his complex life; that is why his food has to be cultivated in different
fields and brought from different sources.
Civilisation is
a kind of mould that each nation is busy making for itself to shape its men
and women according to its best ideal. All its institutions, its legislature,
its standard of approbation and condemnation, its conscious and unconscious
teachings tend toward that object. The modern civilisation of the west, by all
its organised efforts, is trying to turn out men perfect in physical, intellectual,
and moral efficiency. There the vast energies of the nations are employed in
extending man's power over his surroundings, and people are combining and straining
every faculty to possess and to turn to account all that they can lay their
hands upon, to overcome every obstacle on their path of conquest. They are ever
disciplining themselves to fight nature and other races; their armaments are
getting more and more stupendous every day; their machines, their appliances,
their organisations go on multiplying at an amazing rate. This is a splendid
achievement, no doubt, and a wonderful manifestation of man's masterfulness
which knows no obstacle, and which has for its object the supremacy of himself
over everything else.
The ancient civilisation
of India had its own ideal of perfection towards which its efforts were directed.
Its aim was not attaining power, and it neglected to cultivate to the utmost
its capacities, and to organise men for defensive and offensive purposes, for
co-operation in the acquisition of wealth and for military and political ascendancy.
The ideal that India tried to realise led her best men to the isolation of a
contemplative life, and the treasures that she gained for mankind by penetrating
into the mysteries of reality cost her dear in the sphere of worldly success.
Yet, this also was a sublime achievement,--it was a supreme manifestation of
that human aspiration which knows no limit, and which has for its object nothing
less than the realisation of the Infinite.
There were the
virtuous, the wise, the courageous; there were the statesmen, kings and emperors
of India; but whom amongst all these classes did she look up to and choose to
be the representative of men?
They were the rishis.
What were the rishis? They who having attained the supreme soul in knowledge
were filled with wisdom, and having found him in union with the soul were in
perfect harmony with the inner self; they having realised him in the heart were
free from all selfish desires, and having experienced him in all the activities
of the world, had attained calmness. The rishis were they who having reached
the supreme God from all sides had found abiding peace, had become united with
all, had entered into the life of the Universe. 1
Thus the state
of realising our relationship with all, of entering into everything through
union with God, was considered in India to be the ultimate end and fulfilment
of humanity.
Man can destroy
and plunder, earn and accumulate, invent and discover, but he is great because
his soul comprehends all. It is dire destruction for him when he envelopes his
soul in a dead shell of callous habits, and when a blind fury of works whirls
round him like an eddying dust storm, shutting out the horizon. That indeed
kills the very spirit of his being, which is the spirit of comprehension. Essentially
man is not a slave either of himself or of the world; but he is a lover. His
freedom and fulfilment is in love, which is another name for perfect comprehension.
By this power of comprehension, this permeation of his being, he is united with
the all-pervading Spirit, who is also the breath of his soul. Where a man tries
to raise himself to eminence by pushing and jostling all others, to achieve
a distinction by which he prides himself to be more than everybody else, there
he is alienated from that Spirit. This is why the Upanishads describe those
who have attained the goal of human life as "peaceful" 2 and as "at-one-with-
God," 3 meaning that they are in perfect harmony with man and nature, and
therefore in undisturbed union with God.
We have a glimpse
of the same truth in the teachings of Jesus when he says, "It is easier
for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter
the kingdom of Heaven"-- which implies that whatever we treasure for ourselves
separates us from others; our possessions are our limitations. He who is bent
upon accumulating riches is unable, with his ego continually bulging, to pass
through the gates of comprehension of the spiritual world, which is the world
of perfect harmony; he is shut up within the narrow walls of his limited acquisitions.
Hence the spirit
of the teachings of Upanishad is: In order to find him you must embrace all.
In the pursuit of wealth you really give up everything to gain a few things,
and that is not the way to attain him who is completeness.
Some modern philosophers
of Europe, who are directly or indirectly indebted to the Upanishads, far from
realising their debt, maintain that the Brahma of India is a mere abstraction,
a negation of all that is in the world. In a word, that the Infinite Being is
to be found nowhere except in metaphysics. It may be, that such a doctrine has
been and still is prevalent with a section of our countrymen. But this is certainly
not in accord with the pervading spirit of the Indian mind. Instead, it is the
practice of realising and affirming the presence of the infinite in all things
which has been its constant inspiration.
We are enjoined
to see whatever there is in the world as being enveloped by God. 4
I bow to God over
and over again who is in fire and in water, who permeates the whole world, who
is in the annual crops as well as in the perennial trees. 5
Can this be God
abstracted from the world? Instead, it signifies not merely seeing him in all
things, but saluting him in all the objects of the world. The attitude of the
God-conscious man of the Upanishad towards the universe is one of a deep feeling
of adoration. His object of worship is present everywhere. It is the one living
truth that makes all realities true. This truth is not only of knowledge but
of devotion. 'Namonamah,'--we bow to him everywhere, and over and over again.
It is recognised in the outburst of the Rishi, who addresses the whole world
in a sudden ecstasy of joy: Listen to me, ye sons of the immortal spirit, ye
who live in the heavenly abode, I have known the Supreme Person whose light
shines forth from beyond the darkness. 6 Do we not find the overwhelming delight
of a direct and positive experience where there is not the least trace of vagueness
or passivity?
Buddha who developed
the practical side of the teaching of Upanishads, preached the same message
when he said, With everything, whether it is above or below, remote or near,
visible or invisible, thou shalt preserve a relation of unlimited love without
any animosity or without a desire to kill. To live in such a consciousness while
standing or walking, sitting or lying down till you are asleep, is Brahma vihara,
or, in other words, is living and moving and having your joy in the spirit of
Brahma.
What is that spirit?
The Upanishad says, The being who is in his essence the light and life of all,
who is world-conscious, is Brahma. 7 To feel all, to be conscious of everything,
is his spirit. We are immersed in his consciousness body and soul. It is through
his consciousness that the sun attracts the earth; it is through his consciousness
that the light-waves are being transmitted from planet to planet.
Not only in space,
but this light and life, this all-feeling being is in our souls. 8 He is all-conscious
in space, or the world of extension; and he is all-conscious in soul, or the
world of intension.
Thus to attain
our world-consciousness, we have to unite our feeling with this all-pervasive
infinite feeling. In fact, the only true human progress is coincident with this
widening of the range of feeling. All our poetry, philosophy, science, art and
religion are serving to extend the scope of our consciousness towards higher
and larger spheres. Man does not acquire rights through occupation of larger
space, nor through external conduct, but his rights extend only so far as he
is real, and his reality is measured by the scope of his consciousness.
We have, however,
to pay a price for this attainment of the freedom of consciousness. What is
the price? It is to give one's self away. Our soul can realise itself truly
only by denying itself. The Upanishad says, Thou shalt gain by giving away 9
, Thou shalt not covet. 10
In Gita we are
advised to work disinterestedly, abandoning all lust for the result. Many outsiders
conclude from this teaching that the conception of the world as something unreal
lies at the root of the so-called disinterestedness preached in India. But the
reverse is true.
The man who aims
at his own aggrandisement underrates everything else. Compared to his ego the
rest of the world is unreal. Thus in order to be fully conscious of the reality
of all, one has to be free himself from the bonds of personal desires. This
discipline we have to go through to prepare ourselves for our social duties--for
sharing the burdens of our fellow-beings. Every endeavour to attain a larger
life requires of man "to gain by giving away, and not to be greedy."
And thus to expand gradually the consciousness of one's unity with all is the
striving of humanity.
The Infinite in
India was not a thin nonentity, void of all content. The Rishis of India asserted
emphatically, "To know him in this life is to be true; not to know him
in this life is the desolation of death." 11 How to know him then? "By
realising him in each and all." 12 Not only in nature but in the family,
in society, and in the state, the more we realise the World- conscious in all,
the better for us. Failing to realise it, we turn our faces to destruction.
It fills me with
great joy and a high hope for the future of humanity when I realise that there
was a time in the remote past when our poet-prophets stood under the lavish
sunshine of an Indian sky and greeted the world with the glad recognition of
kindred. It was not an anthropomorphic hallucination. It was not seeing man
reflected everywhere in grotesquely exaggerated images, and witnessing the human
drama acted on a gigantic scale in nature's arena of flitting lights and shadows.
On the contrary, it meant crossing the limiting barriers of the individual,
to become more than man, to become one with the All. It was not a mere play
of the imagination, but it was the liberation of consciousness from all the
mystifications and exaggerations of the self. These ancient seers felt in the
serene depth of their mind that the same energy which vibrates and passes into
the endless forms of the world manifests itself in our inner being as consciousness;
and there is no break in unity. For these seers there was no gap in their luminous
vision of perfection. They never acknowledged even death itself as creating
a chasm in the field of reality. They said, His reflection is death as well
as immortality. 13 They did not recognise any essential opposition between life
and death, and they said with absolute assurance, "It is life that is death."
14 They saluted with the same serenity of gladness "life in its aspect
of appearing and in its aspect of departure"-- That which is past is hidden
in life, and that which is to come. 15 They knew that mere appearance and disappearance
are on the surface like waves on the sea, but life which is permanent knows
no decay or diminution.
Everything has
sprung from immortal life and is vibrating with life, 16 for life is immense.
17
This is the noble
heritage from our forefathers waiting to be claimed by us as our own, this ideal
of the supreme freedom of consciousness. It is not merely intellectual or emotional,
it has an ethical basis, and it must be translated into action. In the Upanishad
it is said, The supreme being is all-pervading, therefore he is the innate good
in all. 18 To be truly united in knowledge, love, and service with all beings,
and thus to realise one's self in the all-pervading God is the essence of goodness,
and this is the keynote of the teachings of the Upanishads: Life is immense!
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