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(I)
"Savitri",
the poem, the word of Sri Aurobindo is the cosmic Answer to
the cosmic Question. And Savitri, the person, the Godhead, the
Divine Woman is the Divine's response to the human aspiration.
The world is a great question mark.
It is a riddle, eternal and ever-recurring. Man has faced the
riddle and sought to arrive at a solution since he has been
given a mind to seek and interrogate.
What is this universe? From where has
it come? Whither is it going? What is the purpose of it all?
Why is man here? What is the object of his existence?
Such is the mode of human aspiration.
And Ashwapati in his quest begins to explore the world and see
what it is, the way it is built up. He observes it rising tier
upon tier, level upon level of consciousness. He mounts these
stairs, takes cognisance of the modes and functions of each
and passes on enriched by the experiences that each contributes
to his developing consciousness. The ascent he finds is from
ignorance to knowledge. The human being starts from the darkest
bed of ignorance, the solid basis of rock as it were, the body,
the material existence. Ignorance here is absolute inconscience.
Out of the total absence of consciousness, the being begins
to awake and rise to a gradually developing -widening, deepening
and heightening - consciousness. That is how Ashwapati advances,
ascends from a purely bodily life and consciousness, to the
next rung of the ladder, the first appearance and expression
of life-force, the vital consciousness -energies and forms of
the small lower vital. He moves on, moves upward, there is a
growing light in and mixed with the obscurity; ignorance begins
to shed its hard and dark coatings one by one and gives place
to directed and motivated energies. He meets beings and creatures
appropriate to those levels crawling and stirring and climbing,
moved by the laws governing the respective regions. In this
way Ashwapati passes on
into the higher vital, into the border of the mental.
Ashwapati now observes with a clear
vividness that all these worlds and the beings and forces that
inhabit them are stricken as it were with a bar sinister branded
upon their bodies. In spite of an inherent urge of ascension
the way is not a straight road but devious and crooked breaking
into by-lanes and blind alleys. There is a great corruption
and perversion of natural movements towards Truth: falsehoods
and pretensions, arrogance of blindness reign here in various
degrees. Ashwapati sought to know the wherefore of it all. So
he goes behind, dives down and comes into a region that seems
to be the source and basis of all ignorance and obscurity and
falsehood. He comes into the very heart of the Night, the abyss
of consciousness. He meets there the Mother of Evil and the
sons of darkness. He stands before
...the
gate of a false Infinite,
An
eternity of disastrous absolutes...
Here are the forces that pull down and lure away to perdition
all that man's aspirations and the world's urge seek to express
and build of Divine things. It is the world in which the forces
of the original inconscience find their primitive play. They
are dark and dangerous: they prey upon earth's creatures who
are not content with being vassals of darkness but try to move
to the Light.
Dangerous
is this passage for the celestial aspirant:
Where
the red Wolf waits by the fordless stream
And
Death's black eagles scream to the precipice...
He must be absolutely vigilant, absolutely on his guard, absolutely
sincere.
Here
must the traveller of the upward way -
For
daring Hell's kingdoms winds the heavenly route -
Pause
or pass slowly through that perilous space,
A
prayer upon his lips and the great Name.
But there is no escape. The divine traveller
has to pass through this region. For it lies athwart his path
to the goal. Not only so, it is necessary to go through this
Night. For Ashwapati
Knew
death for a cellar of the house of life,
In
destruction felt creation' s hasty pace,
Knew
loss as the price of a celestial gain
And
hell as a short cut to heaven' s gates.
Ashwapati now passes into the higher
luminous regions. He enters regions of larger breath and wider
movement -the higher vital and then into the yet more luminous
region of the higher mind. He reaches the heavens where immortal
sages and the divinities and the gods themselves dwell. Even
these Ashwapati finds to be only partial truths, various aspects,
true but limited, of the One Reality beyond. Thus he leaves
all behind and reaches into the single sole Reality, the transcendental
Truth of things, the status vast and infinite and eternal, immutable
existence and consciousness and bliss.
A
Vastness brooded free from sense of Space,
An
Everlastingness cut off from Time...
A
stillness absolute, incommunicable ...
Here seems to be the end of the quest, and one would fain stay
there ever and ever in that status
...occult,
impenetrable, -
Infinite,
eternal, unthinkable, alone.
Ashwapati was perhaps about to be
lured into that Bliss but suddenly a doubt enters into him -there
is a hesitation, a questioning; he hears a voice:
The
ego is dead; we are free from being and care,
We
have done with birth and death and work and fate.
O
soul, it is too early to rejoice!
Thou
hast reached the boundless silence of the Self,
Thou
hast leaped into a glad divine abyss;
But
where hast thou thrown self's mission and self's power?
On
what dead bank on the Eternal's road?
Ashwapati veers round. A new perception,
a new consciousness begins to open within him. A new urge moves
him. He has to start on a new journey, a new quest and achievement.
The world exists neither as a Truth nor as an illusion in itself.
It exists in and through the Mother of the worlds. There is
a motive in its existence and it is her will that is being worked
out in that existence. The world moves for the fulfilment of
a purpose that is being evolved through earth-life and human-life.
The ignorant incomplete human life upon earth is not the be-all
and end-all of the life here. That life has to evolve into a
life of light and love and joy perfect here below. Nature as
it is now will be transmuted into a new pure and radiant substance.
Ashwapati is filled with this new urge and inspired by this
new vision. He sees and understands now the truth of his life,
the goal that has to be achieved, the great dream that has to
be realised here upon earth in and through matter. He sees how
nature has been labouring ceaselessly and tirelessly through
aeons through eternity onward. He is now almost impatient to
see the consummation here and now. The divine Voice however
shows him the wisdom of working patiently, hastening slowly.
The Voice admonishes him:
I
ask thee not to merge thy heart of flame
In
the Immobile's wide uncaring bliss...
Thy
soul was born to share the laden Force;
Obey
thy nature and fulfil thy fate:
Accept
the difficulty and godlike toil,
For
the slow-paced omniscient purpose live
All things shall change in God's transfiguring hour.
But the human flame once kindled is hard to put down. It seeks
an immediate result. It does not understand the fullness of
time. So Ashwapati cries out:
Heavy
and long are the years our labour counts
And
still the seals are firm upon man's soul
And
weary is the ancient Mother's heart
Linger not long with thy transmuting hand
Pressed
vainly on one golden bar of Time...
Let
a great word be spoken from the heights
And
one great act unlock the doors of Fate.
This great cry of the human soul moved
the Divine Mother and she granted at last prayer.. She answered
by bestowing of her motherly comfort on the yearning thirsty
soul:
O
strong forerunner, I have heard thy cry.
One
shall descend and break the iron Law...
A
seed shall be sown in Death's tremendous hour,
A
branch of heaven transplant to human soil;
Nature
shall overleap her mortal step;
Fate
shall be changed by an unchanging will.
And She herself came down upon earth as Ashwapati' s daughter
to undertake the human labour and accomplish the Divine work.
(2)
The Divine Mother is upon earth as a human creature. She is
to change
the mortal earth into an immortal paradise. Earth at present
is a bundle of material inconscience. The Supreme Consciousness
has manifested itself as supreme unconsciousness. The Divine
has lost itself in pulverising itself, scattering itself abroad.
Immortality is thus entombed here below in death. The task of
the incarnate Supreme Consciousness is to revive the death bound
divinity, to free the human consciousness in its earthly life
from the obscurity of the material unconsciousness, re-install
it in its original radiant status of the Divine Consciousness.
Such is Savitri ' s mission. This mission
has two sessions or periods. The first, that of preparation;
the second, that of fulfilment. Savitri, the human embodiment
was given only twelve months out of her earthly life and in
that short space of time she had to do all the preparation.
She knew her work from her very birth, she was conscious of
her nature and the mission she was entrusted with. Now she is
facing the crisis. Death is there standing in front. What is
to be done, how is she to proceed? She was told she is to conquer
Death, she is to establish immortal life upon mortal earth.
The Divine Voice rings out:
Arise,
O soul, and vanquish Time and Death.
Yes, she is ready to do it, but not
for herself, but for her Love, the being who was the life of
her life. Savitri is the Divine Consciousness but here in the
mortal body she is clothed in the human consciousness; it is
the human consciousness that she is to lead upward and beyond
and it is in and through the human consciousness that the Divine
Realisation has to be expressed and established. The human Savitri
declares: If Death is conquered, it is for the sake of Satyavan
living eternally with her. She seems to say: What I wish to
see is the living Satyavail and I united with him for ever.
I do not need an earthly life without him; with him I prefer
to be in another world if necessary away from the obscurity
and turmoil of this earth here.
My
strength is taken from me and given to Death,
Why
should I lift my hands to the shut heavens...
Why should I strive with earth's unyielding laws
Or
stave off death's inevitable hour?
This
surely is best to pactise with my fate
And
follow close behind my lover's steps
And
pass through night from twilight to the sun...
But a thunderous voice descends from above shaking Savitri to
the very basis of her existence.
And
what shall thy soul say when it wakes and knows
The
work was left undone for which it came?
Thus a crisis very similar to that which
Ashwapati had to face now confronts Savitri also. Both of them
were at the crossroads away from the earth in the pure delights
of the heavens or in the world labouring on earth's soil. Savitri's
soul was now revealed to her in its fullness. She viewed the
mighty destiny for which she had come down and the great work
she had to achieve here upon earth, not any personal or individual
human satisfaction or achievement but a cosmic fulfilment, a
global human realisation. The godhead in Savitri is now fully
awake, established in its plenitude -the Divinity incarnate
in the human frame. All the godheads, all the goddess-emanations
now entered into her and moulded the totality of her mighty
stature.
Here begins then the second stage of
her mission, -her work and achievement, the conquest of Death.
Only the Divine human being can conquer Death. Savitri follows
Death step by step revealing gradually the mystery of death,
his personality and his true mission, although the dark God
thinks that it is he who is taking away Satyavan and Savitri
along with him, to his own home, his black annihilation. For
Death is that in its first appearance, it is utter destruction,
nothing-ness, non-existence. So the mighty Godhead declares
in an imperious .tone to the mortal woman Savitri:
This
is my silent dark immensity,
This
is the home of everlasting Night,
This is the secrecy of Nothingness
Entombing
the vanity of life's desires
Hopest thou still always to last and love?
Indeed Death is not merely a destruction
of the body, it is in reality nothingness, non-being. The moment
being, existence, reality manifested itself, established itself
as a material fact, simultaneously there came out and stood
against it, its opposite non-being, non-existence, non-reality;
against an everlasting 'yes' there was posited an everlasting
'no'. And in fact, this everlasting No proves to be a greater
effective reality, it has wound itself around every constituent
atom of the universe. That is what has expressed itself in the
material domain as the irreversible degradation of energy and
in the mortal world it is denial and doubt and falsehood -it
is that which brings about failure in life, and frustration,
misery and grief. But then Savitri's vision penetrated beyond
and she saw, Death is a way of achieving the end more swiftly
and more completely. The negation is an apparent obstacle in
order to increase, to purify and intensify the speed of the
process by which the world and humanity is being remodelled
and recreated. This terrible Godhead pursues the human endeavour
till the end; until he finds that nothing more is to be done;
then his mission too is fulfilled.*
So a last cry , the cry of a desperate dying Death, pierces
the universe and throws the final challenge to Savitri:
O
human claimant to immortality,
Reveal
thy power, lay bare thy spirit's force,
whenever
Man's
efforts sink below his proper level.
Then
will I give back to thee Satyavan.
Or
if the Mighty Mother is with thee,
Show
me her face that I may worship her;
Let
deathless eyes look into the eyes of Death's
Death
' s desire, his prayer too is fulfilled. He faces Savitri but
this is not the Savitri against whom he fought. Whose is this
voice?
I
hail thee almighty and victorious Death,
Thou
grandiose Darkness of the Infinite
I have given thee thy awful shape of dread
And
thy sharp sword of terror and grief and pain
To
force the soul of man to struggle for light...
What happens
thereafter is something strange and tremendous and miraculous.
Light flashed all around, a leaping tongue of fire spread out
and the dark fonn of Death was burnt -not to ashes but to blazing
sparks of light-His body was eaten by light, his spirit devoured.
Thus Death came to his death -not to
death in reality but to a new incarnation. Death returned to
his original divine Reality, an emanation of the Divine Mother.
A
secret splendour rose revealed to sight
Where
once the vast embodied Void had stood.
Night
the dim mask had grown a wonderful face.
In that domain of pure transcendent
light stood face to face the human Savitri and the transfonned
Satyavan.
(3)
Savitri has entered into the deathless luminous world where
there is only faultless beauty, stainless delight and an unmeasured
self- gathered strength. Saviri heard the melodious voice of
the Divine:
You have now left earth's miseries and
its impossible conditions, you have reached the domain of unalloyed
felicity and you need not go back to the old turbulent life:
dwell here both of you and enjoy eternal bliss.
But Savitri answered firm and moveless:
I
climb not to thy everlasting Day,
Even
as I have shunned thy eternal Night
Earth is the chosen place of mightiest souls;
Earth
is the heroic spirit's battlefield...
Thy
servitudes on earth are greater, King,
Than all the glorious liberties of heaven.
Once more Savitri, even like Ashwapati,
has to make a choice between two destinies, two soul-movements
-although the choice is already made even before it is offered
to her. Ashwapati had to abandon, we know, the silent immutable
transcendent status of pure light in order to bathe in this
lower earthly light. Savitri too as the prototype of human consciousness
chose and turned to this light of the earth.
The Rishi of the Upanishad declared:
they who worship only Ignorance enter into darkness, but they
who worship knowledge alone enter into a still darker darkness.
This world of absolute light which Savitri names 'everlasting
day' is what the Upanishadic Rishi sees and describes as the
golden lid upon the face of the Sun. The Sun is the complete
integral light of the Truth in its fullness. The golden covering
has to be removed if one is to see the Sun itself- to live the
integral life, one has to possess the integral truth.
So it is that Savitri comes down upon
earth and standing upon its
welcoming soil speaks to Satyavan as though consoling him for
having abandoned their own abode in heaven to dwell among mortal
men:
Heaven's
touch fulfils but cancels not our earth...
Still
am I she who came to thee mid the murmur
Of
sunlit leaves upon this forest verge...
All
that I was before, I am to thee still...
Voicing Satyavan' s thought and feeling,
all humanity, the whole world in joy and gratefulness, utters
this mantra of thanksgiving:
If
this is she of whom the world has heard,
Wonder
no more at any happy change.
(4)
In her Prayers and Meditations the Mother says:
Comme
I'homme n'a pas voulu du repas que j'avais prepare avec tant
d ' amour et de soin, alors j , ai invite le Dieu
a le prendre.
Et mon
Dieu, Tu as accepte mon invitation et Tu es venu t'asseoir a
ma table; et en echange de ma pauvre et humble offrande Tu m
' as octroye la finale liberation! **
What is this banquet that she
prepared for man and which man refused? It is nothing else than
the Life Divine here below - the life of the Gods enjoying immortality,
full of the supreme light and power, love and delight. Man refused
because for him it is
something too high, too great. Being a creature earth-bound
and of small dimensions he can seize and appreciate only small
things, little specks of a material world. He refused, first
of all, because of his ignorance; he does not know, nor is he
capable of conceiving that there are such things as immortal
life, divinity, unobscured light, griefless love, or a radiant,
tranquil, invisible energy. He does not know and yet he is arrogant,
arrogant in his little knowledge, his petty power, in his blind
self-sufficiency. Furthermore, besides ignorance and arrogance
there is an element of revolt in him, for in his half-wakefulness
with his rudimentary consciousness, if ever he came in contact
with something that is above and beyond him, if a shadow of
another world happens to cross his threshold, he is not at peace,
does not want to recognise but denies and even curses it.
The Divine Mother brings solace and
salvation. For the Grace it is such a small and easy thing,
it is a wonder how even such a simple, natural, inconspicuous
thing could be refused by anybody.
If man finds no use for the gift she
has brought down for him, naturally she will take it back and
return it to Him to whom it belongs, for all things belong to
the Supreme Lord, even She belongs to Him, as She is one with
Him. The Gita says: there is nothing else than the Brahman in
the creation -the doer, the doing and the deed, all are essentially
He. In the sacrifice that is this moving, acting universe, the
offerer, the offering and the offered, each and every element
is the Brahman -brahmiirpanam brahma havih.
This gesture of the Divine
Mother teaches us also what should be the approach and attitude
of human beings in all their activities. In all our movements
we should always remember Him, refer to Him, consider that in
the last analysis each and every movement comes from Him and
we must always offer them to Him, return them to the parent-source
from where they come, therein lies freedom, the divine detachment
which the individual must possess always in order to be one
with Him, feel one's identity with Him.
(5)
Man's refusal of the Divine Grace has been depicted very beautifully
and graphically in a perfect dramatic form by Sri Aurobindo
in Savitri. The refusal comes one by one from the three
constituent parts of the human being. First of all man is a
material being, a bodily creature, as such he is a being of
ignorance and misery , of brutish blindness. He does not know
that there is something other than his present state of misfortune
and dark fate. He is not even aware that there may be anything
higher or nobler than the ugliness he is steeped in. He lives
on earth-life with an earth-consciousness, moves mechanically
and helplessly through vicissitudes over which he has no control.
Even so the material life is not a mere despicable thing; behind
its darkness, behind its sadness, behind all its infirmities,
the Divine Mother is there upholding it and infusing into it
her grace and beauty. Indeed, she is one with this world of
sorrows, she has in effect become it in her infinite pity and
love so that this material body of hers may become conscious
of its divine substance and manifest her true form. But the
human being individualised and separated in egoistic consciousness
has lost the sense of its inner reality and is vocal only in
regard to its outward formulation. It is natural for physical
man therefore to reject and deny the physical Godhead in him,
he even curses it and wants to continue as he is. He yells therefore
in ignorance and anguish:
I
am the Man of Sorrows, I am he
Who
is nailed on the wide cross of the Universe...
I
toil like the animal, like the animal die.
I
am man the rebel, man the helpless serf...
I
know my fate will ever be the same,
It
is my Nature's work that cannot change...
I
was made for evil, evil is my lot;
Evil
I must be and by evil live;
Nought
other can I do but be myself;
What
Nature made, that I must remain,
The
Divine glory manifests itself for a moment to the earthly consciousness
but man refuses to be pulled out of its pigsty. The Grace withdraws
but in its Supreme Consciousness of unity and love consoles
the fallen creature and gives it the assurance:
One
day I will return, a bringer of strength...
Misery
shall pass abolished from the earth;
The
world shall be freed from the anger of the Beast...
The basic status or foundation of Man,
in fact of creation, is earth, the material organisation. After
the body, next comes the life and Life-power. Here man attains
a larger dynamic being of energy and creative activity. Here
too, on this level, what man is or what he achieves is only
a reflection, a shadow, but mostly a misshapen resemblance,
an aberration of the divine reality that hides behind, and yet
half-reveals itself. That Godhead is the Mother's form of Might,
we name it variously, Kali and Durga and Lakshmi, for it is
Her Grace that is ultimately expressed and fulfilled in this
world of vital power. It is because of this realising power
of the Mother that
Slowly
the Light grows greater in the East,
Slowly
the world progresses on God's road.
His
seal is on my task, it cannot fail;
I
shall hear the silver swing of heaven' s gates
When
God comes out to meet the soul of the world.
But man in the strength of his ignorance
and arrogance does not recognise this Goddess. Human power,
we have said, is a reflection, a shadow of the Divine Power
but most often it is a deformed, a perverted Divine Power. Man
is full of his egoistic vital self -confidence: he believes
it is his own will that is realising all, all which is achieved
here; whatever he has created, it is through the might of his
own merit and whatever new creations
will be done in the future will be through the Grace of his
own genius. A mighty vital selfilood obscures his consciousness
and he sees nothing else, understands nothing else beyond the
reach of that limited vision. This is the Rakshasa, this is
the Asura in man. Here is his philosophy of life:
I
climb, a claimant to the throne of heaven.
The
last-born of the earth I stand the first...
I
am God still unevolved in human form;
Even
if he is not, he becomes in me
No magic can surpass my magic's skill.
There is no miracle I shall not achieve.
So this
vital being in man in his Rakshasic hunger and Asuric self-conceit
rejects the Divine Power that is in tact behind him too, supporting
him. The Goddess, in the wake of her predecessor, goes back
from where she came, leaving however a consoling word, assuring
that one day she will return; she will bide her time. For one
day,
The
cry of the ego shall be hushed within,
Its lion-roar that claims the world as food,
All
shall be might and bliss and happy force.
In his
body man is the beast, in the vital he is the Rakshasa and the
Asura, he rises now into the mind. And in the mind he is the
human being proper, he has attained his own humanity. Here he
has received the light of knowledge, a wider and deeper consciousness,
he has unveiled the secret mysteries of Nature, brought to play
hidden forces that were unknown and untapped. All these achievements
have been possible for man because it is the Mother of Light
that is behind and has come forward to shed something of her
luminous presence around. But man has no inkling of the presence
of this luminous Deity, his own light has been a screen in front
of the inner divine light. It is not possible for
the human mind to seize the higher light: his consciousness,
his knowledge is too narrow, too superficial, too dull to comprehend
what is beyond. This Divine Light is also a thing of delight,
the consciousness it possesses is also the very essence of Joy
and Felicity. But all that is occult to the human knowledge.
Man considers Truth is his property, whatever truth is there
his understanding can grasp it and bring it to play: Truth and
Reality are commensurate with his own consciousness, his mental
comprehension. What others speak of as realities of the spirit,
truths transcendental, are an illusion and delusion. This is
what is usually known as the scientific mind, the rational consciousness.
An orthodox scientific mentality is in the first instance a
thing of overweening self -confidence, of arrogant self -assertion.
It declares in its formidable pride:
I
have seized the cosmic energies for my use.
I
have pored on her infinitesimal elements
And
her invisible atoms have unmasked...
If
God is at work, his secrets I have found.
This imperiousness in man seems however
to be a sheer imperviousness: it is a mask, a hollow appearance;
for with all his knowledge, at the end he has attained no certainty,
no absoluteness. There is something behind, all the outer bravado
he flourishes has a sense of helplessness, at times almost as
pitiable as that of a child; for he finds at last
All
is a speculation or a dream.
In
the end the world itself becomes a doubt..
It is true his survey of the universe,
his knowledge of boundless Nature and the inexhaustible multiplicities
of creation have given him a sense of the endless and the infinite
but he has not the necessary light or capacity to follow those
lines of infinity, on the contrary , there is a shrinking in
him at the touch of such
vastnesses; his small humanity makes him desperately earth-bound,
his aspiration follows the lines of least resistance:
Our
smallness saves us from the Infinite.
In
a frozen grandeur lone and desolate
Call
me not to die the great eternal Death...
Human
I am, human let me remain
Till
in the Inconscient I fall dumb and sleep.
Thus, this Goddess too, is rejected
like her previous comrades, the Mother of Light, the Deity who
is properly the guide and ruler of man ' s own destiny. Even
she is refused but hers is not to complain, in tranquil quietness
she brings comfort and hope to the troubled human mind and says
she goes to come back in the fullness of her incarnation. She
utters divinely:
One
day I shall return, His hands in mine,
And
thou shalt see the face of the Absolute.
Then
shall the holy marriage be achieved,
Then
shall the divine family be born.
(6)
To the inconscient and ignorant human nature, Savitri, the Divine's
delegate presents the powers and personalities that are behind
man ' s present infirmities -these broken images of true realities
lying scattered about in the front of existence. Man will be
made conscious, he is being made conscious step by step precisely
by such relations from time to time. The Vedic image is that
of the eternal succession of dawns whose beginning no one knows,
nor the end, that creation proceeds from light to light, from
consciousness to higher reaches of consciousness. From the material
life through the vital and the mental life he first reaches
the spiritual life and finally the Life Divine. From the animal
he rises to manhood, and in the end to Godhood.
But there are intermediaries.
The fullness of the realisation depends on the fullness of the
incarnation. The Evil in the body, the Evil in the vital, the
Evil in the mind are, whatever their virulence and intransigence,
subsidiary agents, for they serve only a mightier Lord. The
first original Sin is Death, the God of Denial, of non-existence.
That is the very source -ions et origo - the fount and
origin of all the misfortune, the fate that terrestrial life
involves. This demon, this anti-Divine has to be tracked and
destroyed or dissolved into its original origin. This is the
Nihil that negates the Divine -Asat that seeks to nullify
Sat and that has created this world of ignorance and
misery , that is to say, in its outward pragmatic form. So Saviri
sees the one source and knows the remedy. Therefore she pursues
Death, pursues him to the end, that is, to the end of death.
The luminous energy of the Supreme faces now its own shadow
and blazes it up. The flaming Light corrodes into the substance
of the darkness and makes of it her own transfigured substance.
This then is the gift that Savitri brings to man, the Divine's
own immortality, transfusing the mortality that reigns now upon
earth.
In view of the necessity of the age,
for the crucial, critical and, in a way, final consummation
of Nature's evolutionary urge, the Divine Himself has to come
down in the fullness of His divinity; for only then can the
earth be radically changed and wholly transformed. In the beginning
the Divine once came down, but by sacrificing Himself, being
pulverised, scattered and lost in the infinitesimals of a universal,
material, unconscious- ness. Once again He has to come down,
but this time in the supreme glory of His victorious Luminosity.
This then is the occult, the symbolic
sense of the Mother's gesture turning away from man with her
gifts and returning to the Divine Himself, and inviting Him
as the chief guest of honour upon this earth. Or, in the Vedic
image, He is to come as the flaming front and leader of the
journeying sacrifice that is this universal existence.
*
We are reminded here of a parallelism in Goethe' s conception
of the role of Satan (the Negative Principle) in human affairs.
Satan is not merely a destroying devil, he is a constructive
angel. For it is he
Who
must goad and leane
And
toil to serve creation.
**"Since
the man refused the meal I had prepared with so much love and
care, I invoked the God to take it.
My God, Thou hast accepted my
invitation, Thou hast come to sit at my table, and in exchange
for my poor and humble offering Thou hast granted to me the
last liberation."
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