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IN ANCIENT times the Veda was
revered as a sacred book of wisdom, a great mass of inspired poetry,
the work of Rishis, seers and sages, who received in their illumined minds
rather than mentally constructed a great universal, eternal and impersonal
Truth which they embodied in Mantras, revealed verses of power, not of
an ordinary but of a divine inspiration and source. The name given to
these sages was Kavi, which afterwards came to mean any poet, but at the
time had the sense of a seer of truth, -the Veda itself describes them
as kavayah " satyaSrutah, "seers who are hearers
of the Truth" and the Veda itself was called, sruti, a word
which came to mean "revealed Scripture". The seers of the Upanishad
had the same idea about the Veda and frequently appealed to its authority
for the truths they themselves announced and these too afterwards came
to be regarded as Sruti, revealed Scripture, and were included in the
sacred Canon.
This tradition persevered in the
Brahmanas and continued to maintain itself in spite of the efforts of
the ritualistic commentators, Yajnikas, to explain everything as myth
and rite and the
division made by the Pandits distinguishing the section of works, Karmakanda,
and the section of Knowledge, Jnanakanda, identifying the former with
the hymns and the latter with the Upanishads. This drowning of the parts
of Knowledge by the I parts of ceremonial works was strongly criticised
in one of the Upanishads and in the Gita, but both look on the Veda as
a Book of Knowledge. Even, the Sruti including both Veda and Upanishad
was regarded as the supreme authority for spiritual knowledge and infallible.
Is this all legend and moonshine,or a groundless and
even nonsensical tradition ? Or is it the fact tbat there is only a scanty
element of higher ideas in some later hymns which started this theory?
Did the writers of the Upanishads foist upon the Riks a meaning which
was not there but read into it by their imagination or a fanciful interpretation
? Modern European scholarship in- sists on having it so. And it has persuaded
the mind of modern India. In favour of this view is the fact that the
Rishis of the Veda were not only seers but singers and priests of sacrifice,
that their chants were written to be sung at public sacrifices and refer
constantly to the customary ritual and seem to call for the outward objects
of these ceremonies, wealth, prosperity, victory over enemies. Sayana,
the great commentator, gives us a ritualistic and where necessary a tentatively
mythical or historical sense to the Riks, very rarely does he put forward
any higher meaning though sometimes he lets a higher sense come through
or puts it as an alternative as if in despair of finding out some ritualistic
or mythical interpretation. But still he does not reject the spiritual
authority of the Veda or deny that there is a higher truth contained in
the Riks. This last development was left to our own times and popularised
by occidental scholars.
The European scholars took up the
ritualistic tradition, but for the rest they dropped Sayana overboard
and went on to make their own etymological explanation of the words, or
build up their own conjectural meanings of the Vedic verses and gave a
new presentation often arbitrary and imaginative. What they sought for
in the Veda was the early history of India, its society, institutions,
customs, a civilisation-picture of the times. They invented the theory
based on the difference of languages of an Aryan invasion from the north,
an invasion of a Dravidian India of which the Indians themselves had no
memory or tradition and of which there is no record in their epic or classical
literature. The Vedic religion was in this account only a worship of Nature-
Gods full of solar myths and consecrated by sacrifices and a sacrificial
liturgy primitive enough in its ideas and contents, and it is these barbaric
prayers that are the much vaunted, haloed and apotheosized Veda.
There can be no doubt that in the beginning
there was a worship of the Powers of the physical world, the Sun, Moon,
Heaven and Earth, Wind, Rain and Storm etc., the Sacred Rivers and a number
of Gods who presided over the workings of Nature. That was the general
aspect of the ancient worship in Greece, Rome, India and among other ancient
peoples. But in all these countires these gods began to assume a higher,
a psychological function; Pallas Athene who may have been originally a
Dawn- Goddess springing in flames from the head of Zeus, the Sky-God,
Dyaus of the Veda, has in classical Greece a higher function and was identified
by the Romans with their Minerva, the Goddess of learning and wisdom;
similarly, Saraswati, a River Goddess, becomes in India the goddess of
wisdom, learning and the arts and crafts: all the Greek deities have undergone
a change in this direction -Apollo, the Sun-God, has become a god of poetry
and prophecy, Hephaestus the Fire-God a divine smith, god of labour. In
India the process was arrested half-way, and the Vedic Gods developed
their psychological functions but retained more fixedly their external
character and for higher purposes gave place to a new pantheon. They had
to give precedence to Puranic deities who developed out of the early company
but assumed larger cosmic functions, Vishnu, Rudra, Brahma, -developing
from the Vedic Brihaspati, or Brahmanaspati, -Shiva, ,
Lakshmi, Durga. Thus in India the change in the gods was less complete,
the earlier deities became the inferior divinities of the Puranic pantheon
and this was largely due to the survival of the Rig-veda in which their
psychological and their external functions co-existed and are both given
a powerful emphasis; there was no such early literary record to maintain
the original features of the Gods of Greece and Rome.
This change was evidently
due to a cultural development in these early peoples who became progressively
more mentalised and less engrossed in the physical life as they advanced
in civilisation and needed to read into their religion and their deities
finer and subtler aspects which would support their more highly mentalised
concepts and interests and find for them a true spiritual being or some
celestial figure as their support and sanction. But the largest part in
determining and deepening this inward turn must be attributed to the Mystics
who had an enormous influence on these early civilisations; there was
indeed almost everywhere an age of the Mysteries in which men of a deeper
knowledge and self-knowledge established their practices, significant
rites, symbols, secret lore within or on the border of the more primitive
:
exterior religions. This took different forms in different
countries; in Greece there were the Orphic and Eleusinian Mysteries, in
Egypt and Chaldea the priests and their occult lore and magic, in Persia
the Magi, in India the Rishis. The preoccupation of the Mystics was with
self-knowledge and a profounder world-knowledge; they found out that in
man there was a deeper self and inner being behind the surface of the
outward physical man, which it was his highest business to discover and
know. "Know thyself" was their great precept, just as in India
to know the Self, the Atman became the great spiritual need, the highest
thing for the human being. They found also a Truth, a Reality behind the
outward aspects of the universe and to discover, follow, realise this
Truth was their great aspiration. They discovered secrets and powers of
Nature which were not those of the physical world but which could bring
occult mastery over the physical world and physical things and to systematise
this occult knowledge and power was also one of their strong preoccupations.
But all this could only be safely done by a difficult and careful training,
discipline, purification of the nature; it could not be done by the ordinary
man. If men entered into these things without a severe test and training
it would be dangerous to themselves and others ; this knowledge, these
powers could be misused, misinterpreted, turned from truth to falsehood,
from good to evil. Astrict secrecy was therefore maintained, the knowledge
handed down behind a veil from master to disciple. A veil of symbols was
created behind which these mysteries could shelter, formulas of speech
also which could be understood by the initiated but were either not known
by others or were taken by them in an outward sense which carefully covered
their true meaning and secret. This was the substance of Mysticism everywhere.
It has been the tradition in India from
the earliest times that the Rishis, the poet-seers of the Veda, were men
of this type, men with a great spiritual and occult knowledge not shared
by ordinary human beings, men who handed down this knowledge and their
powers by a secret initiation to their descendant and chosen disciples.
It is a gratuitous assumption to suppose that this tradition was wholly
unfounded, a superstition that arose suddenly or slowly formed in a void,
with nothing whatever to support it; some foundation there must have been
however small or however swelled by legend and the accretions of centuries.
But if it is true, then inevitably the poet-seers must have expressed
something of their secret knowledge, their mystic lore in their writings
and such an element must be present, however well-concealed by an occult
language or behind a technique of symbols, and if it is there it must
be to some extent discoverable. It is true that an antique language, obsolete
words, -Yaska counts more than four hundred of which he did not know the
meaning, -and often a difficult and out-of-date diction helped to obscure
their meaning; the loss of the sense of their symbols, the glossary of
which they kept to themselves, made them unintelligible to later generations;
even in the time of the Upanishads the spiritual seekers of the age had
to resort to initiation and meditation to penetrate into their secret
knowledge, while the scholars afterwards were at sea and had to resort
to conjecture and to concentrate on a mental interpretation or to explain
by myths, by the legends of the Brahmanas themselves often symbolic and
obscure. But still to make this discovery will be the sole way of getting
at the true sense and the true value of the Veda. We must take seriously
the hint of Yaska, accept the Rishi's description of the Veda's contents
as "seer-wisdoms, seer-words", and look for whatever clue we
can find to this ancient wisdom. Otherwise the Veda must remain for ever
a sealed book; grammarians, etymologists, scholastic conjectures will
not open to us the sealed chamber .
For
it is a fact that the tradition of a secret meaning and a o mystic wisdom
couched in the Riks of the ancient Veda was as old as the Veda itself.
The Vedic Rishis believed that their Mantras were inspired from higher
hidden planes of consciousness and contained this secret knowledge. The
words of the Veda could only be known in their true meaning by one who
was him- self a seer or mystic; from others the verses withheld their
hidden knowledge. In one of Vamadeva's hymns in the fourth Mandala (IV.3.16)
the Rishi describes himself as one illumined expressing through his thought
and speech words of guidance, "secret words" -ninya vacamsi-
"seer-wisdoms that utter their inner meaning to the seer"
-kavyani kavaye nivacana. The Rishi
flI Dirghatamas speaks of the Riks, the Mantras of the Veda, as . existing
"in a supreme ether, imperishable and immutable in which all the
gods are seated", and he adds "one who knows not That what shall
he do with the Rik?" (1.164.39) He further alludes to four planes
from which the speech issues, three of them hidden in the secrecy while
the fourth is human, and from there comes the ordinary word; but the word
and thought of the Veda belongs to the higher planes (1.164.46). Elsewhere
in the Riks the Vedic Word is described (X.71) as that which is supreme
and the topmost height of speech, the best and the most faultless. It
is something that is hidden in secrecy and from there comes out and is
manifested. It has entered into the truth-seers, the Rishis, and it is
found by following the track of their speech. But all cannot enter into
its secret meaning. Those who do not know the inner sense are as men who
seeing see not, hearing hear not, only to one here and there the Word
desiring him like a beautifully robed wife to a husband lays open her
body. Others unable to drink steadily of the milk of the Word, the Vedic
cow, move with it as with one that gives no milk, to him the Word is a
tree without flowers or fruits. This is quite clear and precise; it results
from it beyond doubt that even then while the Rig-veda was being written
the Riks were regarded as having a secret sense which was not open to
all. There was an occult and spiritual knowledge in the sacred hymns and
by this knowledge alone, it is said, one can know the truth and rise to
a higher existence. This belief was not a later tradition but held, probably,
by all and evidently by some of the greatest Rishis such as Dirghatamas
and Vamadeva.
The tradition, then, was there and it was
prolonged after the Vedic times. Yaska speaks of several schools of interpretation
of the Veda. There was a sacrifici.al or ritualistic interpretation, the
historical or rather mythological explanation, an explanation by the grammarians
and etymologists, by the logicians, a spiritual interpretation. Yaska
himself declares that there is a triple knowledge and therefore a triple
meaning of the Vedic hymns, a sacrificial or ritualistic knowledge, a
knowledge of the gods and finally a spiritual knowledge; but the last
is the true sense and when one gets it the others drop or are cut away.
It is this spiritual sense that saves and the rest is outward and subordinate.
He says fur- ther that "the Rishis saw the truth, the
true law of things, directly by an inner vision" ; afterwards the
knowledge and the inner sense of the Veda were almost lost and the Rishis
who still knew had to save it by handing it down through initiation to
disciples and at a last stage outward and mental means had to be used
for finding the sense such as Nirukta and other Vedangas. But even then,
he says, "the true sense of the Veda can be recovered directly by
meditation and tapasya ", those who can use these means need no outward
aids for this knowledge. This also is sufficiently clear and positive.
The tradition of a mystic
element in the Veda as a source of Indian civilisation, its religion,
its philosophy, its culture is more in consonance with historical fact
than the European scouting of this idea. The nineteenth century European
scholarship writing in a period of materialistic rationalism regarded
the history of the race as a development out of primitive barbarism or
semi-barbarism, a crude social life and religion and a mass of superstitions,
by the growth of outward civilised institutions, manners and habits through
the development of intellect and reason, art, philosophy and science and
a clearer and sounder, more matter-of-fact intelligence. The ancient idea
about the Veda could not fit into this picture; it was regarded as rather
a part of ancient superstitious ideas and a primitive error. But we can
now form a more accurate idea of the development of the race. The ancient
more primitive civilisations held in themselves the elements of the later
growth but their early wise men were not scientists and philosophers or
men of high intellectual reason but mystics and even mystery-men, occultists,
religious seekers; they were seekers after a veiled truth behind things
and not of an outward knowledge. The scientists and philosophers came
after- wards; they were preceded by the mystics and often like pythagoras
and Plato were to some extent mystics themselves or drew many of their
ideas from the mystics. In India philosophy grew out of the seeking of
the mystics and retained and developed their spiritual aims and kept something
of their methods in later Indian spiritual discipline and Yoga. The Vedic
tradition, the fact of a mystical element in the Veda fits in perfectly
with this historical truth and takes its place in the history of Indian
culture.The tradition of the Veda as the bed-rock of Indian civilisation-
not merely a barbaric sacrificial liturgy- is more than a tradition, it
is an actual fact of history.
(to be continued)
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