IX DAY ANANDA - BANKIM - TILAK ANDAL - NAMMALWAR
Dayananda
Page -331 of leaven, a
power of unformed stir and ferment out of which forms must result. One
remembers them as great souls and great influences who live on in the soul of
India. They are in us and we would not be what we are without them. But of no
precise form can we say that this was what the man meant, still less that this
form was the very body of that spirit. Page -332 and full of vitality, the image of their creator. Here was one who knew
definitely and clearly the work he was sent to do, chose his materials,
determined his conditions with a sovereign clairvoyance of the spirit and
executed his conception with the puis- sant mastery of the born worker. As I
regard the figure of this formidable artisan in God's workshop, images crowd on
me which are all of battle and work and conquest and triumphant labour. Here, I
say to myself, was a very soldier of Light, a warrior in God's world, a
sculptor of men and institutions, a bold and rugged victor of the difficulties
which matter presents to spirit. And the whole sums itself up to me in a
powerful impression of spiritual practicality. The combination of these two
words, usually so divorced from each other in our conceptions, seems to me the
very definition of Dayananda. Be a thinker, but be also a doer; be a soul, but be also a man; be a servant of
God, but be also a master of Nature!" For this was what he himself was; a
man with God in his soul, vision in his eyes and power in his hands to hew out
of life an image according to his vision. "Hew" is the right word.
Granite him- self, he smote out a shape of things with great blows as in
granite.
To be national is not to
stand still. Rather, to seize on a vital thing out of the past and throw it
into the stream of modern life, is really the most powerful means of renovation
and new creation. Dayananda's work brings back such a principle and spirit of
the past to vivify a modern mould. And observe that in the work as in the life
it is the past caught in the first jet of its virgin vigour, pure from its
sources, near to its root principle and therefore to something eternal and
always renewable. Page-335
DAYANANDA AND THE VEDA lation and inspired Book of Knowledge, the source of all sanctions and standard
of all truth. Page - 337 they present themselves to me. For in the action and thought of a great soul or
a great personality the vital thing to my mind is not the form he gave to it,
but in his action the helpful power he put forth and in his thought the helpful
truth he has added or, it may be, restored to the yet all too scanty stock of
our human acquisition and divine potentiality. Page - 338 plicit statement of the Veda itself: "One existent, sages" – not the
ignorant, mind you, but the seers, the men of knowledge, - "speak of in
many ways, as Indra, as Yama, as Matarishwan, as Agni". The Vedic Rishis
ought surely to have known some- thing about their own religion, more, let us
hope, than Roth or Max Muller, and this is what they knew. Page - 339 is admitted, we are bound, whenever the hymns speak of Agni or another, to see
behind that name present always to the thought of the Rishi the one Supreme
Deity or else one of His powers with its attendant qualities or workings.
Immediately the whole character of the Veda is fixed in the sense Dayananda
gave to it; the merely ritual, mythological, polytheistic interpretation of
Sayana collapses, the merely meteorological and naturalistic European
interpretation collapses. We have instead a real Scripture, one of the world's
sacred books and the divine word of a lofty and noble religion. Page-340 ethical righteousness with a moral and spiritual result but mechanical
performance of ritual with a material reward. But, in spite of these efforts of
suppression, the lofty ideas of the Vedas still reveal themselves in strange
contrast to its alleged burden of fantastic naturalism or dull ritualism. The
Vedic godheads are constantly hymned as Masters of Wisdom, Power, Purity,
purifiers, healers of grief and evil, destroyers of sin and falsehood, warriors
for the truth; constantly the Rishis pray to them for healing and purification,
to be made seers of knowledge, possessors of the truth, to be upheld in the divine
law, to be assisted and armed with strength, manhood and energy. Dayananda has
brought this idea of the divine right and truth into the Veda; the Veda is as
much and more a book of divine Law as Hebrew Bible or Zoroastrian Avesta. Objection has also been made to the philological and etymological method by which he arrived at his results, especially in his dealings with the names of the godheads. But this objection, I feel certain, is an error due to our introduction of modern ideas about language into our study of this ancient tongue. We modems use words as counters without any memory or appre- Page - 341 ciation of their original sense;
when we speak we think of the object spoken of, not at all of the expressive
word which is to us a dead and brute thing, mere coin of verbal currency with
no value of its own. In early language the word was on the contrary a living
thing with essential powers of signification; its root meanings' were
remembered because they were still in use, its wealth of force was vividly
present to the mind of the speaker. We say "wolf" and think only of
the animal, any other sound would have served our purpose as well, given the
convention of its usage; the ancients said "tearer" and had that
significance present to them. We say "agni" and think of fire, the
word is of no other use to us; to the ancients "agni" means other
things besides and only because of one or more of its root meanings was applied
to the physical object fire. Our words are carefully limited to one or two
senses, theirs were capable of a great number and it was quite easy for them,
if they so chose, to use a word like Agni, Varuna or Vayu as a sound-index of a
great number of connected and complex ideas, a key-word. It cannot be doubted
that the Vedic Rishis did take advantage of this greater potentiality of their
language, - note their dealings with such words as gau and candra. The
Nirukta bears evidence to this capacity and in the Brahmanas and Upanishads we
find the memory of this free and symbolic use of words still subsisting. Page - 342 celebrate the divine Law and man's aspiration to fulfil it; it does purport to
give us the law of the cosmos. Page - 343 |