{"id":1851,"date":"2013-07-13T01:37:53","date_gmt":"2013-07-13T01:37:53","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost\/?p=1851"},"modified":"2013-07-13T01:37:53","modified_gmt":"2013-07-13T01:37:53","slug":"05-chapter-v-the-philological-method-of-the-veda-vol-15-the-secret-of-veda","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/01-works-of-sri-aurobindo\/03-cwsa\/15-the-secret-of-veda\/05-chapter-v-the-philological-method-of-the-veda-vol-15-the-secret-of-veda","title":{"rendered":"-05_Chapter V The Philological Method of the Veda.htm"},"content":{"rendered":"<div align=\"center\">\n<table border=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" cellspacing=\"0\" width=\"100%\">\n<tr>\n<td width=\"100%\" valign=\"top\">\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n\t\t\t<b><font size=\"4\">Chapter<br \/>\nV <\/font><\/b><br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n\t\t\t<b><font size=\"4\">The Philological Method of the Veda<\/font><\/b><\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t<span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n\t\t\t<b><font size=\"5\">N<\/font>O INTERPRETATION<\/b> of the Veda can be sound which<br \/>\ndoes not rest on a sound and secure philological basis; and yet this scripture with its obscure and antique<br \/>\ntongue of which it is the sole remaining document offers unique philological difficulties. To rely entirely on the traditional and<br \/>\noften imaginative renderings of the Indian scholars is impossible for any critical mind. Modern philology strives after a more<br \/>\nsecure and scientific basis, but has not yet found it.<br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 25pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t<span lang=\"en-gb\">In the psychological interpretation of the Veda there are,<br \/>\nespecially, two difficulties which can only be met by a satisfactory philological justification. This interpretation necessitates<br \/>\nthe acceptance of several new senses for a fair number of fixed<br \/>\n&nbsp;technical terms of the Veda, &#8212;terms, for example like <i>&#363;ti<\/i>, <i>avas<\/i>,<br \/>\n<i>vayas<\/i>. These new renderings satisfy one test we may fairly demand; they fit into every context, clarify the sense and free us from the necessity of attributing quite different significances to<br \/>\nthe same term in a work of so fixed a form as the Veda. But this test is not sufficient. We must have, besides, a philological<br \/>\nbasis which will not only account for the new sense, but also explain how a single word came to be capable of so many different meanings, the sense attached to it by the psychological interpretation, those given to it by the old grammarians and<br \/>\nthose, if any, which are attached to it in later Sanskrit. But this is not easily possible unless we find a more scientific basis for our<br \/>\nphilological deductions than our present knowledge affords. <\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 25pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t<span lang=\"en-gb\">Secondly, the theory of the psychological interpretation depends very often on the use of a double meaning for important words, &#8212;the key-words of the secret teaching. The figure is one<br \/>\nthat is traditional in Sanskrit literature and sometimes employed with an excess of artifice in the later classical works; it is the <i>&#347;les&#61477;a<\/i> or rhetorical figure of double entendre. But its very artificiality<br \/>\n &nbsp;<br \/>\n<\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t<span lang=\"en-gb\"><font size=\"2\">Page &#8211; 48<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p>\t\t\t<span lang=\"en-gb\"><\/font><br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">predisposes us to believe that this poetical device must belong necessarily to a later and more sophisticated culture. How are we<br \/>\nto account for its constant presence in a work of the remotest antiquity? Moreover, there is a peculiar extension of it in the<br \/>\nVedic use, a deliberate employment of the &#8220;multi-significance&#8221; of Sanskrit roots in order to pack as much meaning as possible<br \/>\ninto a single word, which at first sight enhances the difficulty of the problem to an extraordinary degree. For instance, the<br \/>\n&nbsp;word, <i>a&#299;va<\/i>, usually signifying a horse, is used as a figure of<br \/>\nthe Prana, the nervous energy, the vital breath, the half-mental, half-material dynamism which links mind and matter. Its root<br \/>\nis capable, among other senses, of the ideas of impulsion, force, possession, enjoyment, and we find all these meanings united in<br \/>\nthis figure of the Steed of Life to indicate the essential tendencies of the Pranic energy. Such a use of language would not be<br \/>\npossible if the tongue of the Aryan forefathers obeyed the same conventions as our modern speech or were in the same stage<br \/>\nof development. But if we can suppose that there was some peculiarity in the old Aryan tongue as it was used by the Vedic<br \/>\nRishis by which words were felt to be more alive, less merely conventional symbols of ideas, more free in their transitions<br \/>\nof meaning than in our later use of speech, then we shall find that these devices were not at all artificial or far-fetched to their<br \/>\nemployers, but were rather the first natural means which would suggest themselves to men anxious at once to find new, brief and<br \/>\nadequate formulae of speech for psychological conceptions not understood by the vulgar and to conceal the ideas contained in<br \/>\ntheir formulae from a profane intelligence. I believe that this is the true explanation; it can be established, I think, by a study of<br \/>\nthe development of Aryan speech that language did pass through a stage peculiarly favourable to this cryptic and psychological<br \/>\nuse of words which in their popular handling have a plain, precise and physical significance.<br \/>\n<\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 25pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n <span lang=\"en-gb\">I have already indicated that my first study of Tamil words had brought me to what seemed a clue to the very origins and<br \/>\nstructure of the ancient Sanskrit tongue; and so far did this clue lead that I lost sight entirely of my original subject of interest, the<br \/>\n &nbsp; <\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t<span lang=\"en-gb\"><font size=\"2\">Page &#8211; 49<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p>\t\t\t<span lang=\"en-gb\"><\/font><br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<p><span lang=\"en-gb\">connections between Aryan and Dravidian speech, and plunged into the far more interesting research of the origins and laws of<br \/>\ndevelopment of human language itself. It seems to me that this great inquiry and not the ordinary preoccupations of linguistic<br \/>\nscholars should be the first and central aim of any true science of Philology.<br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 25pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<p><span lang=\"en-gb\">Owing to the failure of the first hopes which attended the birth of modern Philology, its meagre results, its crystallisation<br \/>\ninto the character of a &#8220;petty conjectural science&#8221;, the idea of a Science of Language is now discredited and its very possibility,<br \/>\non quite insufficient reasoning, entirely denied. It seems to me impossible to acquiesce in such a final negation. If there is one<br \/>\nthing that Modern Science has triumphantly established, it is the reign of law and process of evolution in the history of all<br \/>\nearthly things. Whatever may be the deeper nature of Speech, in its outward manifestation as human language it is an organism,<br \/>\na growth, a terrestrial evolution. It contains indeed a constant psychological element and is therefore more free, flexible, consciously self-adaptive than purely physical organisms; its secret is more difficult to seize, its constituents yield themselves only<br \/>\nto more subtle and less trenchant methods of analysis. But law and process exist in mental no less than in material phenomena<br \/>\nin spite of their more volatile and variable appearances. Law and process must have governed the origins and developments<br \/>\nof language. Given the necessary clue and sufficient data, they must be discoverable. It seems to me that in the Sanskrit language<br \/>\nthe clue can be found, the data lie ready for investigation. <\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 25pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<p><span lang=\"en-gb\">The error of Philology which prevented it from arriving at a<br \/>\nmore satisfactory result in this direction, was its preoccupation in the physical parts of speech with the exterior morphology of<br \/>\nlanguage and in its psychological parts with the equally external connections of formed vocables and of grammatical inflexions in<br \/>\nkindred languages. But the true method of Science is to go back to the origins, the embryology, the elements and more obscure<br \/>\nprocesses of things. From the obvious only the obvious and superficial results. The profundities of things, their real truth,<br \/>\ncan best be discovered by penetration into the hidden things that &nbsp;<br \/>\n<\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t<span lang=\"en-gb\"><font size=\"2\">Page &#8211; 50<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p>\t\t\t<span lang=\"en-gb\"><\/font><br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">the surface of phenomena conceals, into that past development of which the finished forms present only secret and dispersed<br \/>\nindications or into the possibilities from which the actualities we see are only a narrow selection. A similar method applied<br \/>\nto the earlier forms of human speech can alone give us a real Science of Language.<br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 25pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n <span lang=\"en-gb\">It is not in a short chapter of a treatise itself brief and devoted to another subject that it is at all possible to present the<br \/>\nresults of the work that I have attempted on these lines.<sup><font size=\"2\">1<\/font><\/sup> I can only briefly indicate the one or two features which bear directly<br \/>\non the subject of Vedic interpretation. And I mention them here solely to avoid any supposition in the minds of my readers that in<br \/>\ndeparting from the received senses of certain Vedic words I have simply taken advantage of that freedom of ingenious conjecture<br \/>\nwhich is at once one of the great attractions and one of the most serious weaknesses of modern Philology.<br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 25pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n <span lang=\"en-gb\">My researches first convinced me that words, like plants, like animals, are in no sense artificial products, but growths,<br \/>\n\t\t\t&#8212;living<br \/>\ngrowths of sound with certain seed-sounds as their basis. Out of these seed-sounds develop a small number of primitive root<br \/>\nwords with an immense progeny which have their successive generations and arrange themselves in tribes, clans, families,<br \/>\nselective groups each having a common stock and a common psychological history. For the factor which presided over the development of language was the association, by the nervous mind of primitive man, of certain general significances or rather of<br \/>\ncertain general utilities and sense-values with articulate sounds. The process of this association was also in no sense artificial but<br \/>\nnatural, governed by simple and definite psychological laws. <\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 25pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n <span lang=\"en-gb\">In their beginnings language-sounds were not used to ex<br \/>\npress what we should call ideas; they were rather the vocal equivalents of certain general sensations and emotion-values. It<br \/>\nwas the nerves and not the intellect which created speech. To<br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 25pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n &nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 25pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n <span lang=\"en-gb\"><br \/>\n <font size=\"2\">1<br \/>\nI propose to deal with them in a separate work on &#8220;The Origins of Aryan Speech&#8221;. [<i>See<br \/>\n<\/i>Vedic Studies with Writings on Philology, <i>volume 14 of <\/i>THE COMPLETE WORKS<br \/>\nOF SRI AUROBINDO.] &nbsp;<br \/>\n<\/font> <\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t<span lang=\"en-gb\"><font size=\"2\">Page &#8211; 51<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p>\t\t\t<span lang=\"en-gb\"><\/font><br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<p><span lang=\"en-gb\">use Vedic symbols, Agni and Vayu, not Indra, were the original artificers of human language. Mind has emerged out of vital<br \/>\nand sensational activities; intellect in man has built itself upon a basis of sense-associations and sense-reactions. By a similar pro<br \/>\ncess the intellectual use of language has developed by a natural law out of the sensational and emotional. Words, which were<br \/>\noriginally vital ejections full of a vague sense-potentiality, have evolved into fixed symbols of precise intellectual significances.<br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 25pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<p><span lang=\"en-gb\">In consequence, the word originally was not fixed to any precise idea. It had a general character or quality (<i>gun&#61477;a<\/i>), which<br \/>\n was capable of a great number of applications and therefore of<br \/>\na great number of possible significances. And this <i>gun&#61477;a <\/i>and its<br \/>\nresults it shared with many kindred sounds. At first, therefore, word-clans, word-families started life on the communal system<br \/>\nwith a common stock of possible and realised significances and a common right to all of them; their individuality lay rather in<br \/>\nshades of expression of the same ideas than in any exclusive right to the expression of a single idea. The early history of language<br \/>\nwas a development from this communal life of words to a system of individual property in one or more intellectual significances.<br \/>\nThe principle of partition was at first fluid, then increased in rigidity, until word-families and finally single words were able<br \/>\nto start life on their own account. The last stage of the entirely natural growth of language comes when the life of the word<br \/>\nis entirely subjected to the life of the idea which it represents. For in the first state of language the word is as living or even<br \/>\na more living force than its idea; sound determines sense. In its last state the positions have been reversed; the idea becomes<br \/>\nall-important, the sound secondary.<br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 25pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<p><span lang=\"en-gb\">Another feature of the early history of language is that it<br \/>\nexpresses at first a remarkably small stock of ideas and these are the most general notions possible and generally the most concrete, such as light, motion, touch, substance, extension, force, speed, etc. Afterwards there is a gradual increase in variety of<br \/>\nidea and precision of idea. The progression is from the general to the particular, from the vague to the precise, from the physical to the mental, from the concrete to the abstract, from the &nbsp;<br \/>\n<\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t<span lang=\"en-gb\"><font size=\"2\">Page &#8211; 52<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p>\t\t\t<span lang=\"en-gb\"><\/font><br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">expression of an abundant variety of sensations about similar things to the expression of precise difference between similar<br \/>\nthings, feelings and actions. This progression is worked out by processes of association in ideas which are always the same, al<br \/>\nways recurrent and, although no doubt due to the environments and actual experiences of the men who spoke the language, wear<br \/>\nthe appearance of fixed natural laws of development. And after all what is a law but a process which has been worked out<br \/>\nby the nature of things in response to the necessities of their environment and has become the fixed habit of their action?<br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 25pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n <span lang=\"en-gb\">From this past history of language certain consequences derive which are of considerable importance in Vedic interpretation. In the first place by a knowledge of the laws under which the relations of sound and sense formed themselves in the<br \/>\nSanskrit tongue and by a careful and minute study of its word-families it is possible to a great extent to restore the past history<br \/>\nof individual words. It is possible to account for the meanings actually possessed by them, to show how they were worked out<br \/>\nthrough the various stages of language-development, to establish the mutual relations of different significances and to explain how<br \/>\nthey came to be attached to the same word in spite of the wide difference and sometimes even the direct contrariety of their<br \/>\nsense-values. It is possible also to restore lost senses of words on a sure and scientific basis and to justify them by an appeal to the<br \/>\nobserved laws of association which governed the development of the old Aryan tongues, to the secret evidence of the word itself<br \/>\nand to the corroborative evidence of its immediate kindred. Thus instead of having a purely floating and conjectural basis for our<br \/>\ndealings with the vocables of the Vedic language, we can work with confidence upon a solid and reliable foundation.<br \/>\n\t<\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 25pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n <span lang=\"en-gb\">Naturally, it does not follow that because a Vedic word may or must have had at one time a particular significance,<br \/>\nthat significance can be safely applied to the actual text of the Veda. But we do establish a sound sense and a clear possibility<br \/>\nof its being the right sense for the Veda. The rest is a matter of comparative study of the passages in which the word occurs and<br \/>\nof constant fitness in the context. I have continually found that &nbsp; <\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t<span lang=\"en-gb\"><font size=\"2\">Page &#8211; 53<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p>\t\t\t<span lang=\"en-gb\"><\/font><br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<p><span lang=\"en-gb\">a sense thus restored illumines always the context wherever it is applied and on the other hand that a sense demanded always by<br \/>\nthe context is precisely that to which we are led by the history of the word. This is a sufficient basis for a moral, if not for an<br \/>\nabsolute certainty.<br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 25pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<p><span lang=\"en-gb\">Secondly, one remarkable feature of language in its inception<br \/>\nis the enormous number of different meanings of which a single word was capable and also the enormous number of words<br \/>\nwhich could be used to represent a single idea. Afterwards this tropical luxuriance came to be cut down. The intellect intervened<br \/>\nwith its growing need of precision, its growing sense of economy. The bearing capacity of words progressively diminished; and it<br \/>\nbecame less and less tolerable to be burdened with a superfluous number of words for the same idea, a redundant variety of<br \/>\nideas for the same word. A considerable, though not too rigid economy in these respects, modified by a demand for a temperate<br \/>\nrichness of variation, became the final law of language. But the Sanskrit tongue never quite reached the final stages of this development; it dissolved too early into the Prakrit dialects. Even in its latest and most literary form it is lavish of varieties of meanings for the same word; it overflows with a redundant wealth of synonyms. Hence its extraordinary capacity for rhetorical<br \/>\ndevices which in any other language would be difficult, forced and hopelessly artificial, and especially for the figure of double<br \/>\n<i>&nbsp;.<\/i> sense, of <i>&#347;les&#61477;a.<\/i><br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 25pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<p><span lang=\"en-gb\">The Vedic Sanskrit represents a still earlier stratum in the development of language. Even in its outward features it is less<br \/>\nfixed than any classical tongue; it abounds in a variety of forms and inflexions; it is fluid and vague, yet richly subtle in its use<br \/>\nof cases and tenses. And on its psychological side it has not yet crystallised, is not entirely hardened into the rigid forms<br \/>\nof intellectual precision. The word for the Vedic Rishi is still a living thing, a thing of power, creative, formative. It is not<br \/>\nyet a conventional symbol for an idea, but itself the parent and former of ideas. It carries within it the memory of its roots, is<br \/>\nstill conscient of its own history.<br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 25pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<p><span lang=\"en-gb\">The Rishis&#8217; use of language was governed by this ancient<br \/>\n &nbsp;<br \/>\n<\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t<span lang=\"en-gb\"><font size=\"2\">Page &#8211; 54<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p>\t\t\t<span lang=\"en-gb\"><\/font><br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">psychology of the Word. When in English we use the word &#8220;wolf&#8221; or &#8220;cow&#8221;, we mean by it simply the animal designated;<br \/>\nwe are not conscious of any reason why we should use that particular sound for the idea except the immemorial custom of<br \/>\nthe language; and we cannot use it for any other sense or purpose except by an artificial device of style. But for the Vedic Rishi<br \/>\n&#8220;vrika&#8221; meant the tearer and therefore, among other applications of the sense, a wolf; &#8220;dhenu&#8221; meant the fosterer, nourisher,<br \/>\nand therefore a cow. But the original and general sense predominates, the derived and particular is secondary. Therefore, it was<br \/>\npossible for the fashioner of the hymn to use these common words with a great pliability, sometimes putting forward the<br \/>\nimage of the wolf or the cow, sometimes using it to colour the more general sense, sometimes keeping it merely as a conventional figure for the psychological conception on which his mind was dwelling, sometimes losing sight of the image altogether. It<br \/>\nis in the light of this psychology of the old language that we have to understand the peculiar figures of Vedic symbolism as<br \/>\nhandled by the Rishis, even to the most apparently common and concrete. It is so that words like &#8220;ghritam&#8221;, the clarified butter,<br \/>\n&#8220;soma&#8221;, the sacred wine, and a host of others are used. <\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 25pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n <span lang=\"en-gb\">Moreover, the partitions made by the thought between different senses of the same word were much less separative than in modern speech. In English &#8220;fleet&#8221; meaning a number of ships<br \/>\nand &#8220;fleet&#8221; meaning swift are two different words; when we use &#8220;fleet&#8221; in the first sense we do not think of the swiftness of the<br \/>\nship&#8217;s motion, nor when we use it in the second, do we recall the image of ships gliding rapidly over the ocean. But this was<br \/>\nprecisely what was apt to occur in the Vedic use of language. &#8220;Bhaga&#8221;, enjoyment, and &#8220;bhaga&#8221;, share, were for the Vedic<br \/>\nmind not different words, but one word which had developed two different uses. Therefore it was easy for the Rishis to employ<br \/>\nit in one of the two senses with the other at the back of the mind colouring its overt connotation or even to use it equally in both<br \/>\nsenses at a time by a sort of figure of cumulative significance. &#8220;Chanas&#8221; meant food but also it meant &#8220;enjoyment, pleasure&#8221;;<br \/>\ntherefore it could be used by the Rishi to suggest to the profane &nbsp; <\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t<span lang=\"en-gb\"><font size=\"2\">Page &#8211; 55<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p>\t\t\t<span lang=\"en-gb\"><\/font><br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<p><span lang=\"en-gb\">mind only the food given at the sacrifice to the gods, but for the initiated it meant the Ananda, the joy of the divine bliss entering<br \/>\ninto the physical consciousness and at the same time suggested the image of the Soma-wine, at once the food of the gods and<br \/>\nthe Vedic symbol of the Ananda.<br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 25pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<p><span lang=\"en-gb\">We see everywhere this use of language dominating the<br \/>\nWord of the Vedic hymns. It was the great device by which the ancient Mystics overcame the difficulty of their task. Agni<br \/>\nfor the ordinary worshipper may have meant simply the god of the Vedic fire, or it may have meant the principle of Heat and<br \/>\nLight in physical Nature, or to the most ignorant it may have meant simply a superhuman personage, one of the many &#8220;givers<br \/>\nof wealth&#8221;, satisfiers of human desire. How suggest to those capable of a deeper conception the psychological functions of<br \/>\nthe God? The word itself fulfilled that service. For Agni meant the Strong, it meant the Bright, or even Force, Brilliance. So<br \/>\nit could easily recall to the initiated, wherever it occurred, the idea of the illumined Energy which builds up the worlds and<br \/>\nwhich exalts man to the Highest, the doer of the great work, the Purohit of the human sacrifice.<br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 25pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<p><span lang=\"en-gb\">Or how keep it in the mind of the hearer that all these gods are personalities of the one universal Deva? The names of<br \/>\nthe gods in their very meaning recall that they are only epithets, significant names, descriptions, not personal appellations. Mitra<br \/>\nis the Deva as the Lord of love and harmony, Bhaga as the Lord of enjoyment, Surya as the Lord of illumination, Varuna<br \/>\nas the all-pervading Vastness and purity of the Divine supporting and perfecting the world. &#8220;The Existent is One,&#8221; says the Rishi<br \/>\nDirghatamas, &#8220;but the sages express It variously; they say Indra, Varuna, Mitra, Agni; they call It Agni, Yama, Matarishwan.&#8221;<br \/>\nThe initiate in the earlier days of the Vedic knowledge had no need of this express statement. The names of the gods carried to<br \/>\nhim their own significance and recalled the great fundamental truth which remained with him always.<br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 25pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<p><span lang=\"en-gb\">But in the later ages the very device used by the Rishis turned against the preservation of the knowledge. For language<br \/>\nchanged its character, rejected its earlier pliability, shed off old &nbsp;<br \/>\n<\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t<span lang=\"en-gb\"><font size=\"2\">Page &#8211; 56<\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<hr>\n<p>\t\t\t<span lang=\"en-gb\"><\/font><br \/>\n\t\t\t<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n<span lang=\"en-gb\">familiar senses; the word contracted and shrank into its outer and concrete significance. The ambrosial wine of the Ananda<br \/>\nwas forgotten in the physical offering; the image of the clarified butter recalled only the gross libation to mythological deities,<br \/>\nlords of the fire and the cloud and the storm-blast, godheads void of any but a material energy and an external lustre. The<br \/>\nletter lived on when the spirit was forgotten; the symbol, the body of the doctrine, remained, but the soul of knowledge had<br \/>\nfled from its coverings. &nbsp;<br \/>\n<\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\" style=\"text-indent: 0pt;line-height: 150%;margin-left: 0pt;margin-top: 0;margin-bottom: 0\">\n\t\t\t<span lang=\"en-gb\"><font size=\"2\">Page &#8211; 57<\/font><\/span><\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/table>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Chapter V &nbsp; The Philological Method of the Veda &nbsp; NO INTERPRETATION of the Veda can be sound which does not rest on a sound&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[41],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1851","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-15-the-secret-of-veda","wpcat-41-id"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1851","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1851"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1851\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1851"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1851"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worksofthemotherandsriaurobindo.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1851"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}