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THE RELIGION OF MAN RABINDRANATH TAGOR

THE HIBBERT LECTURES FOR 1930 
THE RELIGION OF MAN 



RABINDRANATH TAGORJS 

THE RELIGION 



BEING 

THE HIBBERT LECTURES FOR 1930 



NEW YORK 

THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 
1931 



COPYRIGHT, 1931, 
BY THE MACM1LLAN COMPANY. 

All rights reserved no part of this book 
may be reproduced in any form without 
permission in writing from the publisher. 

Set up and elcctrotypcd Published February, 193 



8T W BY MAWtf WKmiRltS WKOTVWtfl 
MIHTBri IK TI1K UNITXD MATft tif A V1RU'A 



TO 

DOROTHY ELMHIRST 



PREFACE 

THE chapters included in this book, which com- 
prises the Hibbert Lectures delivered in Oxford, 
at Manchester College, during the month of May 
1930, contain also the gleanings of my thoughts on 
the same subject from the harvest of many lectures 
and addresses delivered in different countries of 
the world over a considerable period of my life. 

The fact that one theme runs through all only 
proves to me that the Religion of Man has been 
growing within my mind as a religious experience 
and not merely as a philosophical subject In fact, 
a very large portion of my writings, beginning 
from the earlier products of my immature youth 
down to the present time, carry an almost con- 
tinuous trace of the history of this growth. To-day 
I am made conscious of the fact that the works 
that I have started and the words that I have 
uttered are deeply linked by a unity of inspiration 
whose proper definition has often remained un- 
revealed to me. 

In the present volume I offer the evidence of 
my own personal life brought into a definite focus. 
To some of my readers this will supply matter of 
psychological interest; but for others I hope it 
will carry with It its own ideal value important for 
such a subject as religion. 

7 



PREFACE 

My sincere thanks are due to the Hibbert Trus- 
tees, and especially to Dr. W. H. Drummond, 
with whom I have been in constant correspond- 
ence, for allowing me to postpone the delivery of 
these Hibbert Lectures from the year 1928, when 
I was too ill to proceed to Europe, until the sum- 
mer of 1930. I have also to thank the Trustees for 
their very kind permission given to me to present 
the substance of the lectures in this book in an 
enlarged form by dividing the whole subject into 
chapters instead of keeping strictly to the lecture 
form in which they were delivered in Oxford* 
May I add that the great kindness of my hostess* 
Mrs. Drummond, in Oxford, will always remain 
in my memory along with these lectures as inti- 
mately associated with them? 

In the Appendix I have gathered together from 
my own writings certain parallel passages which 
bring the reader to the heart of my main theme. 
Furthermore, two extracts, which contain histori- 
cal material of great value, are from the pen of my 
esteemed colleague and friend, Professor KshitI 
Mohan Sen, To him I would express my gratitude 
for the help he has given me in bringing before me 
the religious ideas of medieval India which* touch 
the subject of my lectures. 

RABINDMNATH TAGORE 

September 1930 
8 



CONTENTS 

PAGE 

PREFACE 7 

CHAPTER 

I. MAN'S UNIVERSE n 

II. THE CREATIVE SPIRIT * 3 

III. THE SURPLUS IN MAN 49 

IV, SPIRITUAL UNION 63 
V. THE PROPHET 7 z 

VI. THE VISION 88 

VII. THE MAN OF MY HEART 107 

VIII. THE MUSIC MAKER 117 

IX. THE ARTIST 127 

X. MAN'S NATURE 141 

XL THE MEETING 154 

XII. THE TEACHER 163 

XIII. SPIRITUAL FREEDOM 179 

XIV. THE FOUR STAGES OF LIFE 189 
XV. CONCLUSION 202 

APPENDIX 

I. THE BAtJL SINGERS OF BENGAL 207 

II- NOTE ON THE NATURE OF REALITY aa* 

IIL DADU AND THE MYSTERY OF FORM 226 

IV. NIGHT AND MORNING 333 

INDEX 43 



The eternal Dream 

is borne on the wings of ageless Light 
that rends the veil of the vague 

and goes across Time 
weaving ceaseless patterns of Being. 

The mystery remains dumb, 

the meaning of this pilgrimage, 

the endless adventure of existence 
whose rush along the sky 

flames up into innumerable rings of paths, 
till at last knowledge gleams out from the dusk 
in the infinity of human spirit, 

and in that dim lighted dawn 

she speechlessly gazes through the break in the mist 
at the vision of Life and of Love 

rising from the tumult of profound pain and joy, 

Santiniketan 
September 16, 1939 

(Composed for the Opening Day Celebrations of the Indian College, 
Montpelier, France.) 



THE RELIGION OF MAN. 

CHAPTER I 
MAN'S UNIVERSE 

LIGHT, as the radiant energy of creation, started 
the ring-dance of atoms in a diminutive sky, and 
also the dance of the stars in the vast, lonely theatre 
of time and space* The planets came out of their 
bath of fire and basked in the sun for ages. They 
were the thrones of the gigantic Inert, dumb and 
desolate, which knew not the meaning of its own 
blind destiny and majestically frowned upon a 
future when its monarchy would be menaced. 

Then came a time when life was brought into 
the arena in the tiniest little monocycle of a cell. 
With its gift of growth and power of adaptation 
it faced the ponderous enormity of things, and 
contradicted the unmeaningness of their bulk. It 
was made conscious not of the volume but of the 
value of existence, which it ever tried to enhance 
and maintain in many-branched paths of creation, 
overcoming the obstructive inertia of Nature by 
obeying Nature's law* 

But the miracle of creation did not stop here in 
this isolated speck of life launched on a lonely 
voyage to the Unknown. A multitude of cells were 
bound together into a larger unit, not through 

IX 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

aggregation, but through a marvellous quality of 
complex inter-relationship maintaining a perfect 
co-ordination of functions. This is the creative 
principle of unity, the divine mystery of existence, 
that baffles all analysis. The larger co-operative 
units could adequately pay for a greater freedom 
of self-expression, and they began to form and 
develop in their bodies new organs of power, ne\v 
instruments of efficiency. This was the march of 
evolution ever unfolding the potentialities of life, 

But this evolution which continues on the physi- 
cal plane has its limited range. All exaggeration 
in that direction becomes a burden that breaks the 
natural rhythm of life, and those creatures that 
encouraged their ambitious flesh to grow in dimen- 
sions have nearly all perished of their cumbrous 
absurdity. 

Before the chapter ended Man appeared and 
turned the course of this evolution from an indefi- 
nite march of physical aggrandisement to a free- 
dom of a more subtle perfection. This has made 
possible his progress to become unlimited, and has 
enabled him to realize the boundless in his power, 

The fire is lighted, the hammers are working, 
and for laborious days and nights amidst dirt and 
discordance the musical instrument is being made, 
We may accept this as a detached fact and follow 
its evolution* But when the music is revealed, we 
know that the whole thing is a part of the manifes* 

12 



MAN'S UNIVERSE 

tation of music in spite of its contradictory charac- 
ter. The process of evolution, which after ages has 
reached man, must be realized in its unity with 
him; though in him it assumes a new value and 
proceeds to a different path. It is a continuous 
process that finds its meaning in Man ; and we must 
acknowledge that the evolution which Science 
talks of is that of Man's universe. The leather 
binding and title-page are parts of the book itself ; 
and this world that we perceive through our senses 
and mind and life's experience is profoundly one 
with ourselves. 

The divine principle of unity has ever been that 
of an inner inter-relationship. This is revealed in 
some of its earliest stages in the evolution of multi- 
cellular life on this planet. The most perfect in- 
ward expression has been attained by man in his 
Wn body. But what is most important of all is the 
( f act that man has also attained its realization in a 
,more subtle body outside his physical system. He 
'misses himself when isolated; he finds his own 
larger and truer self in his wide human relation- 
Ship, His multicellular body is born and it dies; 
his multi-personal humanity is immortal In this 
ideal of unity he realizes the eternal in his life and 
the boundless in his love. The unity becomes not a 
mere subjective idea, but an energizing truth. 
Whatever name may be given to it, and whatever 
form it symbolizes, the consciousness of this unity 

13 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

is spiritual, and our effort to be true to it is our 
religion. It ever waits to be revealed in our history 
in a more and more perfect illumination. 

We have our eyes, which relate to us the vision 
of the physical universe. We have also an inner 
faculty of our own which helps us to find our rela- 
tionship with the supreme self of man, the universe 
of personality. This faculty is our luminous imagi- 
nation, which in its higher stage is special to man. 
It offers us that vision of wholeness which for the 
biological necessity of physical survival is super- 
fluous; its purpose is to arouse in us the sense of 
perfection which is our true sense of immortality. 
For perfection dwells ideally in Man the Eternal, 
inspiring love for this ideal in the individual, urg- 
ing him more and more to realize it 

The development of intelligence and physical 
power is equally necessary in animals and men for 
their purposes of living; but what is unique in man 
is the development of his consciousness which 
gradually deepens and widens the realization of 
his immortal being, the perfect, the eternal. It 
inspires those creations of his that reveal the divin- 
ity in him which is his humanity in the varied 
manifestations of truth, goodness and beauty, in 
the freedom of activity which is not for his use but 
for his ultimate expression* The individual man 
must exist for Man the great, and must express him 
in disinterested works, in science and philosophy, 

14 



MAN' S UNIVERSE 

in literature and arts, in service and worship. This 
is his religion, which is working in the heart of all 
his religions in various names and forms. He 
knows and uses this world where it is endless and 
thus attains greatness, but he realizes his own 
truth where it is perfect and thus finds his ful- 
filment, 

The idea of the humanity of our God, or the 
divinity of Man the Eternal, is the main subject of 
this book. This thought of God has not grown in 
my mind through any process of philosophical rea- 
soning* On the contrary, it has followed the cur- 
rent of my temperament from early days until it 
suddenly flashed into my consciousness with a 
direct vision. The experience which I have de- 
scribed in one of the chapters which follow con- 
vinced me that on the surface of our being we have 
the ever-changing phases of the individual self, 
but in the depth there dwells the Eternal Spirit of 
human unity beyond our direct knowledge. It very 
often contradicts the trivialities of our daily life, 
and upsets the arrangements made for securing our 
personal exclusiveness behind the walls of indi- 
vidual habits and superficial conventions. It in- 
spires in us works that are the expressions of a 
Universal Spirit; it invokes unexpectedly in the 
midst of a self-centred life a supreme sacrifice. At 
its call, we hasten to dedicate our lives to the cause 

15 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

of truth and beauty, to unrewarded service of 
others, in spite of our lack of faith in the positive 
reality of the ideal values. 

During the discussion of my own religious 
experience I have expressed my belief that the 
first stage of my realization was through my feel- 
ing of intimacy with Nature not that Nature 
which has its channel of information for our mind 
and physical relationship with our living body, 
but that which satisfies our personality with mani- 
festations that make our life rich and stimulate our 
imagination in their harmony of forms, colours, 
sounds and movements. It is not that world which 
vanishes into abstract symbols behind its own testi- 
mony to Science, but that which lavishly displays 
its wealth of reality to our personal self having its 
own perpetual reaction upon our human nature. 

I have mentioned in connection with my per- 
sonal experience some songs which I had often 
heard from wandering village singers, belonging 
to a popular sect of Bengal, called Baiiis,' who 
have no images, temples, scriptures, or ceremo- 
nials, who declare in their songs the divinity of 
Man, and express for him an intense feeling of 
love. Coming from men who are unsophisticated, 
living a simple life in obscurity, it gives us a clue 
to the inner meaning of all religions. For it sug* 
gests that these religions are never about a God of 

* Se Appendix I, 
16 



MAN'S UNIVERSE 

cosmic force, but rather about the God of human 
personality. 

At the same time it must be admitted that even 
the impersonal aspect of truth dealt with by 
Science belongs to the human Universe. But men 
of Science tell us that truth, unlike beauty and 
goodness, is independent of our consciousness. 
They explain to us how the belief that truth is 
independent of the human mind is a mystical 
belief, natural to man but at the same time inex- 
plicable. But may not the explanation be this, that 
ideal truth does not depend upon the individual 
mind of man, but on the universal mind which 
comprehends the individual? For to say that truth, 
as we see it, exists apart from humanity is really to 
contradict Science itself; because Science can only 
organize into rational concepts those facts which 
man can know and understand, and logic is a 
machinery of thinking created by the mechanic 
man. 

The table that I am using with all its varied 
meanings appears as a table for man through his 
special organ of senses and his special organ of 
thoughts* When scientifically analysed the same 
table offers an enormously different appearance to 
him from that given by his senses. The evidence 
of his physical senses and that of his logic and his 
scientific instruments are both related to his own 
power of comprehension; both are true and true 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

for him. He makes use of the table with full confi- 
dence for his physical purposes, and with equal 
confidence makes intellectual use of it for his scien- 
tific knowledge. But the knowledge is his who is a 
man. If a particular man as an individual did not 
exist, the table would exist all the same, but still 
as a thing that is related to the human mind. The 
contradiction that there is between the table of 
our sense perception and the table of our scientific 
knowledge has its compon centre of reconciliation 
in human personality. 

The same thing holds true in the realm of idea. 
In the scientific idea of the world there is no gap 
in the universal law of causality. Whatever hap- 
pens could never have happened otherwise. This 
is a generalization which has been made possible 
by a quality of logic which is possessed by the 
human mind. But this very mind of Man has its 
immediate consciousness of will within him which 
is aware of its freedom and ever struggles for it 
Every day in most of our behaviour we acknowl- 
edge its truth; in fact, our conduct finds its best 
value in its relation to its truth. Thus this has its 
analogy in our daily behaviour with regard to a 
table. For whatever may be the conclusion that 
Science has unquestionably proved about the table, 
we are amply rewarded when we deal with it as a 
solid fact and never as a crowd of fluid elements 
that represent a certain kind of energy. We can 

18 



MAN'S UNIVERSE 

also utilize this phenomenon of the measurement 
The space represented by a needle when magnified 
by the microscope may cause us no anxiety as to 
the number of angels who could be accommo- 
dated on its point or camels which could walk 
through its eye. In a cinema-picture our vision of 
time and space can be expanded or condensed 
merely according to the different technique of the 
instrument. A seed carries packed in a minute 
receptacle a future which is enormous in its con- 
tents both in time and space. The truth, which is 
Man, has not emerged out of nothing at a certain 
point of time, even though seemingly it might 
have been manifested then. But the manifestation 
of Man has no end in itself not even now. 
Neither did it have its beginning in- any particular 
time we ascribe to it The truth of Man is in the 
heart of eternity, the fact of it being evolved 
through endless ages. If Man's manifestation has 
round it a background of millions of light-years, 
still it is his own background. He includes in him- 
self the time, however long, that carries the process 
of his becoming, and he is related for the very 
truth of his existence to all things that surround 
him. 

Relationship is the fundamental truth of this 
world of appearance. Take, for instance, a piece 
of coal When we pursue the fact of it to its ulti- 
mate composition, substance which seemingly is 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

the most stable element in it vanishes in centres of 
revolving forces. These are the units, called the 
elements of carbon, which can further be analysed 
into a certain number of protons and electrons. 
Yet these electrical facts are what they are, not in 
their detachment, but in their inter-relationship, 
and though possibly some day they themselves may 
be further analysed, nevertheless the pervasive 
truth of inter-relation which is manifested in them 
will remain. 

We do not know how these elements, as carbon, 
compose a piece of coal ; all that we can say is that 
they build up that appearance through a unity of 
inter-relationship, which unites them not merely 
in an individual piece of coal, but in a comrade- 
ship of creative co-ordination with the entire 
physical universe. 

Creation has been made possible through the 
continual self-surrender of the unit to the universe. 
And the spiritual universe of Man is also ever 
claiming self-renunciation from the individual 
units. This spiritual process is not so easy as the 
physical one in the physical world, for the intelli- 
gence and will of the units have to be tempered 
to those of the universal spirit 

It is said in a verse of the Upanishad that this 
world which is all movement is pervaded by one 
supreme unity, and therefore true enjoyment can 
never be had through the satisfaction of greed, but 

20 



MAN'S UNIVERSE 

only through the surrender of our individual self 
to the Universal Self. 

There are thinkers who advocate the doctrine 
of the plurality of worlds, which can only mean 
that there are worlds that are absolutely unrelated 
to each other. Even if this were true it could never 
be proved. For our universe is the sum total of 
what Man feels, knows, imagines, reasons to be, 
and of whatever is knowable to him now or in 
another time. It affects him differently in its dif- 
ferent aspects, in its beauty, its inevitable sequence 
of happenings, its potentiality; and the world 
proves itself to him only in its varied effects upon 
his senses, imagination and reasoning mind. 

I do not imply that the final nature of the world 
depends upon the comprehension of the individual 
person* Its reality is associated with the universal 
human rnind which comprehends all time and all 
possibilities of realization. And this is why for the 
accurate knowledge of things we depend upon 
Science that represents the rational mind of the 
universal Man, and not upon that of the individual 
who dwells in a limited range of space and time 
and the immediate needs of life. And this is why 
there is such a thing as progress in our civiliza- 
tion; for progress means that there is an ideal per- 
fection which the individual seeks to reach by 
extending his limits in knowledge, power, love, 
enjoyment, thus approaching the universal. The 

21 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

most distant star, whose faint message touches the 
threshold of the most powerful telescopic vision, 
has its sympathy with the understanding mind of 
man, and therefore we can never cease to believe 
that we shall probe further and further into the 
mystery of their nature. As we know the truth of 
the stars we know the great comprehensive mind 
of man. 

We must realize not only the reasoning mind, 
but also the creative imagination, the love and wis- 
dom that belong to the Supreme Person, whose 
Spirit is over us all, love for whom comprehends 
love for all creatures and exceeds in depth and 
strength all other loves, leading to difficult en- 
deavours and martyrdoms that have no other gain 
than the fulfilment of this love itself. 

The Isha of our Upanishad, the Super Soul, 
which permeates all moving things, is the God of 
this human universe whose mind we share in all 
our true knowledge, love and service, and whom 
to reveal in ourselves through renunciation of self 
is the highest end of life. 



CHAPTER II 
THE CREATIVE SPIRIT 

ONCE, during the improvisation of a story by a 
young child, I was coaxed to take my part as the 
hero. The child imagined that I had been shut in 
a dark room locked from the outside. She asked 
me, "What will you do for your freedom?" and I 
answered, "Shout for help". But, however desir- 
able that might be if it succeeded immediately, it 
would be unfortunate for the story. And thus she 
in her imagination had to clear the neighbourhood 
of all kinds of help that my cries might reach. I 
was compelled to think of some violent means of 
kicking through this passive resistance ; but for the 
sake of the story the door had to be made of steel. 
I found a key, but it would not fit, and the child 
was delighted at the development of the story 
jumping over obstructions. 

Life's story of evolution, the main subject of 
which is the opening of the doors of the dark dun- 
geon, seems to develop in the same manner. Diffi- 
culties were created, and at each offer of an answer 
the story had to discover further obstacles in order 
to carry on the adventure. For to come to an abso- 
lutely satisfactory conclusion is to come to the end 
of all things, and in that case the great child would 

33 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

have nothing else to do but to shut her curtain and 
go to sleep. 

The Spirit of Life began her chapter by intro- 
ducing a simple living cell against the tremen- 
dously powerful challenge of the vast Inert. The 
triumph was thrillingly great which still refuses to 
yield its secret She did not stop there, but defi- 
antly courted difficulties, and in the technique of 
her art exploited an element which still baffles our 
logic. 

This is the harmony of self-adjusting inter-rela- 
tionship impossible to analyse. She brought close 
together numerous cell units and, by grouping 
them into a self-sustaining sphere of co-operation, 
elaborated a larger unit It was not a mere agglom- 
eration. The grouping had its caste system in the 
division of functions and yet an intimate unity of 
kinship. The creative life summoned a larger 
army of cells under her command and imparted 
into them, let us say, a communal spirit that fought 
with all its might whenever its integrity was 
menaced. 

This was the tree which has its inner harmony 
and inner movement of life in its beauty, its 
strength, its sublime dignity of endurance, its pil- 
grimage to the Unknown through the tiniest gates 
of reincarnation. It was a sufficiently marvellous 
achievement to be a fit termination to the creative 
venture. But the creative genius cannot stop 

24 



THE CREATIVE SPIRIT 

exhausted ; more windows have to be opened ; and 
she went out of her accustomed way and brought 
another factor into her work, that of locomotion. 
Risks of living were enhanced, offering opportuni- 
ties to the daring resourcefulness of the Spirit of 
Life. For she seems to revel in occasions for a fight 
against the giant Matter, which has rigidly pro- 
hibitory immigration laws against all new-comers 
from Life's shore. So the fish was furnished with 
appliances for moving in an element which offered 
its density for an obstacle. The air offered an even 
more difficult obstacle in its lightness; but the 
challenge was accepted, and the bird was gifted 
with a marvellous pair of wings that negotiated 
with the subtle laws of the air and found in it a 
better ally than the reliable soil of the stable earth. 
The Arctic snow set up its frigid sentinel; the 
tropical desert uttered in its scorching breath a 
gigantic "No" against all life's children. But those 
peremptory prohibitions were defied, and the 
frontiers, though guarded by a death penalty, were 
triumphantly crossed. 

This process of conquest could be described as 
progress for the kingdom of life. It journeyed on 
through one success to another by dealing with the 
laws of Nature through the help of the invention 
of new instruments. This field of life's onward 
march is a field of ruthless competition. Because 
the material world is the world of quantity, where 

25 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

resources are limited and victory waits for those 
who have superior facility in their weapons, there- 
fore success in the path of progress for one group 
most often runs parallel to defeat in another. 

It appears that such scramble and fight for 
opportunities of living among numerous small 
combatants suggested at last an imperialism of big 
bulky flesh a huge system of muscles and bones, 
thick and heavy coats of armour and enormous 
tails. The idea of such indecorous massiveness 
must have seemed natural to life's providence; for 
the victory in the world of quantity might reason- 
ably appear to depend upon the bigness of dimen- 
sion. But such gigantic paraphernalia of defence 
and attack resulted in an utter defeat, the records 
of which every day are being dug up from the des- 
ert sands and ancient mud flats. These represent 
the fragments that strew the forgotten paths of a 
great retreat in the battle of existence. For the 
heavy weight which these creatures carried was 
mainly composed of bones, hides, shells, teeth and 
claws that were non-living, and therefore imposed 
its whole huge pressure upon life that needed free- 
dom and growth for the perfect expression of its 
own vital nature. The resources for living which 
the earth offered for her children were recklessly 
spent by these megalomaniac monsters of an im- 
moderate appetite for the sake of maintaining a 
cumbersome system of dead burdens that thwarted 

26 



THE CREATIVE SPIRIT 

them in their true progress. Such a losing game 
has now become obsolete. To the few stragglers 
of that party, like the rhinoceros or the hippopota- 
mus, has been allotted a very small space on this 
earth, absurdly inadequate to their formidable 
strength and magnitude of proportions, making 
them look forlornly pathetic in the sublimity of 
their incongruousness. These and their extinct 
forerunners have been the biggest failures in life's 
experiments. And then, on some obscure dusk of 
dawn, the experiment entered upon a completely 
new phase of a disarmament proposal, when little 
Man made his appearance in the arena, bringing 
with him expectations and suggestions that are 
unfathomably great. 

We must know that the evolution process of the 
world has made its progress towards the revelation 
of its truth that is to say some inner value which 
is not in the extension in space and duration in 
time. When life came out it did not bring with it 
any new materials into existence. Its elements are 
the same which are the materials for the rocks and 
minerals. Only it evolved a value in them which 
cannot be measured and analysed. The same thing 
is true with regard to mind and the consciousness 
of self ; they are revelations of a great meaning, the 
self-expression of a truth. In man this truth has 
made its positive appearance, and is struggling to 
make its manifestation more and more clear. That 

27 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

which is eternal is realizing itself in history 
through the obstructions of limits. 

The physiological process in the progress of 
Life's evolution seems to have reached its finality 
in man. We cannot think of any noticeable addi- 
tion or modification in our vital instruments which 
we are likely to allow to persist. If any individual 
is born, by chance, with an extra pair of eyes or 
ears, or some unexpected limbs like stowaways 
without passports, we are sure to do our best to 
eliminate them from our bodily organization. Any 
new chance of a too obviously physical variation is 
certain to meet with a determined disapproval 
from man, the most powerful veto being expected 
from his aesthetic nature, which peremptorily re- 
fuses to calculate advantage when its majesty is 
offended by any sudden license of form. We all 
know that the back of our body has a wide surface 
practically unguarded. From the strategic point of 
view this oversight is unfortunate, causing us 
annoyances and indignities, if nothing worse, 
through unwelcome intrusions. And this could 
reasonably justify in our minds regret for retrench- 
ment in the matter of an original tail, whose 
memorial we are still made to carry in secret But 
the least attempt at the rectification of the policy 
of economy in this direction is indignantly re- 
sented. I strongly believe that the idea of ghosts 
had its best chance with our timid imagination in 

28 



THE CREATIVE SPIRIT 

our sensitive back a field of dark ignorance; and 
yet it is too late for me to hint that one of our eyes 
could profitably have been spared for our burden- 
carrier back, so unjustly neglected and haunted by 
undefined fears. 

Thus, while all innovation is stubbornly op- 
posed, there is every sign of a comparative care- 
lessness about the physiological efficiency of the 
human body. Some of our organs are losing their 
original vigour. The civilized life, within walled 
enclosures, has naturally caused in man a weaken- 
ing of his power of sight and hearing along with 
subtle sense of the distant. Because of our habit of 
taking cooked food we give less employment to 
our teeth and a great deal more to the dentist. 
Spoilt and pampered by clothes, our skin shows 
lethargy in its function of adjustment to the atmos- 
pheric temperature and in its power of quick 
recovery from hurts. 

The adventurous Life appears to have paused 
at a crossing in her road before Man came. It 
seems as if she became aware of wastefulness in 
carrying on her experiments and adding to her 
inventions purely on the physical plane. It was 
proved in Life's case that four is not always twice 
as much as two. In living things it is necessary to 
keep to the limit of the perfect unit within which 
the inter-relationship must not be inordinately 
strained* The ambition that seeks power in the 

29 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

augmentation of dimension is doomed; for that 
perfection which is in the inner quality of harmony 
becomes choked when quantity overwhelms it in 
a fury of extravagance. The combination of an 
exaggerated nose and arm that an elephant carries 
hanging down its front has its advantage. This 
may induce us to imagine that it would double the 
advantage for the animal if its tail also could grow 
into an additional trunk. But the progress which 
greedily allows Life's field to be crowded with an 
excessive production of instruments becomes a 
progress towards death. For Life has its own nat- 
ural rhythm which a multiplication table has not; 
and proud progress that rides roughshod over 
Life's cadence kills it at the end with encum- 
brances that are unrhythmic. As I have already 
mentioned, such disasters did happen in the history 
of evolution. 

The moral of that tragic chapter is that if the 
tail does not have the decency to know where to 
stop, the drag of this dependency becomes fatal to 
the body's empire. 

Moreover, evolutionary progress on the physical 
plane inevitably tends to train up its subjects into 
specialists. The camel is a specialist of the desert 
and is awkward in the swamp. The hippopotamus 
which specializes in the mudlands of the Nile is 
helpless in the neighbouring desert Such one- 
sided emphasis breeds professionalism in Life's 

30 



THE CREATIVE SPIRIT 

domain, confining special efficiencies in narrow 
compartments. The expert training in the aerial 
sphere is left to the bird ; that in the marine is par- 
ticularly monopolized by the fish. The ostrich is 
an expert in its own region and would look utterly 
foolish in an eagle's neighbourhood. They have to 
remain permanently content with advantages that 
desperately cling to their limits. Such mutilation 
of the complete ideal of life for the sake of 
some exclusive privilege of power is inevitable; 
for that form of progress deals with materials 
that are physical and therefore necessarily lim- 
ited. 

To rescue her own career from such a multiply- 
ing burden of the dead and such constriction of 
specialization seems to have been the object of the 
Spirit of Life at one particular stage. For it does 
not take long to find out that an indefinite pursuit 
of quantity creates for Life, which is essentially 
qualitative, complexities that lead to a vicious cir- 
cle. These primeval animals that produced an 
enormous volume of flesh had to build a gigantic 
system of bones to carry the burden. This required 
in its turn a long and substantial array of tails to 
give it balance. Thus their bodies, being com- 
pelled to occupy a vast area, exposed a very large 
surface which had to be protected by a strong, 
heavy and capacious armour. A progress which 
represented a congress of dead materials required 



THE RELIGION OP MAN 

a parallel organization of teeth and claws, or horns 
and hooves, which also were dead. 

In its own manner one mechanical burden links 
itself to other burdens of machines, and Life grows 
to be a carrier of the dead, a mere platform for 
machinery, until it is crushed to death by its inter- 
minable paradoxes. We are told that the greater 
part of a tree is dead matter; the big stem, except 
for a thin covering, is lifeless. The tree uses it as a 
prop in its ambition for a high position and the life- 
less timber is the slave that carries on its back the 
magnitude of the tree. But such a dependence upon 
a dead dependant has been achieved by the tree at 
the cost of its real freedom. It had to seek the 
stable alliance of the earth for the sharing of its 
burden, which it did by the help of secret under- 
ground entanglements making itself permanently 
stationary. 

But the form of life that seeks the great privilege 
of movement must minimize its load of the dead 
and must realize that life's progress should be a 
perfect progress of the inner life itself and not of 
materials and machinery; the non-living must not 
continue outgrowing the living, the armour dead- 
ening the skin, the armament laming the arms. 

At last, when the Spirit of Life found her form 
in Man, the effort she had begun completed its 
cycle, and the truth of her mission glimmered into 
suggestions which dimly pointed to some direction 

32 



THE CREATIVE SPIRIT 

of meaning across her own frontier. Before the 
end of this cycle was reached, all the suggestions 
had been external. They were concerned with 
technique, with life's apparatus, with the efficiency 
of the organs. This might have exaggerated itself 
into an endless boredom of physical progress. It 
can be conceded that the eyes of the bee possessing 
numerous facets may have some uncommon advan- 
tage which we cannot even imagine, or the glow- 
worm that carries an arrangement for producing 
light in its person may baffle our capacity and com- 
prehension. Very likely there are creatures having 
certain organs that give them sensibilities which 
we cannot have the power to guess. 

All such enhanced sensory powers merely add 
to the mileage in life's journey on the same road 
lengthening an indefinite distance. They never 
take us over the border of physical existence. 

The same thing may be said not only about life's 
efficiency, but also life's ornaments. The colouring 
and decorative patterns on the bodies of some of 
the deep sea creatures make us silent with amaze- 
ment The butterfly's wings, the beetle's back, the 
peacock's plumes, the shells of the crustaceans, the 
exuberant outbreak of decoration in plant life, 
have reached a standard of perfection that seems 
to be final. And yet if it continues in the same 
physical direction, then, however much variety of 
surprising excellence it may produce, it leaves out 

33 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

some great element of unuttered meaning. These 
ornaments are like ornaments lavished upon a cap- 
tive girl, luxuriously complete within a narrow 
limit, speaking of a homesickness for a far away 
horizon of emancipation, for an inner depth that 
is beyond the ken of the senses. The freedom in 
the physical realm is like the circumscribed free- 
dom in a cage. It produces a proficiency which is 
mechanical and a beauty which is of the surface. 
To whatever degree of improvement bodily 
strength and skill may be developed they keep life 
tied to a persistence of habit It is closed, like a 
mould, useful though it may be for the sake of 
safety and precisely standardized productions. For 
centuries the bee repeats its hive, the weaver-bird 
its nest, the spider its web; and instincts strongly 
attach themselves to some invariable tendencies of 
muscles and nerves never being allowed the privi- 
lege of making blunders. The physical functions, 
in order to be strictly reliable, behave like some 
model schoolboy, obedient, regular, properly re- 
peating lessons by rote without mischief or mistake 
in his conduct, but also without spirit and initia- 
tive. It is the flawless perfection of rigid limits, a 
cousin possibly a distant cousin of the inani- 
mate. 

Instead of allowing a full paradise of perfection 
to continue its tame and timid rule of faultless 
regularity the Spirit of Life boldly declared for 

34 



THE CREATIVE SPIRIT 

a further freedom and decided to eat of the fruit 
of the Tree of Knowledge. This time her struggle 
was not against the Inert, but against the limitation 
of her own overburdened agents. She fought 
against the tutelage of her prudent old prime min- 
ister, the faithful instinct She adopted a novel 
method of experiment, promulgated new laws, and 
tried her hand at moulding Man through a his- 
tory which was immensely different from that 
which went before. She took a bold step in throw- 
ing open her gates to a dangerously explosive fac- 
tor which she had cautiously introduced into her 
council the element of Mind. I should not say 
that it was ever absent, but only that at a certain 
stage some curtain was removed and its play was 
made evident, even like the dark heat which in its 
glowing intensity reveals itself in a contradiction 
of radiancy. 

Essentially qualitative, like life itself, the Mind 
does not occupy space. For that very reason it has 
jio bounds in its mastery of space. Also, like Life, 
Mind has its meaning in freedom, which it missed 
in its earliest dealings with Life's children. In the 
animal, though the mind is allowed to come out of 
the immediate limits of livelihood, its range is 
restricted, like the freedom of a child that might 
run out of its room but not out of the house; or, 
rather, like the foreign ships to which only a cer- 
tain port was opened in Japan in the beginning of 

33 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

her contact with the West in fear of the danger 
that might befall if the strangers had their uncon- 
trolled opportunity of communication. Mind also 
is a foreign element for Life; its laws are different, 
its weapons powerful, its moods and manners most 
alien. 

Like Eve of the Semitic mythology, the Spirit 
of Life risked the happiness of her placid seclusion 
to win her freedom. She listened to the whisper 
of a tempter who promised her the right to a new 
region of mystery, and was urged into a permanent 
alliance with the stranger. Up to this point the 
interest of life was the sole interest in her own 
kingdom, but another most powerfully parallel 
interest was created with the advent of this adven- 
turer Mind from an unknown shore. Their inter- 
ests clash, and complications of a serious nature 
arise. I have already referred to some vital organs 
of Man that are suffering from neglect. The only 
reason has been the diversion created by the Mind 
interrupting the sole attention which Life's func- 
tions claimed in the halcyon days of her undisputed 
monarchy. It is no secret that Mind has the habit 
of asserting its own will for its expression against 
life's will to live and enforcing sacrifices from hen 
When lately some adventurers accepted the dan- 
gerous enterprise to climb Mount Everest, it was 
solely through the instigation of the arch-rebel 
Mind. In this case Mind denied its treaty of co- 

36 



THE CREATIVE SPIRIT 

operation with its partner and ignored Life's 
claim to help in her living. The immemorial 
privileges of the ancient sovereignty of Life are 
too often flouted by the irreverent Mind; in fact,- 
all through the course of this alliance there are 
constant cases of interference with each other's 
functions, often with unpleasant and even fatal 
results. But in spite of this, or very often because 
of this antagonism, the new current of Man's evo- 
lution is bringing a wealth to his harbour infinitely 
beyond the dream of the creatures of monstrous 
flesh. 

The manner in which Man appeared in Life's 
kingdom was in itself a protest and a challenge, 
the challenge of Jack to the Giant. He carried in 
his body the declaration of mistrust against the 
crowding of burdensome implements of physical 
progress. His Mind spoke to the naked man, 
"Fear not" ; and he stood alone facing the menace 
of a heavy brigade of formidable muscles. His 
own puny muscles cried out in despair, and he had 
to invent for himself in a novel manner and in a 
new spirit of evolution. This at once gave him his 
promotion from the passive destiny of the animal 
to the aristocracy of Man* He began to create his 
further body, his outer organs the workers which 
served him and yet did not directly claim a share 
of his life. Some of the earliest in his list were 
bows and arrows. Had this change been under- 

37 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

taken by the physical process of evolution, modify- 
ing his arms in a slow and gradual manner, it 
might have resulted in burdensome and ungainly 
apparatus. Possibly, however, I am unfair, and 
the dexterity and grace which Life's technical in- 
stinct possesses might have changed his arm into 
a shooting medium in a perfect manner and with 
a beautiful form. In that case our lyrical literature 
to-day would have sung in praise of its fascination, 
not only for a consummate skill in hunting victims, 
but also for a similar mischief in a metaphorical 
sense. But even in the service of lyrics it would 
show some limitation. For instance, the arms that 
would specialize in shooting would be awkward in 
wielding a pen or stringing a lute. But the great 
advantage in the latest method of human evolution 
lies in the fact that Man's additional new limbs, 
like bows and arrows, have become detached. They 
never tie his arms to any exclusive advantage of 
efficiency. 

The elephant's trunk, the tiger's paws, the claws 
of the mole, have combined their best expressions 
in' the human arms, which are much weaker in 
their original capacity than those limbs I have 
mentioned. It would have been a hugely cumber- 
some practical joke if the combination of animal 
limbs had had a simultaneous location In the hu- 
man organism through some overzeal in biological 
inventiveness. 

38 



THE CREATIVE SPIRIT 

The first great economy resulting from the new 
programme was the relief of the physical burden, 
which means the maximum efficiency with the 
minimum pressure of taxation upon the vital re- 
sources of the body. Another mission of benefit 
was this, that it absolved the Spirit of Life in 
Man's case from the necessity of specialization for 
the sake of limited success. This has encouraged 
Man to dream of the possibility of combining in 
his single person the fish, the bird and the fleet- 
footed animal that walks on land. Man desired in 
his completeness to be the one great representative 
of multiform life, not through wearisome subjec- 
tion to the haphazard gropings of natural selection, 
but by the purposeful selection of opportunities 
with the help of his reasoning mind. It enables 
the schoolboy who is given a pen-knife on his 
birthday to have the advantage over the tiger in 
the fact that it does not take him- a million years 
to obtain its possession, nor another million years 
for its removal, when the instrument proves un- 
necessary or dangerous. The human mind has 
compressed ages into a few years for the acquisi- 
tion of steel-made claws. The only cause of anxiety 
is that the instrument and the temperament which 
uses it may not keep pace in perfect harmony. In 
the tiger, the claws and the temperament which 
only a tiger should possess have had a synchronous 
development, and in no single tiger is any malad- 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

justment possible between its nails and its tigerli- 
ness. But the human boy, who grows a claw in the 
form of a pen-knife, may not at the same time 
develop the proper temperament necessary for its 
use which only a man ought to have. The new 
organs that to-day are being added as a supple- 
ment to Man's original vital stock are too quick 
and too numerous for his inner nature to develop 
its own simultaneous concordance with them, and 
thus we see everywhere innumerable schoolboys in 
human society playing pranks with their own and 
other people's lives and welfare by means of newly 
acquired pen-knives which have not had time to 
become humanized. 

One thing, I am sure, must have been noticed 
that the original plot of the drama is changed, and 
the mother Spirit of Life has retired into the back- 
ground, giving full prominence, in the third act, 
to the Spirit of Man though the dowager queen, 
from her inner apartment, still renders necessary 
help. It is the consciousness in Man of his own 
creative personality which has ushered in this new 
regime in Life's kingdom. And from now onwards 
Man's attempts are directed fully to capture the 
government and make his own Code of Legislation 
prevail without a break. We have seen in India 
those who are called mystics, impatient of the con- 
tinued regency of mother Nature in their own 

40 



THE CREATIVE SPIRIT 

body, winning for their will by a concentration of 
inner forces the vital regions with which our mas- 
terful minds have no direct path of communi- 
cation. 

But the most important fact that has come into 
prominence along with the change of direction 
in our evolution, is the possession of a Spirit which 
has its enormous capital with a surplus far in 
excess of the requirements of the biological animal 
in Man. Some overflowing influence led us over 
the strict boundaries of living, and offered to us an 
open space where Man's thoughts and dreams 
could have their holidays. Holidays are for gods 
who have their joy in creation. In Life's primitive 
paradise, where the mission was merely to live, 
any luck which came to the creatures entered in 
from outside by the donations of chance; they 
lived on perpetual charity, by turns petted and 
kicked on the back by physical Providence. Beg- 
gars never can have harmony among themselves; 
they are envious of one another, mutually suspi- 
cious, like dogs living upon their master's favour, 
showing their teeth, growling, barking, trying to 
tear one another. This is what Science describes 
as the struggle for existence. This beggars' para- 
dise lacked peace ; I am sure the suitors for special 
favour from fate lived in constant preparedness, 
inventing and multiplying armaments. 

41 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

But above the din of the clamour and scramble 
rises the voice of the Angel of Surplus, of leisure, 
of detachment from the compelling claim of 
physical need, saying to men, "Rejoice". From his 
original serfdom as a creature Man takes his right 
seat as a creator. Whereas, before, his incessant 
appeal has been to get, now at last the call comes 
to him to give. His God, whose help he was in 
the habit of asking, now stands Himself at his door 
and asks for his offerings. As an animal, he is still 
dependent upon Nature; as a Man, he is a sover- 
eign who builds his world and rules it 

And there, at this point, comes his religion, 
whereby he realizes himself in the perspective of 
the infinite. There is a remarkable verse in the 
Atharva Veda which says: "Righteousness, truth, 
great endeavours, empire, religion, enterprise, 
heroism and prosperity, the past and the future, 
dwell in the surpassing strength of the sur- 
plus." 

What is purely physical has its limits like the 
shell of an egg ; the liberation is there in the atmos- 
phere of the infinite, which is indefinable, invisible. 
Religion can have no meaning in the enclosure of 
mere physical or material interest; it is in the sur- 
plus we carry around our personality the surplus 
which is like the atmosphere of the earth, bringing 
to her a constant circulation of light and life and 
delightfulness* 

42 



THE CREATIVE SPIRIT 

I have said in a poem of mine that when the 
child is detached from its mother's womb it finds 
its mother in a real relationship whose truth is in 
freedom. Man in his detachment has realized him- 
self in a wider and deeper relationship with the 
universe. In his moral life he has the sense of his 
obligation and his freedom at the same time, and 
this is goodness. In his spiritual life his sense of 
the union and the will which is free has its cul- 
mination in love. The freedom of opportunity he 
wins for himself in Nature's region by uniting his 
power with Nature's forces. The freedom of social 
relationship he attains through owning responsi- 
bility to his community, thus gaining its collective 
power for his own welfare. In the freedom of con- 
sciousness he realizes the sense of his unity with 
his larger being, finding fulfilment in the dedicated 
life of an ever-progressive truth and ever-active 
love. 

The first detachment achieved by Man is physi- 
cal. It represents his freedom from the aecessity 
of developing the power of his senses and limbs 
in the limited area of his own physiology, having 
for itself an unbounded background with an im- 
mense result in consequence. Nature's original 
intention was that Man should have the allowance 
of his sight-power ample enough for his surround- 
ings and a little over. But to have to develop an 
astronomical telescope on our skull would cause 

43 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

a worse crisis of bankruptcy than it did to the 
Mammoth whose densely foolish body indulged in 
an extravagance of tusks. A snail carries its house 
on its back and therefore the material, the shape 
and the weight have to be strictly limited to the 
capacity of the body. But fortunately Man's house 
need not grow on the foundation of his bones and 
occupy his flesh. Owing to this detachment, his 
ambition knows no check to its daring in the di- 
mension and strength of his dwellings. Since his 
shelter does not depend upon his body, it survives 
him. This fact greatly affects the man who builds 
a house, generating in his mind a sense of the eter- 
nal in his creative work. And this background of 
the boundless surplus of time encourages architec- 
ture, which seeks a universal value overcoming the 
miserliness of the present need. 

I have already mentioned a stage which Life 
reached when the units of single cells formed them- 
selves into larger units, each consisting of a multi- 
tude. It was not merely an aggregation, but had 
a mysterious unity of inter-relationship, complex 
in character, with differences within of forms and 
function. We can never know concretely what this 
relation means, There are gaps between the units, 
but they do not stop the binding force that per- 
meates the whole. There is a future for the whole 
which is in its growth, but in order to bring this 

44 



THE CREATIVE SPIRIT 

about each unit works and dies to make room for 
the next worker. While the unit has the right to 
claim the glory of the whole, yet individually it 
cannot share the entire wealth that occupies a his- 
tory yet to be completed. 

Of all creatures Man has reached that multicel- 
lular character in a perfect manner, not only in his 
body but in his personality. For centuries his evo- 
lution has been the evolution of a consciousness 
that tries to be liberated from the bonds of indi- 
vidual separateness and to comprehend in its rela- 
tionship a wholeness which may be named Man. 
This relationship, which has been dimly instinc- 
tive, is ever struggling to be fully aware of itself. 
Physical evolution sought for efficiency in a per- 
fect communication with the physical world; the 
evolution of Man's consciousness sought for truth 
in a perfect harmony with the world of personality. 

There are those who will say that the idea of 
humanity is an abstraction, subjective in character* 
It must be confessed that the concrete objective- 
ness of this living truth cannot be proved to its 
own units. They can never see its entireness from 
outside; for they are one with it The individual 
cells of our body have their separate lives; but they 
never have the opportunity of observing the body 
as a whole with its past, present and future. If 
these cells have the power of reasoning (which 

45 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

they may have for aught we know) they have the 
right to argue that the idea of the body has no 
objective foundation in fact, and though there is 
a mysterious sense of attraction and mutual influ- 
ence running through them, these are nothing posi- 
tively real ; the sole reality which is provable is in 
the isolation of these cells made by gaps that can 
never be crossed or bridged. 

We know something about a system of explosive 
atoms whirling separately in a space which is im- 
mense compared to their own dimension. Yet we 
do not know why they should appear to us a solid 
piece of radiant mineral. And if there is an 
onlooker who at one glance can have the view of 
the immense time and space occupied by innumer- 
able human individuals engaged in evolving a 
common history, the positive truth of their solidar- 
ity will be concretely evident to him and not the 
negative fact of their separateness. 

The reality of a piece of iron is not provable 
if we take the evidence of the atom ; the only proof 
is that I see it as a bit of iron, and that it has cer- 
tain reactions upon my consciousness. Any being 
from, say, Orion, who has the sight to see the atoms 
and not the iron, has the right to say that we human 
beings suffer from an age-long epidemic of hallu- 
cination. We need not quarrel with him but go 
on using the iron as it appears to us. Seers there 
have been who have said "Vedahametam", "I see", 

46 



THE CREATIVE SPIRIT 

and lived a life according to that vision. f And 
though our own sight may be blind we have ever 
bowed our head to them in reverence. 

However, whatever name our logic may give to 
the truth of human unity, the fact can never be 
ignored that we have our greatest delight when 
we realize ourselves in others, and this is the defi- 
nition of love. This love gives us the testimony of 
the great whole, which is the complete and final 
truth of man. It offers us the immense field where 
we can have our release from the sole monarchy 
of hunger, of the growling voice, snarling teeth and 
tearing claws, from the dominance of the limited 
material means, the source of cruel envy and 
ignoble deception, where the largest wealth of the 
human soul has been produced through sympathy 
and co-operation ; through disinterested pursuit of 
knowledge that recognizes no limit and is unafraid 
of all time-honoured tabus; through a strenuous 
cultivation of intelligence for service that knows 
no distinction of colour and clime. The Spirit of 
Love, dwelling in the boundless realm of the sur- 
plus, emancipates our consciousness from the illu- 
sory bond of the separateness of self; it is ever 
trying to spread its illumination in the human 
world. This is the spirit of civilization, which in 
all its best endeavour invokes our supreme Being 
for the only bond of unity that leads us to truth, 
namely, that of righteousness: 

47 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

Ya efco varno bahudha saktiyogat 
varnan anekan nihitartho dadhati 
vichaitti chante viavamadau sa devah 
sa no budhya subhaya samyunaktu. 

"He who is one, above all colours, and who with his manifold 
power supplies the inherent needs of men of all colours, who 
is in the beginning and in the end of the world, is divine, and 
may he unite us in a relationship of good will." 



CHAPTER III 
THE SURPLUS IN MAN 

THERE are certain verses from the Atharva Veda 
in which the poet discusses his idea of Man, indi- 
cating some transcendental meaning that can be 
translated as follows : 

"Who was it that imparted form to man, gave him majesty, 
movement, manifestation and character, inspired him with wis- 
dom, music and dancing? When his body was raised upwards 
he found also the oblique sides and all other directions in him 
he who is the Person, the citadel of the infinite being." 

Tasmad vai vidvan purushamidan brahmeti manyate. 
"And therefore the wise man knoweth this person as Brahma." 
Sanatanam enam ahur utadya syat punarnavah. 

"Ancient they call him, and yet he is renewed even now 
to-day." 

In the very beginning of his career Man asserted 
in his bodily structure his first proclamation of 
freedom against the established rule of Nature. 
At a certain bend in the path of evolution he 
refused to remain a four-footed creature, and the 
position which he made his body to assume carried 
with it a permanent gesture of insubordination. 
For there could be no question that it was Nature's 

49 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

own plan to provide all land-walking mammals 
with two pairs of legs, evenly distributed along 
their lengthy trunk heavily weighted with a head 
at the end. This was the amicable compromise 
made with the earth when threatened by its con- 
servative downward force, which extorts taxes for 
all movements. The fact that man gave up such an 
obviously sensible arrangement proves his inborn 
mania for repeated reforms of constitution, for 
pelting amendments at every resolution proposed 
by Providence. 

If we found a four-legged table stalking about 
upright upon two of its stumps, the remaining two 
foolishly dangling by its sides, we should be afraid 
that it was either a nightmare or some supernormal 
caprice of that piece of furniture, indulging in a 
practical joke upon the carpenter's idea of fitness. 
The like absurd behaviour of Man's anatomy 
encourages us to guess that he was born under the 
influence of some comet of contradiction that 
forces its eccentric path against orbits regulated by 
Nature. And it is significant that Man should per- 
sist in his foolhardiness, in spite of the penalty he 
pays for opposing the orthodox rule of animal 
locomotion. He reduces by half the help of an easy 
balance of his muscles. He is ready to pass his 
infancy tottering through perilous experiments in 
making progress upon insufficient support, and 
followed all through his life by liability to sudden 
50 



THE SURPLUS IN MAN 

downfalls resulting in tragic or ludicrous conse- 
quences from which law-abiding quadrupeds are 
free. This was his great venture, the relinquish- 
ment of a secure position of his limbs, which he 
could comfortably have retained in return for 
humbly salaaming the all-powerful dust at every 
step. 

This capacity to stand erect has given our body 
its freedom of posture, making it easy for us to 
turn on all sides and realize ourselves at the centre 
of things. Physically, it symbolizes the fact that 
while animals have for their progress the prolonga- 
tion of a narrow line Man has the enlargement of 
a circle. As a centre he finds his meaning in a wide 
perspective, and realizes himself in the magnitude 
of his circumference. 

As one freedom leads to another, Man's eyesight 
also found a wider scope. I do not mean any 
enhancement of its physical power, which in many 
predatory animals has a better power of adjust- 
ment to light But from the higher vantage of our 
physical watch-tower we have gained our view, 
which is not merely information about the location 
of things but their inter-relation and their unity* 

But the best means of the expression of his physi- 
cal freedom gained by Man in his vertical position 
is through the emancipation of his hands. In our 
bodily organization these have attained the high- 
est dignity for their skill) their grace, their useful 

Si 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

activities, as well as for those that are above all 
uses. They are the most detached of all our limbs. 
Once they had their menial vocation as our car- 
riers, but raised from their position as shudras, 
they at once attained responsible status as our 
helpers. When instead of keeping them under- 
neath us we offered them their place at our side, 
they revealed capacities that helped us to cross the 
boundaries of animal nature. 

This freedom of view and freedom of action 
have been accompanied by an analogous mental 
freedom in Man through his imagination, which 
is the most distinctly human of all our faculties. It 
is there to help a creature who has been left unfin- 
ished by his designer, undraped, undecorated, 
unarmoured and without weapons, and, what is 
worse, ridden by a Mind whose energies for the 
most part are not tamed and tempered into some 
difficult ideal of completeness upon a background 
which is bare. Like all artists he has the freedom 
to make mistakes, to launch into desperate adven- 
tures contradicting and torturing his psychology 
or physiological normality. This freedom is a 
divine gift lent to the mortals who are untutored 
and undisciplined ; and therefore the path of their 
creative progress is strewn with debris of devasta- 
tion, and stages of their perfection haunted by 
apparitions of startling deformities. But, all the 
same, the very training of creation ever makes 

5* 



THE SURPLUS IN MAN 

clear an aim which cannot be in any isolated freak 
of an individual mind or in that which is only 
limited to the strictly necessary. 

Just as our eyesight enables us to include the 
individual fact of ourselves in the surrounding 
view, our imagination makes us intensely conscious 
of a life we must live which transcends the indi- 
vidual life and contradicts the biological meaning 
of the instinct of self-preservation. It works at 
the surplus, and extending beyond the reservation 
plots of our daily life builds there the guest cham- 
bers of priceless value to offer hospitality to the 
world-spirit of Man. We have such an honoured 
right to be the host when our spirit is a free spirit 
not chained to the animal self. For free spirit is 
godly and alone can claim kinship with God. 

Every true freedom that we may attain in any 
direction broadens our path of self-realization, 
which is in superseding the self. The unimagina- 
tive repetition of life within a safe restriction im- 
posed by Nature may be good for the animal, but 
never for Man, who has the responsibility to out- 
live his life in order to live in truth. 

And freedom in its process of creation gives rise 
to perpetual suggestions of something further than 
its obvious purpose. For freedom is for expressing 
the infinite; it imposes limits in its works, not to 
keep them in permanence but to break them over 
and over again, and to reveal the endless in unend- 

53 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

Ing surprises. This implies a history of constant 
regeneration, a series of fresh beginnings and con- 
tinual challenges to the old in order to reach a more 
and more perfect harmony with some fundamental 
ideal of truth. 

Our civilization, in the constant struggle for 
a great Further, runs through abrupt chapters of 
spasmodic divergences. It nearly always begins 
its new ventures with a cataclysm ; for its changes 
are not mere seasonal changes of ideas gliding 
through varied periods of flowers and fruit They 
are surprises lying in ambuscade provoking revo- 
lutionary adjustments. They are changes in the 
dynasty of living ideals the ideals that are active 
in consolidating their dominion with strongholds 
of physical and mental habits, of symbols, cere- 
monials and adornments* But however violent 
may be the revolutions happening in whatever 
time or country, they never completely detach 
themselves from a common centre. They find their 
places in a history which is one. 

The civilizations evolved in India or China, 
Persia or Judaea, Greece or Rome, are like several 
mountain peaks having different altitude, tempera- 
ture, flora and fauna, and yet belonging to the 
same chain of hills. There are no absolute barriers 
of communication between them; their foundation 
is the same and they affect the meteorology of an 
atmosphere which is common to us all. This is at 

54 



THE SURPLUS IN MAN 

the root of the meaning of the great teacher who 
said he would not seek his own salvation if all 
men were not saved ; for we all belong to a divine 
unity, from which our great-souled men have 
their direct inspiration; they feel it immediately 
in their own personality, and they proclaim in their 
life, "I am one with the Supreme, with the Death- 
less, with the Perfect". 

Man, in his mission to create himself, tries to 
develop in his mind an image of his truth accord- 
ing to an idea which he believes to be universal, 
and is sure that any expression given to it will per- 
sist through all time. This is a mentality abso- 
lutely superfluous for biological existence. It rep- 
resents his struggle for a life which is not limited 
to his body. For our physical life has its thread of 
unity in the memory of the past, whereas this ideal 
life dwells in the prospective memory of the 
future* In the records of past civilizations, un- 
earthed from the closed records of dust, we find 
pathetic efforts to make their memories uninter- 
rupted through the ages, like the effort of a child 
who sets adrift on a paper boat his dream of reach- 
ing the distant unknown. But why is this desire? 
Only because we feel instinctively that in our ideal 
life we must touch all men and all times through 
the manifestation of a truth which is eternal and 
universal. And in order to give expression to it 
materials are gathered that are excellent and a 

55 



THE RELIGION O MAN 

manner of execution that has a permanent value* 
For we mortals must offer homage to the Man of 
the everlasting life. In order to do so, we are ex- 
pected to pay a great deal more than we need for 
mere living, and in the attempt we often exhaust 
our very means of livelihood, and even life itself. 

The ideal picture which a savage imagines of 
himself requires glaring paints and gorgeous finer- 
ies, a rowdiness in ornaments and even grotesque 
deformities of over-wrought extravagance* He 
tries to sublimate his individual self into a mani- 
festation which he believes to have the majesty of 
the ideal Man. He is not satisfied with what he is 
in his natural limitations ; he irresistibly feels some- 
thing beyond the evident fact of himself which 
only could give him worth. It is the principle of 
power, which, according to his present mental 
stage, is the meaning of the universal reality 
whereto he belongs, and it is his pious duty to give 
expression to it even at the cost of his happiness. 
In fact, through it he becomes one with his God, 
for him his God is nothing greater than power. 
The savage takes immense trouble, and often suf- 
fers tortures, in order to offer in himself a repre- 
sentation of power in conspicuous colours and dis- 
torted shapes, in acts of relentless cruelty and in- 
temperate bravado of self-indulgence. Such an 
appearance of rude grandiosity evokes a loyal rev- 
erence in the members of his community and a 

56 



THE SURPLUS IN MAN 

fear which gives them an aesthetic satisfaction 
because it illuminates for them the picture of a 
character which, as far as they know, belongs to 
ideal humanity. They wish to see in him not an 
individual, but the Man in whom they all are rep* 
resented. Therefore, in spite of their sufferings, 
they enjoy being overwhelmed by his exaggerations 
and dominated by a will fearfully evident owing 
to its magnificent caprice in inflicting injuries. 
They symbolize their idea of unlimited wilfulness 
in their gods by ascribing to them physical and 
moral enormities in their anatomical idiosyncracy 
and virulent vindictiveness crying for the blood of 
victims, in personal preferences indiscriminate in 
the choice of recipients and methods of rewards 
and punishments. In fact, these gods could never 
be blamed for the least wavering in their conduct 
owing to any scrupulousness accompanied by the 
emotion of pity so often derided as sentimentalism 
by virile intellects of the present day. 

However crude all this may be, it proves that 
Man has a feeling that he is truly represented in 
something which exceeds himself. He is aware 
that he is not imperfect, but incomplete. He knows 
that in himself some meaning has yet to be real- 
ized. We do not feel the wonder of it, because it 
seems so natural to us that barbarism in Man is 
not absolute, that its limits are like the limits of 
the horizon. The call is deep in his mind the 

57 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

call of his own inner truth, which is beyond his 
direct knowledge and analytical logic. And indi- 
viduals are born who have no doubt of the truth 
of this transcendental Man. As our consciousness 
more and more comprehends it, new valuations are 
developed in us, new depths and delicacies of de- 
light, a sober dignity of expression through elimi- 
nation of tawdriness, of frenzied emotions, of all 
violence in shape, colour, words, or behaviour, of 
the dark mentality of Ku-Klux-Klanism. 

Each age reveals its personality as dreamer in 
its great expressions that carry it across surging 
centuries to the continental plateau of permanent 
human history. These expressions may not be con- 
sciously religious, but indirectly they belong to 
Man's religion. For they are the outcome of the 
consciousness of the greater Man in the individual 
men of the race. This consciousness finds its man- 
ifestation in science, philosophy and the arts, in 
social ethics, in all things that carry their ultimate 
value in themselves. These are truly spiritual and 
they should all be consciously co-ordinated in one 
great religion of Man, representing his ceaseless 
endeavour to reach the perfect in great thoughts 
and deeds and dreams, in immortal symbols of art, 
revealing his aspiration for rising in dignity of 
being. 

I had the occasion to visit the ruins of ancient 
Rome, the relics of human yearning towards the 
58 



THE SURPLUS IN MAN 

immense, the sight of which teases our mind out 
of thought. Does it not prove that in the vision 
of a great Roman Empire the creative imagination 
of the people rejoiced in the revelation of its trans- 
cendental humanity? It was the idea of an Empire 
which was not merely for opening an outlet to the 
pent-up pressure of over-population, or widening 
its field of commercial profit, but which existed as 
a concrete representation of the majesty of Roman 
personality, the soul of the people dreaming of a 
world-wide creation of its own for a fit habitation 
of the Ideal Man. It was Rome's titanic endeavour 
to answer the eternal question as to what Man 
truly was, as Man. And any answer given in earn- 
est falls within the realm of religion, whatever 
may be its character ; and this answer, in its truth, 
belongs not only to any particular people but to 
us all. It may be that Rome did not give the most 
perfect answer possible when she fought for her 
place as a world-builder of human history, but she 
revealed the marvellous vigour of the indomitable 
human spirit which could say, "Bhumaiva suk- 
hamf "Greatness is happiness itself". Her Em- 
pire has been sundered and shattered, but her faith 
in the sublimity of man still persists in one of the 
vast strata of human geology. And this faith was 
the true spirit of her religion, which had been dim 
in the tradition of her formal theology, merely 
supplying her with an emotional pastime and not 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

with spiritual inspiration. In fact this theology 
fell far below her personality, and for that reason 
it went against her religion, whose mission was to 
reveal her humanity on the background of the 
eternal. Let us seek the religion of this and other 
people not in their gods but in Man, who dreamed 
of his own infinity and majestically worked for all 
time, defying danger and death. 

Since the dim nebula of consciousness in Life's 
world became intensified into a centre of self in 
Man, his history began to unfold its rapid chap- 
ters ; for it is the history of his strenuous answers 
in various forms to the question rising from this 
conscious self of his, "What am I?" Man is not 
happy or contented as the animals are ; for his hap- 
piness and his peace depend upon the truth of his 
answer. The animal attains his success in a physi- 
cal sufficiency that satisfies his nature. When a 
crocodile finds no obstruction in behaving like an 
orthodox crocodile he grins and grows and has no 
cause to complain. It is truism to say that Man 
also must behave like a man in order to find his 
truth. But he is sorely puzzled and asks in be- 
wilderment: "What is it to be like a man? What 
am I?" It is not left to the tiger to discover what 
is his own nature as a tiger, nor, for the matter of 
that, to choose a special colour for his coat accord- 
ing to his taste. 

But Man has taken centuries to discuss the ques- 
60 



THE SURPLUS IN MAN 

tion of his own true nature and has not yet come 
to a conclusion. He has been building up elab- 
orate religions to convince himself, against his nat- 
ural inclinations, of the paradox that he is not what 
he is but something greater. What is significant 
about these efforts is the fact that in order to know 
himself truly Man in his religion cultivates the 
vision of a Being who exceeds him in truth and 
with whom also he has his kinship. These religions 
differ in details and often in their moral signifi- 
cance, but they have a common tendency. In them 
men seek their own supreme value, which they call 
divine, in some personality anthropomorphic in 
character. The Mind, which is abnormally scien- 
tific, scoffs at this ; but it should know that religion 
is not essentially cosmic or even abstract; it finds 
itself when it touches the Brahma in man; other- 
wise it has no justification to exist. 

It must be admitted that such a human element 
introduces into our religion a mentality that often 
has its danger in aberrations that are intellectually 
blind, morally reprehensible and aesthetically 
repellent But these are wrong answers; they dis- 
tort the truth of man and, like all mistakes in 
sociology, in economics or politics, they have to 
be fought against and overcome. Their truth has 
to be judged by the standard of human perfection 
and not by some arbitrary injunction that refuses 
to be confirmed by the tribunal of the human con- 

6* 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

science. And great religions are the outcome of 
great revolutions in this direction causing funda- 
mental changes of our attitude. These religions 
invariably made their appearance as a protest 
against the earlier creeds which had been unhu- 
man, where ritualistic observances had become 
more important and outer compulsions more im- 
perious. These creeds were, as I have said before, 
cults of power; they had their value for us, not 
helping us to become perfect through truth, but to 
grow formidable through possessions and magic 
control of the deity. 

But possibly I am doing injustice to our ances- 
tors. It is more likely that they worshipped power 
not merely because of its utility, but because they, 
in their way, recognized it as truth with which 
their own power had its communication and in 
which it found its fulfilment They must have nat- 
urally felt that this power was the power of will 
behind nature, and not some impersonal insanity 
that unaccountably always stumbled upon correct 
results. For it would have been the greatest depth 
of imbecility on their part had they brought their 
homage to an abstraction, mindless, heartless and 
purposeless; in fact, infinitely below them in its 
manifestation. 



CHAPTER IV 
SPIRITUAL UNION 

WHEN Man's preoccupation with the means of 
livelihood became less insistent he had the leisure 
to come to the mystery of his own self, and could 
not help feeling that the truth of his personality 
had both its relationship and its perfection in an 
endless world of humanity. His religion, which in 
the beginning had its cosmic background of power, 
came to a higher stage when it found its back- 
ground in the human truth of personality. It must 
not be thought that in this channel it was narrow- 
ing the range of our consciousness of the infinite. 
The negative idea of the infinite is merely an 
indefinite enlargement of the limits of things; in 
fact, a perpetual postponement of infinitude. I am 
told that mathematics has come to the conclusion 
that our world belongs to a space which is limited. 
It does not make us feel disconsolate. We do not 
miss very much and need not have a low opinion 
of space even if a straight line cannot remain 
straight and has an eternal tendency to come back 
to the point from which it started. In the Hindu 
Scripture the universe is described as an egg; that 

63 



THB RELIGION OF MAN 

is to say, for the human mind it has its circular 
shell of limitation. The Hindu Scripture goes still 
further and says that time also is not continuous 
and our world repeatedly comes to an end to begin 
its cycle once again. In other words, in the region 
of time and space infinity consists of ever-revolving 
finitude. 

But the positive aspect of the infinite is in 
advaitam, in an absolute unity, in which compre- 
hension of the multitude is not as in an outer re- 
ceptacle but as in an inner perfection that per- 
meates and exceeds its contents, like the beauty in 
a lotus which is ineffably more than all the con- 
stituents of the flower. It is not the magnitude of 
extension but an intense quality of harmony which 
evokes in us the positive sense of the infinite in our 
joy, in our love. For advaitam is anandam; the 
infinite One is infinite Love. For those among 
whom the spiritual sense is dull, the desire for 
realization is reduced to physical possession, an 
actual grasping in space. This longing for magni- 
tude becomes not an aspiration towards the great, 
but a mania for the big. But true spiritual realiza- 
tion is not through augmentation of possession in 
dimension or number. The truth that is infinite 
dwells in the ideal of unity which we find in the 
deeper relatedness. This truth of realization is not 
in space, it can only be realized in one's own inner 
spirit 

64 



SPIRITUAL UNION 

Ekadhaivanudrashtavyam etat aprameyam dhruvam. 
(This infinite and eternal has to be known as One.) 

Para akasat aja atma "this birthless spirit is 
beyond space". For it is Purushahj it is the 
"Person". 

The special mental attitude which India has in 
her religion is made clear by the word Yoga, whose 
meaning is to effect union. Union has its signifi- 
cance not in the realm of to have, but in that of 
to be. To gain truth is to admit its separateness, 
but to be true is to become one with truth. Some 
religions, which deal with our relationship with 
God, assure us of reward if that relationship be 
kept true. This reward has an objective value. It 
gives us some reason outside ourselves for pursuing 
the prescribed path. We have such religions also 
in India. But those that have attained a greater 
height aspire for their fulfilment in union with 
Narayana, the supreme Reality of Man, which is 
divine. 

Our union with this spirit is not to be attained 
through the mind. For our mind belongs to the 
department of economy in the human organism. 
It carefully husbands our consciousness for its own 
range of reason, within which to permit our rela- 
tionship with the phenomenal world* But it is the 
object of Yoga to help us to transcend the limits 
built up by Mind. On the occasions when these 
are overcome, our inner self is filled with joy, 

65 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

which indicates that through such freedom we 
come into touch with the Reality that is an end in 
itself and therefore is bliss. 

Once man had his vision of the infinite in the 
universal Light, and he offered his worship to the 
sun. He also offered his service to the fire with 
oblations. Then he felt the infinite in Life, which 
is Time in its creative aspect, and he said, "Yat 
*kincha yadidam sarvam prana ejati nihsritam/* "all 
that there is comes out of life and vibrates in it". 
He was sure of it, being conscious of Life's mystery 
immediately in himself as the principle of purpose, 
as the organized will, the source of all his activi- 
ties. His interpretation of the ultimate character 
of truth relied upon the suggestion that Life had 
brought to him, and not the non-living which is 
dumb. And then he came deeper into his being 
and said "Raso vai sah" 9 "the infinite is love itself ", 
the eternal spirit of joy. His religion, which is 
in his realization of the infinite, began its journey 
from the impersonal dyaus, "the sky", wherein 
light had its manifestation; then came to Life, 
which represented the force of self-creation in 
time, and ended in purushak, the "Person", in 
whom dwells timeless love. It said, "Tarn vedyam 
purusham ve-dah", "Know him the Person who is 
to be realized", "Yatha ma vo mrityug parivya~ 
thah" "So that death may not cause you sorrow". 
For this Person is deathless in whom the individual 

66 



S PIRITUAL UNION 

person has his immortal truth. Of him it is said : 
"Esha devo uisvakarma mahatma sada jananam 
hridaye sannivishatah". "This is the divine being, 
the world-worker, who is the Great Soul ever 
dwelling inherent in the hearts of all people." 

Ya etad vidur amritas te bhavanti. "Those who 
realize him, transcend the limits of mortality" 
not in duration of time, but in perfection of truth. 

Our union with a Being whose activity is world- 
wide and who dwells in the heart of humanity 
cannot be a passive one. In order to be united with 
Him we have to divest our work of selfishness and 
become visvakarma, "the world-worker", we must 
work for all. When I use the words "for all", I 
do not mean for a countless number of individuals. 
All work that is good, however small in extent, is 
universal in character. Such work makes for a 
realization of Fisvakarma, "the World-Worker" 
who works for all. In order to be one with this 
Mahatma, "the Great Soul", one must cultivate 
the greatness of soul which identifies itself with 
the soul of all peoples and not merely with that of 
one's own. This helps us to understand what 
Buddha has described as Brahmavihara, "living in 
the infinite". He says: 

"Do not deceive each other, do not despise any- 
body anywhere, never in anger wish anyone to suf- 
fer through your body, words or thoughts. Like a 
mother maintaining her only son with her own 

67 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

life, keep thy immeasurable loving thought for all 
creatures. 

"Above thee, below thee, on all sides of thee, 
keep on all the world thy sympathy and immeas- 
urable loving thought which is without obstruc- 
tion, without any wish to injure, without enmity. 

"To be dwelling in such contemplation while 
standing, walking, sitting or lying down, until 
sleep overcomes thee, is called living in Brahma". 

This proves that Buddha's idea of the infinite 
was not the idea of a spirit of an unbounded cos- 
mic activity, but the infinite whose meaning is in 
the positive ideal of goodness and love, which 
cannot be otherwise than human. By being chari- 
table, good and loving, you do not realize the 
infinite, in the stars or rocks, but the infinite re- 
vealed in Man. Buddha's teaching speaks of Nir- 
vana as the highest end. To understand its real 
character we have to know the path of its attain- 
ment, which is not merely through the negation of 
evil thoughts and deeds but through the elimination 
of all limits to love. It must mean the sublimation 
of self in a truth which is love itself, which unites 
in its bosom all those to whom we must offer our 
sympathy and service. 

When somebody asked Buddha about the orig- 
inal cause of existence he sternly said that such 
questioning was futile and irrelevant Did he not 
mean that it went beyond the human sphere as 

68 



SPIRITUAL UNION 

our goal that though such a question might 
legitimately be asked in the region of cosmic phi- 
losophy or science, it had nothing to do with man's 
dharma, man's inner nature, in which love finds 
its utter fulfilment, in which all his sacrifice ends 
in an eternal gain, in which the putting out of the 
lamplight is no loss because there is the all-pervad- 
ing light of the sun. And did those who listened 
to the great teacher merely hear his words and 
understand his doctrines? No, they directly felt 
in him what he was preaching, in the living lan- 
guage of his own person, the ultimate truth of 
Man. 

It is significant that all great religions have their 
historic origin in persons who represented in their 
life a truth which was not cosmic and unmoral, 
but human and good. They rescued religion from 
the magic stronghold of demon force and brought 
it into the inner heart of humanity, into a fulfil- 
ment not confined to some exclusive good fortune 
of the individual but to the welfare of all men. 
This was not for the spiritual ecstasy of lonely 
souls, but for the spiritual emancipation of all 
races. They came as the messengers of Man to 
men of all countries and spoke of the salvation that 
could only be reached by the perfecting of our 
relationship with Man the Eternal, Man the 
Divine. Whatever might be their doctrines of 
God, or some dogmas that they borrowed from 

69 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

their own time and tradition, their life and teach- 
ing had the deeper implication of a Being who is 
the infinite in Man, the Father, the Friend, the 
Lover, whose service must be realized through 
serving all mankind. For the God in Man de- 
pends upon men's service and men's love for his 
own love's fulfilment 

The question was once asked in the shade of 
the ancient forest of India : 

Kasmai devaya havisha vidhema? 
"Who is the God to whom we must bring our oblation?" 

That question is still ours, and to answer it we 
must know in the depth of our love and the 
maturity of our wisdom what man is know him 
not only in sympathy but in science, in the joy of 
creation and in the pain of heroism ; tena tyaktena 
bhunjitha, "enjoy him through sacrifice" the sac- 
rifice that comes of love ; ma gridhah, "covet not" ; 
for greed diverts your mind to that illusion in you 
which is your separate self and diverts it from 
truth in which you represent the parama purushah f 
"the supreme Person". 

Our greed diverts our consciousness to materials 
away from that supreme value of truth which is 
the quality of the universal being. The gulf thus 
created by the receding stream of the soul we try 
to replenish with a continuous stream of wealth, 
which may have the power to fill but not the power 

70 



SPIRITUAL UNION 

to unite and recreate. Therefore the gap is danger- 
ously concealed under the glittering quicksand oi 
things, which by their own weight cause a sudden 
subsidence while we are in the depths of sleep. 

The real tragedy, however, does not lie in the 
risk of our material security but in the obscuration 
of Man himself in the human world. In the crea- 
tive activities of his soul Man realizes his sur- 
roundings as his larger self, instinct with his own 
life and love. But in his ambition he deforms and 
defiles it with the callous handling of his voracity. 
His world of utility assuming a gigantic propor- 
tion, reacts upon his inner nature and hynotically 
suggests to him a scheme of the universe which is 
an abstract system. In such a world there can be 
no question of mukti, the freedom in truth, because 
it is a solidly solitary fact, a cage with no sky 
beyond it. In all appearance our world is a closed 
world of hard facts ; it is like a seed with its tough 
cover. But within this enclosure is working our 
silent cry of life for mukti, even when its possibil- 
ity is darkly silent When some huge overgrown 
temptation tramples into stillness this living aspi- 
ration then does civilization die like a seed thai 
has lost its urging for germination. And this mukh 
is in the truth that dwells in the ideal man. 



CHAPTER V 
THE PROPHET 

IN my introduction I have stated that the universe 
to which we are related through our sense percep- 
tion, reason or imagination, is necessarily Man's 
universe- Our physical self gains strength and 
success through its correct relationship in knowl- 
edge and practice with its physical aspect. The 
mysteries of all its phenomena are generalized by 
man as laws which have their harmony with his 
rational mind. In the primitive period of our his- 
tory Man's physical dealings with the external 
world were most important for the maintenance 
of his life, the life which he has in common with 
other creatures, and therefore the first expression 
of his religion was physical it came from his 
sense of wonder and awe at the manifestations of 
power in Nature and his attempt to win it for him- 
self and his tribe by magical incantations and rites. 
In other words his religion tried to gain a perfect 
communion with the mysterious magic of Nature's 
forces through his own power of magic. Then came 
the time when he had the freedom of leisure to 
divert his mind to his inner nature and the mystery 
72 



THE PROPHET 

of his own personality gained for him its highest 
importance. And instinctively his personal self 
sought its fulfilment in the truth of a higher per- 
sonality. In the history of religion our realization 
of its nature has gone through many changes even 
like our realization of the nature of the material 
world. Our method of worship has followed the 
course of such changes, but its evolution has been 
from the external and magical towards the moral 
and spiritual significance. 

The first profound record of the change of direc- 
tion in Man's religion we find in the message of 
the great prophet in Persia, Zarathustra, and as 
usual it was accompanied by a revolution. In a 
later period the same thing happened in India, 
and it is evident that the history of this religious 
struggle lies embedded in the epic Mahabharata 
associated with the name of Krishna and the teach- 
ings of Bhagavadgita. 

The most important of all outstanding facts of 
Iranian history is the religious reform brought 
about by Zarathustra. There can be hardly any 
question that he was the first man we know who 
gave a definitely moral character and direction to 
religion and at the same time preached the doctrine 
of monotheism which offered an eternal founda- 
tion of reality to goodness as an ideal of perfection. 
All religions of the primitive type try to keep men 
bound with regulations of external observances. 

73 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

Zarathustra was the greatest of all the pioneer 
prophets who showed the path of freedom to man, 
the freedom of moral choice, the freedom from the 
blind obedience to unmeaning injunctions, the 
freedom from the multiplicity of shrines which 
draw our worship away from the single-minded 
chastity of devotion. 

To most of us it sounds like a truism to-day 
when we are told that the moral goodness of a 
deed comes from the goodness of intention. But 
it is a truth which once came to Man like a revela- 
tion of light in the darkness and it has not yet 
reached all the obscure corners of humanity. We 
still see around us men who fearfully follow, hop- 
ing thereby to gain merit, the path of blind formal- 
ism, which has no living moral source in the mind. 
This will make us understand the greatness of 
Zarathustra. Though surrounded by believers in 
magical rites, he proclaimed in those dark days of 
unreason that religion has its truth in its moral 
significance, not in external practices of imagin- 
ary value; that its value is in upholding man in 
his life of good thoughts, good words and good 
deeds. 

"The prophet' *, says Dr. Geiger, "qualifies his 
religion as 'unheard of words' (Yasna 31. i) or as 
a "mystery" (Y. 48. 3.) because he himself regards 
it as a religion quite distinct from the belief of the 
people hitherto. The revelation he announces is 

74 



THE PROPHET 

to him no longer a matter of sentiment, no longer 
a merely undefined presentiment and conception 
of the Godhead, but a matter of intellect, of spirit- 
ual perception and knowledge. This is of great 
importance, for there are probably not many re- 
ligions of so high antiquity in which this funda- 
mental doctrine, that religion is a knowledge or 
learning, a science of what is true, is so precisely 
declared as in the tenets of the Gathas. It is the 
unbelieving that are unknowing; on the contrary, 
the believing are learned because they have pene- 
trated into this knowledge." 

It may be incidentally mentioned here, as show- 
ing the parallel to this in the development of In- 
dian religious thought, that all through the Upan- 
ishad spiritual truth is termed with a repeated 
emphasis, vidya, knowledge, . which has for its 
opposite avidya, acceptance of error born of un- 
reason. 

The outer expression of truth reaches its white 
light of simplicity through its inner realization. 
True simplicity is the physiognomy of perfection. 
In the primitive stages of spiritual growth, when 
man is dimly aware of the mystery of the infinite 
in his life and the world, when he does not fully 
know the inward character of his relationship with 
this truth, his first feeling is either of dread, or of 
greed of gain. This drives him into wild exag- 
geration in worship, frenzied convulsions of cere- 

75 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

monialism. But in Zarathustra's teachings, which 
are best reflected in his Gathas, we have hardly 
any mention of the ritualism of worship. Con- 
duct and its moral motives have there received 
almost the sole attention. 

The orthodox Persian form of worship in an- 
cient Iran included animal sacrifices and offering 
of haema to the daevas. That all these should be 
discountenanced by Zarathustra not only shows 
his courage, but the strength of his realization of 
the Supreme Being as spirit. We are told that it 
has been mentioned by Plutarch that "Zarathustra 
taught the Persians to sacrifice to Ahura Mazda, 
Vows and thanksgivings' ". The distance between 
faith in the efficiency of the bloodstained magi- 
cal rites, and cultivation of the moral and spiritual 
ideals as the true form of worship is immense. It 
is amazing to see how Zarathustra was the first 
among men who crossed this distance with a cer- 
tainty of realization which imparted such a fer- 
vour of faith to his life and his words. The truth 
which filled his mind was not a thing which he 
borrowed from books or received from teachers; 
he did not come to it by following a prescribed 
path of tradition, but it came to him as an illu- 
mination of his entire life, almost like a commu- 
nication of his universal self to his personal self, 
and he proclaimed this utmost immediacy of his 
knowledge when he said: 

76 



THE PROPHET 

When I conceived of Thee, O Mazda, as the very First and 
the Last, as the most Adorable One, as the Father of the Good 
Thought, as the Creator of Truth and Right, as the Lord Judge 
of our actions in life, then I made a place for Thee in my very 
eyes. Yasna 31,8 (Translation D. J. Irani). 

It was the direct stirring of his soul which made 
him say: 

Thus do I announce the Greatest of all ! I weave my songs of 
praise for him through Truth, helpful and beneficent of all that 
live. Let Ahura Mazda listen to them with his Holy Spirit, 
for the Good Mind instructed me to adore Him; by his wis- 
dom let Him teach me about what is best. Yasna 45.6 (Trans- 
lation D. J, Irani). 

The truth which is not reached through the ana- 
lytical process of reasoning and does not depend for 
proof on some corroboration of outward facts or 
the prevalent faith and practice of the people 
the truth which comes like an inspiration out of 
context with its surroundings brings with it an 
assurance that it has been sent from an inner source 
of divine wisdom, that the individual who has 
realized it is specially inspired and therefore has 
his responsibility as a direct medium of communi- 
cation of Divine Truth. 

As long as man deals with his God as the dis- 
penser of benefits only to those of His worshippers 
who know the secret of propitiating Him, he tries 
to keep Him for his own self or for the tribe to 
which he belongs* But directly the moral nature, 

77 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

that is to say, the humanity of God is apprehended, 
man realizes his divine self in his religion, his God 
is no longer an outsider to be propitiated for a 
special concession. The consciousness of God 
transcends the limitations of race and gathers to- 
gether all human beings within one spiritual circle 
of union. Zarathustra was the first prophet who 
emancipated religion from the exclusive narrow- 
ness of the tribal God, the God of a chosen people, 
and offered it the universal Man, This is a great 
fact in the history of religion. The Master said, 
when the enlightenment came to him : 

Verily I believed Thee, O Ahura Mazda, to be the Supreme 
Benevolent Providence, when Sraosha came to me with the 
Good Mind, when first I received and became wise with your 
words. And though the task be difficult, though woe may come 
to me, I shall proclaim to all mankind Thy message, which 
Thou declarest to be the best. Yasna 43 (Translation D. J. 
Irani). 

He prays to Mazda : 

This I ask Thee, tell me truly, O Ahura, the religion that 
is best for all mankind, the religion, which based on truth, 
should prosper in all that is ours, the religion which establishes 
our actions in order and justice by the Divine songs of Perfect 
Piety, which has for its intelligent desire of desires, the desire 
for Thee, O Mazda* Yasna 44.10 (Translation D, J. Irani). 

With the undoubted assurance and hope of one 
who has got a direct vision of Truth he speaks to 
the world ; 
78 



THE PROPHET 

Hearken unto me, Ye who come from near and from far! 
Listen for I shall speak forth now; ponder well over all things, 
weigh my words with care and clear thought. Never shall the 
false teacher destroy this world for a second time, for his tongue 
stands mute, his creed exposed. Yasna 45.1 (Translation D. 
J. Irani), 

I think it can be said without doubt that such a 
high conception of religion, uttered in such a 
clear note of affirmation with a sure note of con- 
viction that it is a truth of the ultimate ideal of 
perfection which must be revealed to all humanity, 
even at the cost of martyrdom, is unique in the 
history of any religion belonging to such a remote 
dawn of civilization. 

There was a time when, along with other Aryan 
peoples, the Persian also worshipped the elemental 
gods of Nature, whose favour was not to be won 
by any moral duty performed or service of love. 
That in fact was the crude beginning of the scien- 
tific spirit trying to unlock the hidden sources of 
power in nature. But through it all there must 
have been some current of deeper desire, which 
constantly contradicted the cult of power and in- 
dicated worlds of inner good, infinitely more 
precious than material gain. Its voice was not 
strong at first nor was it heeded by the majority 
of the people ; but its influences, like the life within 
the seed, were silently working. 

Then comes the great prophet; and in his life 
and mind the hidden fire of truth suddenly bursts 

79 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

out into flame. The best in the people works for 
long obscure ages in hints and whispers till it finds 
its voice which can never again be silenced. For 
that voice becomes the voice of Man, no longer 
confined to a particular time or people. It works 
across intervals of silence and oblivion, depression 
and defeat, and comes out again with its conquer- 
ing call. It is a call to the fighter, the fighter 
against untruth, against all that lures away man's 
spirit from its high mission of freedom into the 
meshes of materialism. 

Zarathustra's voice is still a living voice, not 
alone a matter of academic interest for historical 
scholars who deal with the facts of the past; nor 
merely the guide of a small community of men in 
the daily details of their life. Rather, of all teach- 
ers Zarathustra was the first who addressed his 
words to all humanity, regardless of distance of 
space or time. He was not like a cave-dweller who, 
by some chance of friction, had lighted a lamp 
and, fearing lest it could not be shared with all, 
secured it with a miser's care for his own domestic 
use. But he was the watcher in the night, who 
stood on the lonely peak facing the East and broke 
out singing the paeans of light to the sleeping world 
when the sun came out on the brim of the horizon. 
The Sun of Truth is for all, he declared its light 
is to unite the far and the near. Such a message 

So 



THE PROPHET 

always arouses the antagonism of those whose 
habits have become nocturnal, whose vested in- 
terest is in the darkness. And there was a bitter 
fight in the lifetime of the prophet between his 
followers and the others who were addicted to the 
ceremonies that had tradition on their side, and 
not truth. 

We are told that "Zarathustra was descended 
from a kingly family", and also that the first con- 
verts to his doctrine were of the ruling caste. But 
the priesthood, "the Kavis and the Karapans, often 
succeeded in bringing the rulers over to their side". 
So we find that, in this fight, the princes of the 
land divided themselves into two opposite parties 
as we find in India in the Kurukshetra War. 

It has been a matter of supreme satisfaction to 
me to realize that the purification of faith which 
was the mission of the great teachers in both com- 
munities, in Persia and in India, followed a similar 
line. We have already seen how Zarathustra spir- 
itualized the meaning of sacrifice, which in former 
days consisted in external ritualism entailing 
bloodshed. The same thing we find in the Gita, 
in which the meaning of the word Yajna has been 
translated into a higher significance than it had 
in its crude form. 

According to the Gita, the deeds that are done 
solely for the sake of self fetter our soul; the 

81 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

disinterested action, performed for the sake of the 
giving up of self, is the true sacrifice. For creation 
itself comes of the self-sacrifice of Brahma, which 
has no other purpose; and therefore, in our per- 
formance of the duty which is self-sacrificing, we 
realize the spirit of Brahma. 

The Ideal of Zoroastrian Persia is distinctly 
ethical. It sends its call to men to work together 
with the Eternal Spirit of Good in spreading and 
maintaining Kshathra, the kingdom of righteous- 
ness, against all attacks of evil. This ideal gives 
us our place as collaborators with God in distribu- 
ting his blessings over the world. 

Clear is this to the man of wisdom as to the man who care- 
fully thinks; 

He who upholds Truth with all the might of his power, 
He who upholds Truth the utmost in his words and deed, 
He, indeed, is Thy most valued helper, O Mazda Ahura! 
Ifasna 31.22 (Translation D. J. Irani) 

It is a fact of supreme moment to us that the 
human world is in an incessant state of war be- 
tween that which will save us and that which will 
drag us into the abyss of disaster. Our one hope 
lies in the fact that Ahura Mazda is on our side 
if we choose the right course. 

The active heroic aspect of this religion reflects 
the character of the people themselves, who later 
on spread conquests far and wide and built up 
great empires by the might of their sword. They 

82 



THE PROP HEX 

accepted this world in all seriousness. They had 
their zest in life and confidence in their own 
strength. They belonged to the western half of 
Asia and their great influence travelled through 
the neighbouring civilization of Judaea towards 
the Western Continent Their ideal was the ideal 
of the fighter. By force of will and deeds of sacri- 
fice they were to conquer haurvatat welfare in 
this world, and ameratat immortality in the 
other. This is the best ideal in the West, the great 
truth of fight. For paradise has to be gained 
through conquest. That sacred task is for the 
heroes, who are to take the right side in the battle, 
and the right weapons. 

There was a heroic period in Indian history, 
when this holy spirit of fight was invoked by the 
greatest poet of the Sanskrit Literature. It is not 
to be wondered at that his ideal of fight was simi- 
lar to the ideal that Zarathustra preached. The 
problem with which his poem starts is that para- 
dise has to be rescued by the hero from its invasion 
by evil beings. This is the eternal problem of 
man. The evil spirit is exultant and paradise is 
lost when Sati, the spirit of Sat (Reality), is dis- 
united from Siva, the Spirit of Goodness. The 
Real and the Good must meet in wedlock if the 
hero is to take his birth in order to save all that is 
true and beautiful. When the union was attempted 
through the agency of passion, the anger of God 

83 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

was aroused and the result was a tragedy of dis- 
appointment At last, by purification through 
penance, the wedding was effected, the hero was 
born who fought against the forces of evil and 
paradise was regained. This is a poem of the ideal 
of the moral fight, whose first great prophet was 
Zarathustra. 

We must admit that this ideal has taken a 
stronger hold upon the life of man in the West 
than in India the West, where the vigour of life 
receives its fullest support from Nature and the 
excess of energy finds its delight in ceaseless 
activities. But everywhere in the world, the un- 
realized ideal is a force of disaster. It gathers its 
strength in secret even in the heart of prosperity, 
kills the soul first and then drives men to their 
utter ruin. When the aggressive activity of will, 
which naturally accompanies physical vigour, fails 
to accept the responsibility of its ideal, it breeds 
unappeasable greed for material gain, leads to 
unmeaning slavery of things, till amidst a raging 
conflagration of clashing interests the tower of am- 
bition topples down to the dust 

And for this, the prophetic voice of Zarathustra 
reminds us that all human activities must have an 
ideal goal, which is an end to itself, and therefore 
is peace, is immortality. It is the House of Songs, 
the realization of love, which comes through 
strenuous service of goodness. 

84 



THE PROPHET 

All the joys of life which Thou boldest, O Mazda, the joys 
that were, the joys that are, and the joys that shall be, Thou 
dost apportion all in Thy love for us. 

We, on the other hand, in the tropical East, who 
have no surplus of physical energy inevitably over- 
flowing in outer activities, also have our own ideal 
given to us. Our course is not so much through the 
constant readiness to fight in the battle of the good 
and evil, as through the inner concentration of 
mind, through pacifying the turbulence of desire, 
to reach that serenity of the infinite in our being 
which leads to the harmony in the all. Here, like- 
wise, the unrealized ideal pursues us with its 
malediction. As the activities of a vigorous vitality 
may become unmeaning, and thereupon smother 
the soul with a mere multiplicity of material, so 
the peace of the extinguished desire may become 
the peace of death ; and the inner world, in which 
we would dwell, become a world of incoherent 
dreams. 

The negative process of curbing desire and con- 
trolling passion is only for saving our energy from 
dissipation and directing it into its proper chan- 
nel. If the path of the channel we have chosen 
runs withinwards, it also must have its expression 
in action, not for any ulterior reward, but for the 
proving of its own truth. If the test of action is 
removed, if our realization grows purely sub j Ac- 
tive, then it may become like travelling in a desert 

9s 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

in the night, going round and round the same cir- 
cle, imagining all the while that we are following 
the straight path of purpose. 

This is why the prophet of the Gita in the first 
place says: 

Who so forsakes all desires and goeth onwards free from yearn- 
ings, selfless and without egoism, he goeth to peace. 

But he does not stop here, he adds : 

Surrendering all actions to me, with Thy thoughts resting on 
the Supreme Self, from hope and egoism freed, and of mental 
fever cured, engage in battle. 

Action there must be, fight we must have not 
the fight of passion and desire, or arrogant self- 
assertion, but of duty done in the presence of the 
Eternal, the disinterested fight of the serene soul 
that helps us in our union with the Supreme 
Being. 

In this, the teaching of Zarathustra, his sacred 
gospel of fight finds its unity. The end of the fight 
he preaches is in the House of Songs, in the 
symphony of spiritual union. He sings : 

Ye, who wish to be allied to the Good Mind, to be friend with 
Truth, Ye who desire to sustain the Holy Cause, down with 
all anger and violence, away with all ill-will and strife! Such 
benevolent men, O Mazda, I shall take to the House of Songs ! 

The detailed facts of history, which are the battle- 
ground of the learned, are not my province. I am 
86 



THE PROP HEX 

a singer myself, and I am ever attracted by the 
strains that come forth from the House of Songs. 
When the streams of ideals that flow from the 
East and from the West mingle their murmur in 
some profound harmony of meaning it delights 
my soul. 

In the realm of material property men are jeal- 
ously proud of their possessions and their exclusive 
rights. Unfortunately there are quarrelsome men 
who bring that pride of acquisition, the worldli- 
ness of sectarianism, even into the region of spirit- 
ual truth. Would it be sane, if the man in China 
should lay claim to the ownership of the sun be- 
cause he can prove the earlier sunrise in his own 
country? 

For myself, I feel proud whenever I find that 
the best in the world have their fundamental 
agreement. It is their function to unite and to 
dissuade the small from bristling-up, like prickly 
shrubs, in the pride of the minute points of their 
differences, only to hurt one another. 



87 



CHAPTER VI 
THE VISION 

I HOPE that my readers have understood, as they 
have read these pages, that I am neither a scholar 
nor a philosopher. They should not expect from 
me fruits gathered from a wide field of studies or 
wealth brought by a mind trained in the difficult 
exploration of knowledge. Fortunately for me the 
subject of religion gains in interest and value by 
the experience of the individuals who earnestly 
believe in its truth. This is my apology for offer- 
ing a part of the story of my life which has always 
realized its religion through a process of growth 
and not by the help of inheritance or importation. 

Man has made the entire geography of the earth 
his own, ignoring the boundaries of climate ; for, 
unlike the lion and the reindeer, he has the power 
to create his special skin and temperature, includ- 
ing his unscrupulous power of borrowing the skins 
of the indigenous inhabitants and misappropriat- 
ing their fats. 

His kingdom is also continually extending in 
time through a great surplus in his power of mem- 
ory, to which is linked his immense facility of bor- 
88 



V1OJ.V/JN 



rowing the treasure of the past from all quarters 
of the world. He dwells in a universe of history, 
in an environment of continuous remembrance. 
The animal occupies time only through the multi- 
plication of its own race, but man through the 
memorials of his mind, raised along the pilgrim- 
age of progress. The stupendousness of his knowl- 
edge and wisdom is due to their roots spreading 
into and drawing sap from the far-reaching area 
of history. 

Man has his other dwelling place in the realm 
of inner realization, in the element of an imma- 
terial value. This is a world where from the sub- 
terranean soil of his mind his consciousness often, 
like a seed, unexpectedly sends up sprouts into the 
heart of a luminous freedom, and the individual 
is made to realize his truth in the universal Man. 
I hope it may prove of interest if I give an account 
of my own personal experience of a sudden spir- 
itual outburst from within me which is like the 
underground current of a perennial stream unex- 
pectedly welling up on the surface. 

I was born in a family which, at that time, was 
earnestly developing a monotheistic religion based 
upon the philosophy of the Upanishad, Somehow 
my mind at first remained coldly aloof, absolutely 
uninfluenced by any religion whatever. It was 
through an idiosyncrasy of my temperament thai 
I refused to accept any religious teaching merelj 

89 



THE RELIGION" OF MAN 

because people in my surroundings believed it to 
be true. I could not persuade myself to imagine 
that I had a religion because everybody whom I 
might trust believed in its value. 

Thus my mind was brought up in an atmos- 
phere of freedom freedom from the dominance 
of any creed that had its sanction in the definite 
authority of some scripture, or in the teaching of 
some organized body of worshippers. And, there- 
fore, the man who questions me has every right to 
distrust my vision and reject my testimony. In 
such a case, the authority of some particular book 
venerated by a large number of men may have 
greater weight than the assertion of an individ- 
ual, and therefore I never claim any right to 
preach. 

When I look back upon those days, it seems to 
me that unconsciously I followed the path of my 
Vedic ancestors, and was inspired by the tropical 
sky with its suggestion of an uttermost Beyond. 
The wonder of the gathering clouds hanging heavy 
with the unshed rain, of the sudden sweep of 
storms arousing vehement gestures along the line 
of coconut trees, the fierce loneliness of the blaz- 
ing summer noon, the silent sunrise behind the 
dewy veil of autumn morning, kept my mind with 
the intimacy of a pervasive companionship. 

Then came my initiation ceremony of Brahmin- 
hood when the gayatri verse of meditation was 

90 



THE VISION 

given to me, whose meaning, according to the ex- 
planation I had, runs as follows: 

"Let me contemplate the adorable splendour of Him who 
created the earth, the air and the starry spheres, and sends the 
power of comprehension within our minds." 

This produced a sense of serene exaltation in me, 
the daily meditation upon the infinite being which 
unites in one stream of creation my mind and the 
outer world. Though to-day I find no difficulty 
in realizing this being as an infinite personality 
in whom the subject and object are perfectly 
reconciled, at that time the idea to me was vague. 
Therefore the current of feeling that it aroused in 
my mind was indefinite, like the circulation of air 
an atmosphere which needed a definite world to 
complete itself and satisfy me. For it is evident 
that my religion is a poet's religion, and neither 
that of an orthodox man of piety nor that of a 
theologian. Its touch comes to me through the 
same unseen and trackless channel as does the in- 
spiration of my songs. My religious life has fol- 
lowed the same mysterious line of growth as has 
my poetical life. Somehow they are wedded to 
each other and, though their betrothal had a long 
period of ceremony, it was kept secret to me. 

When I was eighteen, a sudden spring breeze 
of religious experience for the first time came to 
my life and passed away leaving in my memory a 

91 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

direct message of spiritual reality. One day while 
I stood watching at early dawn the sun sending 
out its rays from behind the trees, I suddenly felt 
as if some ancient mist had in a moment lifted 
from my sight, and the morning light on the face 
of the world revealed an inner radiance of joy. 
The invisible screen of the commonplace was re- 
moved from all things and all men, and their ulti- 
mate significance was intensified in my mind ; and 
this is the definition of beauty. That which was 
memorable in this experience was its human mes- 
sage, the sudden expansion of my consciousness 
in the super-personal world of man. The poem I 
wrote on the first day of my surprise was named 
"The Awakening of the Waterfall". The water- 
fall, whose spirit lay dormant in its ice-bound iso- 
lation, was touched by the sun and, bursting in 
a cataract of freedom, it found its finality in an 
unending sacrifice, in a continual union with the 
sea. After four days the vision passed away, and 
the lid hung down upon my inner sight In the 
dark, the world once again put on its disguise of 
the obscurity of an ordinary fact 

When I grew older and was employed in a 
responsible work in some villages I took my place 
in a neighbourhood where the current of time ran 
slow and joys and sorrows had their simple and 
elemental shades and lights. The day which had 
its special significance for me came with all its 

92 



THE VISION 

drifting trivialities of the commonplace life. The 
ordinary work of my morning had come to its 
close and before going to take my bath I stood for 
a moment at my window, overlooking a market 
place on the bank of a dry river bed, welcoming 
the first flood of rain along its channel. Suddenly 
I became conscious of a stirring of soul within 
me. My world of experience in a moment seemed 
to become lighted, and facts that were detached 
and dim found a great unity of meaning. The feel- 
ing which I had was like that which a man, grop- 
ing through a fog without knowing his destination, 
might feel when he suddenly discovers that he 
stands before his own house. 

I still remember the day in my childhood when 
I was made to struggle across my lessons in a first 
primer, strewn with isolated words smothered 
under the burden of spelling. The morning hour 
appeared to me like a once-illumined page, grown 
dusty and faded, discoloured into irrelevant marks, 
smudges and gaps, wearisome in its moth-eaten 
meaninglessness. Suddenly I came to a rhymed 
sentence of combined words, which may be trans- 
lated thus "It rains, the leaves tremble". At once 
I came to a world wherein I recovered my full 
meaning. My mind touched the creative realm 
of expression, and at that moment I was no longer 
a mere student with his mind muffled by spelling 
lessons, enclosed by classroom. The rhythmic pic- 

93 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

ture of the tremulous leaves beaten by the rain 
opened before my mind the world which does not 
merely carry information, but a harmony with my 
being. The unmeaning fragments lost their indi- 
vidual isolation and my mind revelled in the unity 
of a vision. In a similar manner, on that morning 
in the village, the facts of my life suddenly ap- 
peared to me in a luminous unity of truth. All 
things that had seemed like vagrant waves were 
revealed to my mind in relation to a boundless sea. 
I felt sure that some Being who comprehended me 
and my world was seeking his best expression in 
all my experiences, uniting them into an ever- 
widening individuality which is a spiritual work 
of art. 

To this Being I was responsible ; for the creation 
in me is his as well as mine. It may be that it was 
the same creative Mind that is shaping the uni- 
verse to its eternal idea; but in me as a person it 
had one of its special centres of a personal relation- 
ship growing into a deepening consciousness. I 
had my sorrows that left their memory in a long 
burning track across my days, but I felt at that 
moment that in them I lent myself to a travail of 
creation that ever exceeded my own personal 
bounds like stars which in their individual fire- 
bursts are lighting the history of the universe. It 
gave me a great joy to feel in my life detachment 
at the idea of a mystery of a meeting of the two in 
94 



THE VISION 

a creative comradeship. I felt that I had found my 
religion at last, the religion of Man, in which the 
infinite became defined in humanity and came 
close to me so as to need my love and co-opera- 
tion. 

This idea of mine found at a later date its ex- 
pression in some of my poems addressed to what I 
called Jivan devata, the Lord of my life. Fully 
aware of my awkwardness in dealing with a for- 
eign language, with some hesitation I give a trans- 
lation, being sure that any evidence revealed 
through the self-recording instrument of poetry is 
more authentic than answers extorted through 
conscious questionings : 

Thou who art the innermost Spirit of my being, 
art thou pleased, 

Lord of my life? 
For I gave to thee my cup 
filled with all the pain and delight 
that the crushed grapes of my heart had surrendered, 
I wove with the rhythm of colours and songs the cover 

for thy bed, 

and with the molten gold of my desires 
I fashioned playthings for thy passing hours. 

I know not why thou chosest me for thy partner, 

Lord of my life ! 

Didst thou store my days and nights, 
my deeds and dreams for the alchemy of thy art, 
and string in the chain of thy music my songs of autumn 

and spring, 
and gather the flowers from my mature moments for thy 

crown? 

95 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

I see thine eyes gazing at the dark of my heart, 

Lord of my life, 

I wonder if my failures and wrongs are forgiven. 
For many were my days without service 
and nights of f orgetf ulness ; 
futile were the flowers that faded in the shade not 

offered to thee. 

Often the tired strings of my lute 
slackened at the strain of thy tunes. 
And often at the ruin of wasted hours 
my desolate evenings were filled with tears. 

But have my days come to their end at last, 

Lord of my life, 

while my arms round thee grow limp, 
my kisses losing their truth? 
Then break up the meeting of this languid day. 
Renew the old in me in fresh forms of delight; 
and let the wedding come once again 
in a new ceremony of life. 

You will understand from this how unconsciously 
I had been travelling towards the realization which 
I stumbled upon in an idle moment on a day in 
July, when morning clouds thickened on the east- 
ern horizon and a caressing shadow lay on the 
tremulous bamboo branches, while an excited 
group of village boys was noisily dragging from 
the bank an old fishing boat ; and I cannot tell how 
at that moment an unexpected train of thoughts 
ran across my mind like a strange caravan carry- 
ing the wealth of an unknown kingdom. 

From my infancy I had a keen sensitiveness 
which kept my mind tingling with consciousness 

96 



THE VISION 

of the world around me, natural and human. We 
had a small garden attached to our house ; it was 
a fairyland to me, where miracles of beauty were 
of everyday occurrence. 

Almost every morning in the early hour of the 
dusk, I would run out from my bed in a great 
hurry to greet the first pink flush of the dawn 
through the shivering branches of the palm trees 
which stood in a line along the garden boundary, 
while the grass glistened as the dew-drops caught 
the earliest tremor of the morning breeze. The 
sky seemed to bring to me the call of a personal 
companionship, and all my heart my whole body 
in fact used to drink in at a draught the over- 
flowing light and peace of those silent hours. I 
was anxious never to miss a single morning, be- 
cause each one was precious to me, more precious 
than gold to the miser. I am certain that I felt a 
larger meaning of my own self when the barrier 
vanished between me and what was beyond myself. 

I had been blessed with that sense of wonder 
which gives a child his right of entry into the 
treasure house of mystery in the depth of exist- 
ence. My studies in the school I neglected, because 
they rudely dismembered me from the context of 
my world and I felt miserable, like a caged rabbit 
in a biological institute. This, perhaps, will ex- 
plain the meaning of my religion. This world was 
living to me, intimately close to my life, perme- 

97 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

ated by a subtle touch of kinship which enhanced 
the value of my own being. 

It is true that this world also has its impersonal 
aspect of truth which is pursued by the man of 
impersonal science. The father has his personal 
relationship with his son ; but as a doctor he may 
detach the fact of a son from that relationship and 
let the child become an abstraction to him, only a 
living body with its physiological functions. It 
cannot be said that if through the constant pursuit 
of his vocations he altogether discards the personal 
element in his relation to his son he reaches a 
greater truth as a doctor than he does as a father. 
The scientific knowledge of his son is information 
about a fact, and not the realization of a truth. In 
his intimate feeling for his son he touches an ulti- 
mate truth the truth of relationship, the truth 
of a harmony in the universe, the fundamental 
principle of creation. It is not merely the number 
of protons and electrons which represents the truth 
of an element; it is the mystery of their relation- 
ship which cannot be analysed. We are made con- 
scious of this truth of relationship immediately 
within us in our love, in our joy; and from this 
experience of ours we have the right to say that 
the Supreme One, who relates all things, compre- 
hends the universe, is all love the love that is the 
highest truth being the most perfect relationship. 
98 



THE VISION 

I still remember the shock of repulsion I re- 
ceived as a child when some medical student 
brought to me a piece of a human windpipe and 
tried to excite my admiration for its structure. He 
tried to convince me that it was the source of the 
beautiful human voice. But I could not bear the 
artisan to occupy the throne that was for the artist 
who concealed the machinery and revealed the 
creation in its ineffable unity. God does not care 
to keep exposed the record of his power written in 
geological inscriptions, but he is proudly glad of 
the expression of beauty which he spreads on the 
green grass, in the flowers, in the play of the col- 
ours on the clouds, in the murmuring music of run- 
ning water. 

I had a vague notion as to who or what it was 
that touched my heart's chords, like the infant 
which does not know its mother's name, or who 
or what she is. The feeling which I always had was 
a deep satisfaction of personality that flowed into 
my nature through living channels of communica- 
tion from all sides. 

I am afraid that the scientist may remind me 
that to lose sight of the distinction between life 
and non-life, the human and the non-human, is a 
sign of the primitive mind. While admitting it, 
let me hope that it is not an utter condemnation, 
but rather the contrary. It may be a true instinct 

99 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

of Science itself, an instinctive logic, which makes 
the primitive mind think that humanity has be- 
come possible as a fact only because of a universal 
human truth which has harmony with its reason, 
with its will. In the details of our universe there 
are some differences that may be described as 
non-human, but not in their essence. The bones 
are different from the muscles, but they are organi- 
cally one in the body. Our feeling of joy, our 
imagination, realizes a profound organic unity 
with the universe comprehended by the human 
mind. Without minimizing the differences that 
are in detailed manifestations, there is nothing 
wrong in trusting the mind, which is occasionally 
made intensely conscious of an all-pervading 
personality answering to the personality of 
man. 

The details of reality must be studied in their 
differences by Science, but it can never know the 
character of the grand unity of relationship per- 
vading it, which can only be realized immediately 
by the human spirit. And therefore it is the 
primal imagination of man the imagination 
which is fresh and immediate in its experiences 
that exclaims in a poet's verse: 

Wisdom and spirit of the universe! 
Thou soul, that art the eternity of thought, 
And giv'st to forms and images a breath 
And everlasting motion. 
100 



THE VISION 

And in another poet's words it speaks of 

That light whose smile kindles the universe, 
That Beauty in which all things work and move. 

The theologian may follow the scientist and shake 
his head and say that all that I have written is 
pantheism. But let us not indulge in an idolatry 
of name and dethrone living truth in its favour. 
When I say that I am a man, it is implied by that 
word that there is such a thing as a general idea 
of Man which persistently manifests itself in every 
particular human being, who is different from all 
other individuals. If we lazily label such a belief 
as "pananthropy" and divert our thoughts from 
its mysteriousness by such a title it does not help 
us much. Let me assert my faith by saying that 
this world, consisting of what we call animate and 
inanimate things, has found its culmination in 
man, its best expression. Man, as a creation, repre- 
sents the Creator, and this is why of all creatures 
it has been possible for him to comprehend this 
world in his knowledge and in his feeling and in 
his imagination, to realize in his individual spirit a 
union with a Spirit that is everywhere. 

There is an illustration that I have made use of 
in which I supposed that a stranger from some 
other planet has paid a visit to our earth and hap- 
pens to hear the sound of a human voice on the 
gramophone. All that is obvious to him and most 

IOI 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

seemingly active, is the revolving disc. He is un- 
able to discover the personal truth that lies behind, 
and so might accept the impersonal scientific fact 
of the disc as final the fact that could be touched 
and measured. He would wonder how it could be 
possible for a machine to speak to the soul. Then, 
if in pursuing the mystery, he should suddenly 
come to the heart of the music through a meeting 
with the composer, he would at once understand 
the meaning of that music as a personal communi- 
cation. 

That which merely gives us information can be 
explained in terms of measurement, but that which 
gives us joy cannot be explained by the facts of a 
mere grouping of atoms and molecules. Some- 
where in the arrangement of this world there seems 
to be a great concern about giving us delight, 
which shows that, in the universe, over and above 
the meaning of matter and forces, there is a mes- 
sage conveyed through the magic touch of person- 
ality. This touch cannot be analysed, it can only 
be felt. We cannot prove it any more than the 
man from the other planet could prove to the sat- 
isfaction of his fellows the personality which re- 
mained invisible, but which, through the machin- 
ery, spoke direct to the heart 

Is it merely because the rose is round and pink 
that it gives me more satisfaction than the gold 
which could buy me the necessities of life, or any 

102 



THE VISION 

number of slaves? One may, at the outset, deny 
the truth that a rose gives more delight than a 
piece of gold. But such an objector must remem- 
ber that I am not speaking of artificial values. If 
we had to cross a desert whose sand was made of 
gold, then the cruel glitter of these dead particles 
would become a terror for us, and the sight of a 
rose would bring to us the music of paradise. 

The final meaning of the delight which we find 
in a rose can never be in the roundness of its 
petals, just as the final meaning of the joy of music 
cannot be in a gramophone disc. Somehow we feel 
that through a rose the language of love reached 
our heart. Do we not carry a rose to our beloved 
because in it is already embodied a message which, 
unlike our language of words, cannot be analysed. 
Through this gift of a rose we utilize a universal 
language of joy for our own purposes of expres- 
sion. 

Fortunately for me a collection of old lyrical 
poems composed by the poets of the Vaishnava 
sect came to my hand when I was young. I became 
aware of some underlying idea deep in the obvious 
meaning of these love poems. I felt the joy of an 
explorer who suddenly discovers the key to the 
language lying hidden in the hieroglyphs which 
are beautiful in themselves. I was sure that these 
poets were speaking about the supreme Lover, 
whose touch we experience in all our relations of 

103 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

love the love of nature's beauty, of the animal, 
the child, the comrade, the beloved, the love that 
illuminates our consciousness of reality. They 
sang of a love that ever flows through numerous 
obstacles between men and Man the Divine, the 
eternal relation which has the relationship of 
mutual dependence for a fulfilment that needs 
perfect union of individuals and the Universal. 

The Vaishnava poet sings of the Lover who has 
his flute which, with its different stops, gives out 
the varied notes of beauty and love that are in 
Nature and Man. These notes bring to us our 
message of invitation. They eternally urge us to 
come out from the seclusion of our self-centred 
life into the realm of love and truth. Are we deaf 
by nature, or is it that we have been deafened by 
the claims of the world, of self-seeking, by the 
clamorous noise of the market-place? We miss the 
voice of the Lover, and we fight, we rob, we ex- 
ploit the weak, we chuckle at our cleverness, when 
we can appropriate for our use what is due to 
others; we make our lives a desert by turning away 
from our world that stream of love which pours 
down from the blue sky and wells up from the 
bosom of the earth. 

In the region of Nature, by unlocking the secret 
doors of the workshop department, one may come 
to that dark hall where dwells the mechanic and 
help to attain usefulness, but through it one can 

104 



THE VISION 

never attain finality. Here is the storehouse of 
innumerable facts and, however necessary they 
may be, they have not the treasure of fulfilment in 
them. But the hall of union is there, where dwells 
the Lover in the heart of existence. When a man 
reaches it he at once realizes that he has come to 
Truth, to immortality, and he is glad with a glad- 
ness which is an end, and yet which has no end. 

Mere information about facts, mere discovery 
of power, belongs to the outside and not to the 
inner soul of things. Gladness is the one criterion 
of truth, and we know when we have touched 
Truth by the music it gives, by the joy of greeting 
it sends forth to the truth in us. That is the true 
foundation of all religions. It is not as ether waves 
that we receive light; the morning does not wait 
for some scientist for its introduction to us. In 
the same way we touch the infinite reality immedi- 
ately within us only when we perceive the pure 
truth of love or goodness, not through the explana- 
tions of theologians, not through the erudite dis- 
cussion of ethical doctrines. 

I have already made the confession that my 
religion is a poet's religion. All that I feel about 
it is from vision and not from knowledge. Frankly, 
I acknowledge that I cannot satisfactorily answer 
any questions about evil, or about what happens 
after death. Nevertheless, I am sure that there 
have come moments in my own experience when 

105 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

my soul has touched the infinite and has become 
intensely conscious of it through the illumination 
of joy. It has been said in our Upanishad that our 
mind and our words come away baffled from the 
Supreme Truth, but he who knows truth through 
the immediate joy of his own soul is saved from 
all doubts and fears. 

In the night we stumble over things and become 
acutely conscious of their individual separateness. 
But the day reveals the greater unity which em- 
braces them. The man whose inner vision is 
bathed in an illumination of his consciousness at 
once realizes the spiritual unity reigning supreme 
over all differences. His mind no longer awk- 
wardly stumbles over individual facts of separate- 
ness in the human world, accepting them as final. 
He realizes that peace is in the inner harmony 
which dwells in truth and not in any outer adjust- 
ments. He knows that beauty carries an eternal 
assurance of our spiritual relationship to reality, 
which waits for its perfection in the response of 
our love. 



106 



CHAPTER VII 
THE MAN OF MY HEART 

AT the outburst of an experience which is unusual, 
such as happened to me in the beginning of my 
youth, the puzzled mind seeks its explanation in 
some settled foundation of that which is usual, 
trying to adjust an unexpected inner message to an 
organized belief which goes by the general name 
of a religion. And, therefore, I naturally was 
glad at that time of youth to accept from my father 
the post of secretary to a special section of the 
monotheistic church of which he was the leader. I 
took part in its services mainly by composing 
hymns which unconsciously took the many- 
thumbed impression of the orthodox mind, a com- 
posite smudge of tradition. Urged by my sense of 
duty I strenuously persuaded myself to think that 
my new mental attitude was in harmony with that 
of the members of our association, although I con- 
stantly stumbled upon obstacles and felt con- 
straints that hurt me to the quick. 

At last I came to discover that in my conduct I 
was not strictly loyal to my religion, but only to 
the religious institution. This latter represented 
an artificial average, with its standard of truth at 

107 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

its static minimum, jealous of any vital growth 
that exceeded its limits. I have my conviction that 
in religion, and also in the arts, that which is com- 
mon to a group is not important Indeed, very 
often it is a contagion of mutual imitation. After a 
long struggle with the feeling that I was using a 
mask to hide the living face of truth, I gave up my 
connection with our church. 

About this time, one day I chanced to hear a 
song from a beggar belonging to the Baiil * sect 
of Bengal We have in the modern Indian Re- 
ligion deities of different names, forms and mythol- 
ogy, some Vedic and others aboriginal. They 
have their special sectarian idioms and associations 
that give emotional satisfaction to those who are 
accustomed to their hypnotic influences. Some of 
them may have their aesthetic value to me and 
others philosophical significance overcumbered by 
exuberant distraction of legendary myths. But what 
struck me in this simple song was a religious ex- 
pression that was neither grossly concrete, full of 
crude details, nor metaphysical in its rarified trans- 
cendentalism. At the same time it was alive with 
an emotional sincerity. It spoke of an intense 
yearning of the heart for the divine which is in 
Man and not in the temple, or scriptures, in 
images and symbols. The worshipper addresses 
his songs to the Man the ideal, and says: 

1 See Appendix I. 
108 



THE MAN OF MY HEART 

Temples and mosques obstruct thy path, 

and I fail to hear thy call or to move, 

when the teachers and priest angrily crowd round me. 

He does not follow any tradition of ceremony, but 
only believes in love. According to him 

Love is the magic stone, that transmutes by its touch greed into 
sacrifice. 

He goes on to say: 

For the sake of this love heaven longs to become earth and gods 
to become man. 

Since then I have often tried to meet these people, 
and sought to understand them through their songs, 
which are their only form of worship. One is often 
surprised to find in many of these verses a striking 
originality of sentiment and diction; for, at their 
best, they are spontaneously individual in their 
expressions. One such song is a hymn to the Ever 
Young. It exclaims: 

O my flower buds, we worship the Young ; 

for the Young is the source of the holy Ganges of life ; 

from the Young flows the supreme bliss. 

And it says: 

We never offer ripe corn in the service of the Young, 

nor fruit, nor seed, 

but only the lotus bud which is of our own mind. 

The young hour of the day, the morning, 

is our time for the worship of Him. 

from whose contemplation has sprung the Universe* 

109 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

It calls the Spirit of the Young the Brahma 
Kamal, "the infinite lotus". For it is something 
which has perfection in its heart and yet ever 
grows and unfolds its petals. 

There have been men in India who never wrote 
learned texts about the religion of Man but had 
an overpowering desire and practical training for 
its attainment They bore in their life the testi- 
mony of their intimacy with the Person who is in 
all persons, of Man the formless in the individual 
forms of men. Rajjab, a poet-saint of medieval 
India, says of Man: 

God-man (nara-narayand) is thy definition, it is not a delusion 
but truth. In thee the infinite seeks the finite, the perfect knowl- 
edge seeks love, and when the form and the Formless (the indi- 
vidual and the universal) are united love is fulfilled in devotion. 

Ravidas, another poet of the same age, sings: 

Thou seest me, O Divine Man (narahari}> and I see thee, and 
our love becomes mutual. 

Of this God-man a village poet of Bengal says: 

He is within us, an unfathomable reality. We know him when 
we unlock our own self and meet in a true love with all others. 

A brother poet of his says: 

Man seeks the man in me and I lose myself and run out. 

And another singer sings of the Ideal Man, and 
says: 
no 



THE MAN OF MY HEART 

How could the scripture know the meaning of the Lord who has 
his play in the world of human forms? 

Listen, O brother man (declares Chandidas), the truth of 
man is the highest truth, there is no other truth above it. 

All these are proofs of a direct perception of 
humanity as an objective truth that rouses a pro- 
found feeling of longing and love. This is very 
unlike what we find in the intellectual cult of 
humanity, which is like a body that has tragically 
lost itself in the purgatory of shadows. 
Wordsworth says: 

We live by admiration, hope and love, 
And ever as these are well and wisely fixed 
In dignity of being we ascend. 

It is for dignity of being that we aspire through 
the expansion of our consciousness in a great real- 
ity of man to which we belong. We realize it 
through admiration and love, through hope that 
soars beyond the actual, beyond our own span of 
life into an endless time wherein we live the life of 
all men. 

This is the infinite perspective of human per- 
sonality where man finds his religion. Science may 
include in its field of knowledge the starry world 
and the world beyond it; philosophy may try to 
find some universal principle which is at the root 
of all things, but religion inevitably concentrates 
itself on humanity, which illumines our reason, 
inspires our wisdom, stimulates our love, claims 

in 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

our intelligent service. There is an impersonal 
idea, which we call law, discoverable by an imper- 
sonal logic in its pursuit of the fathomless depth of 
the hydrogen atom and the distant virgin worlds 
clothed in eddying fire. But as the physiology of 
our beloved is not our beloved, so this impersonal 
law is not our God, the Pitritamah pitrinam, the 
Father who is ultimate in all fathers and mothers, 
of him we cannot say: 



Tad viddhi pranipatena pariprasnena sevaya- 



( Realize him by obeisance, by the desire to know, by service ) 

For this can only be relevant to the God who is 
God and man at the same time; and if this faith be 
blamed for being anthropomorphic, then Man is 
to be blamed for being Man, and the lo^er for 
loving his dear one as a person instead of as a 
principle of psychology. We can never go beyond 
Man in all that we know and feel, and a mendicant 
singer of Bengal has said: 

Our world is as it is in our comprehension; the thought and 
existence are commingled. Everything would be lost in uncon- 
sciousness if man were nought ; and when response comes to your 
own call you know the meaning of reality. 

According to him, what we call nature is not a 
philosophical abstraction, not cosmos, but what is 
revealed to man as nature. In fact it is included in 
himself and therefore there is a commingling of 
his mind with it, and in that he finds his <jwn 

112 



THE MAN OF MY HEART 

being. He is truly lessened in humanity if he can- 
not take it within him and through it feel the ful- 
ness of his own existence. His arts and literature 
are constantly giving expression to this intimate 
communion of man with his world- And the Vedic 
poet exclaims in his hymn to the sun : 

Thou who nourishest the earth, who walkest alone, O Sun, 
withdraw thy rays, reveal thy exceeding beauty to me and let 
me realize that the Person who is there is the One who I am. 

It is for us to realize the Person who is in the 
heart of the All by the emancipated consciousness 
of our own personality. We know that the highest 
mission of science is to find the universe enveloped 
by the human comprehension ; to see man's visva- 
rupa, his great mental body, that touches the 
extreme verge of time and space, that includes the 
whole world within itself. 

The original Aryans who came to India had for 
their gods the deities of rain, wind, fire, the cosmic 
forces which singularly enough found no definite 
shapes in images. A time came when it was recog- 
nized that individually they had no separate, un- 
related power of their own, but there was one 
infinite source of power which was named Brahma. 
The cosmic divinity developed into an impersonal 
idea ; what was physical grew into a metaphysical 
abstraction, even as in modern science matter 
vanishes into mathematics. And Brahma, accord- 

113 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

ing to those Indians, could neither be apprehended 
by mind nor described by words, even as matter in 
its ultimate analysis proves to be. 

However satisfactory that idea might be as the 
unknowable principle relating to itself all the 
phenomena that are non-personal, it left the per- 
sonal man in a void of negation. It cannot be gain- 
said that we can never realize things in this world 
from inside, we can but know how they appear to 
us. In fact, in all knowledge we know our own 
self in its condition of knowledge. And religion 
sought the highest value of man's existence in this 
self. For this is the only truth of which he is 
immediately conscious from within. And he said : 

Purushanna para kinchit 
sa kashthta sa para gatih 

(Nothing is greater than the Person; he 
is the supreme, he is the ultimate goal.) 

It is a village poet of East Bengal who preaches in 
a song the philosophical doctrine that the universe 
has its reality in its relation to the Person, which I 
translate in the following lines: 

The sky and the earth are born of mine own eyes, 

The hardness and softness, the cold and the heat are the products 

of mine own body, 
The sweet smell and the bad are of my own nostrils. 

This poet sings of the Eternal Person within him, 
coming out and appearing before his eyes, just as 
114 



THE MAN OF MY HEART 

the Vedic Rishi speaks of the Person, who is in 
him, dwelling also in the heart of the sun : 

I have seen the vision, 

the vision of mine own revealing itself, 

coming out from within me. 

In India, there are those whose endeavour is to 
merge completely their personal self in an imper- 
sonal entity which is without any quality or defini- 
tion ; to reach a condition wherein mind becomes 
perfectly blank, losing all its activities. Those who 
claim the right to speak about it say that this is the 
purest state of consciousness, it is all joy and with- 
out any object or content This is considered to 
be the ultimate end of Yoga, the cult of union, thus 
completely to identify one's being with the infinite 
Being who is beyond all thoughts and words. Such 
realization of transcendental consciousness accom- 
panied by a perfect sense of bliss is a time-honoured 
tradition in our country, carrying in it the positive 
evidence which cannot be denied by any negative 
argument of refutation. Without disputing its 
truth I maintain that it may be valuable as a great 
psychological experience but all the same it is not 
religion, even as the knowledge of the ultimate state 
of the atom is of no use to an artist who deals in 
images in which atoms have taken forms. A cer- 
tain condition of vacuum is needed for studying 
the state of things in its original purity, and the 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

same may be said of the human spirit; but the 
original state is not necessarily the perfect state* 
The concrete form is a more perfect manifestation 
than the atom, and man is more perfect as a man 
than where he vanishes in an original indefinite- 
ness. This is why the Ishopanishat says : "Truth is 
both finite and infinite at the same time, it moves 
and yet moves not, it is in the distant, also in the 
near, it is within all objects and without them." 

This means that perfection as the ideal is im- 
movable, but in its aspect of the real it constantly 
grows towards completion, it moves. And I say of 
the Supreme Man, that he is infinite in his essence, 
he is finite in his manifestation in us the individu- 
als. As the Ishopanishat declares, a man must live 
his full term of life and work without greed, and 
thus realize himself in the Being who is in all 
beings. This means that he must reveal in his own 
personality the Supreme Person by his disinterested 
activities. 



CHAPTER VIII 
THE MUSIC MAKER 

A PARTICLE of sand would be nothing if it did not 
have its background in the whole physical world. 
This grain of sand is known in its context of the 
universe where we know all things through the 
testimony of our senses. When I say the grain of 
sand is f the whole physical world stands guarantee 
for the truth which is behind the appearance of 
the sand. 

But where is that guarantee of truth for this 
personality of mine that has the mysterious faculty 
of knowledge before which the particle of sand 
offers its credential of identification? It must be 
acknowledged that this personal self of mine also 
has for its truth a background of personality 
where knowledge, unlike that of other things, can 
only be immediate and self-revealed. 

What I mean by personality is a self-conscious 
principle of transcendental unity within man which 
comprehends all the details of facts that are indi- 
vidually his in knowledge and feeling, wish and 
will and work. In its negative aspect it is limited 
to the individual separateness, while in its posi- 

117 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

tive aspect it ever extends itself in the infinite 
through the increase of its knowledge, love and 
activities. 

And for this reason the most human of all facts 
about us is that we do dream of the limitless un- 
attained the dream which gives character to what 
is attained. Of all creatures man lives in an end- 
less future. Our present is only a part of it. The 
ideas unborn, the unbodied spirits, tease our imagi- 
nation with an insistence which makes them more 
real to our mind than things around us. The atmos- 
phere of the future must always surround our 
present in order to make it life-bearing and sugges- 
tive of immortality. For he who has the healthy 
vigour of humanity in him has a strong instinctive 
faith that ideally he is limitless. That is why our 
greatest teachers claim from us a manifestation that 
touches the infinite. In this they pay homage to 
the Supreme Man. And our true worship lies in 
our indomitable courage to be great and thus to 
represent the human divine and ever to keep open 
the path of freedom towards the unattained. 

We Indians have bad the sad experience in our 
own part of the world how timid orthodoxy, its 
irrational repressions and its accumulation of dead 
centuries, dwarfs man through its idolatry of the 
past. Seated rigid in the centre of stagnation, it 
firmly ties the human spirit to the revolving wheels 
pf habit till f aintness overwhelms her- Like a slug- 

1x8 



THE MUSIC MAKER 

gish stream choked by rotting weeds, it is divided 
into shallow slimy pools that shroud their dumb- 
ness in a narcotic mist of stupor. This mechanical 
spirit of tradition is essentially materialistic, it is 
blindly pious but not spiritual, obsessed by phan- 
toms of unreason that haunt feeble minds in the 
ghastly disguise of religion. For our soul is 
shrunken when we allow foolish days to weave 
repeated patterns of unmeaning meshes round all 
departments of life. It becomes stunted when we 
have no object of profound interest, no prospect of 
heightened life, demanding clarity of mind and 
heroic attention to maintain and mature it. It is 
destroyed when we make fireworks of our animal 
passions for the enjoyment of their meteoric sensa- 
tions, recklessly reducing to ashes all that could 
have been saved for permanent illumination. This 
happens not only to mediocre individuals hugging 
fetters that keep them irresponsible or hungering 
for lurid unrealities, but to generations of insipid 
races that have lost all emphasis of significance in 
themselves, having missed their future. 

The continuous future is the domain of our mil- 
lennium, which is with us more truly than what 
we see in our history in fragments of the present. 
It is in our dream. It is in the realm of the faith 
which creates perfection. We have seen the rec- 
ords of man's dreams of the millennium, the ideal 
reality cherished by forgotten races in their ad- 

119 



THE RELIGION OP MAN 

miration, hope and love manifested in the dignity 
of their being through some majesty in ideals and 
beauty in performance. While these races pass 
away one after another they leave great accom- 
plishments behind them carrying their claim to 
recognition as dreamers not so much as con- 
querors of earthly kingdoms, but as the designers 
of paradise. The poet gives us the best definition 
of man when he says: 

We are the music-makers, 

We are the dreamers of dreams. 

Our religious present for us the dreams of the ideal 
unity which is man himself -as he manifests the 
infinite. We suffer from the sense of sin, which is 
the sense of discord, when any disruptive passion 
tears gaps in our vision of the One in man, creat- 
ing isolation in our self from the universal 
humanity. 

The Upanishad says, r Ma gridah, "covet not". 
For coveting diverts attention from the infinite 
value of our personality to the temptation of 
materials. Our village poet sings: "Man will 
brightly flash into your sight, my heart, if you 
shut the door of desires." 

We have seen how primitive man was occupied 
with his physical needs, and thus restricted him- 
self to the present which is the time boundary of 
the animal; and he missed the urge of his con- 

120 



THE MUSIC MAKER 

sciousness to seek its emancipation in a world of 
ultimate human value. 

Modern civilization for the same reason seems 
to turn itself back to that primitive mentality. 
Our needs have multiplied so furiously fast that 
we have lost our leisure for the deeper realization 
of our self and our faith in it It means that we 
have lost our religion, the longing for the touch of 
the divine in man, the builder of the heaven, the 
music-maker, the dreamer of dreams. This has 
made it easy to tear into shreds our faith in the 
perfection of the human ideal, in its wholeness, as 
the fuller meaning of reality. No doubt it is won- 
derful that music contains a fact which has been 
analysed and measured, and which music shares 
in common with the braying of an ass or of a 
motor-car horn. But it is still more wonderful that 
music has a truth, which cannot be analysed into 
fractions; and there the difference between it and 
the bellowing impertinence of a motor-car horn is 
infinite. Men of our own times have analysed the 
human mind, its dreams, its spiritual aspirations, 
most often caught unawares in the shattered state 
of madness, disease and desultory dreams and 
they have found to their satisf action that these are 
composed of elemental animalities tangled into 
various knots. This may be an important discov- 
ery; but what is still more important to realize is 
the fact that by some miracle of creation man 

121 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

infinitely transcends the component parts of his 
own character. 

Suppose that some psychological explorer sus- 
pects that man's devotion to his beloved has at 
bottom our primitive stomach's hankering for 
human flesh, we need not contradict him ; for what- 
ever may be its genealogy, its secret composition, 
the complete character of our love, in its perfect 
mingling of physical, mental and spiritual asso- 
ciations, is unique in its utter difference from can- 
nibalism. The truth underlying the possibility of 
such transmutation is the truth of our religion. A 
lotus has in common with a piece of rotten flesh 
the elements of carbon and hydrogen. In a state 
of dissolution there is no difference between them, 
but in a state of creation the difference is immense ; 
and it is that difference which really matters. We 
are told that some of our most sacred sentiments 
hold hidden in them instincts -contrary to what 
these sentiments profess to be. Such disclosures 
have the effect upon certain persons of the relief 
of a tension, even like the relaxation in death of 
the incessant strenuousness of life. 

We find in modern literature that something like 
a chuckle of an exultant disillusionment is becom- 
ing contagious, and the knights-errant of the cult 
of arson are abroad, setting fire to our time- 
honoured altars of worship, proclaiming that the 
images enshrined on them, even if beautiful, arc 

122 



THE MUSIC MAKER 

made of mud. They say that it has been found out 
that the appearances in human idealism are decep- 
tive, that the underlying mud is real. From such 
a point of view, the whole of creation may be said 
to be a gigantic deception, and the billions of re- 
volving electric specks that have the appearance 
of "you" or "me" should be condemned as bearers 
of false evidence. 

But whom do they seek to delude? If it be beings 
like ourselves who possess some inborn criterion 
of the real, then to them these very appearances in 
their integrity must represent reality, and not their 
component electric specks. For them the rose 
must be more satisfactory as an object than its 
constituent gases, which can be tortured to speak 
against the evident identity of the rose. The rose, 
even like the human sentiment of goodness, or 
ideal of beauty, belongs to the realm of creation, 
in which all its rebellious elements are reconciled 
in a perfect harmony. Because these elements in 
their simplicity yield themselves to our scrutiny, 
we in our pride are inclined to give them the best 
prizes as actors in that mystery-play, the rose. Such 
an analysis is really only giving a prize to our own 
detective cleverness. 

I repeat again that the sentiments and ideals 
which man in his process of self -creation has built 
up, should be recognized in their wholeness. In all 
our faculties or passions there is nothing which is 

123 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

absolutely good or bad; they all are the constitu- 
ents of the great human personality. They are 
notes that are wrong when in wrong places ; our 
education is to make them into chords that may 
harmonize with the grand music of Man. The 
animal in the savage has been transformed into 
higher stages in the civilized man in other words 
has attained a truer consonance with Man the 
divine, not through any elimination of the original 
materials, but through a magical grouping of them, 
through the severe discipline of art, the discipline 
of curbing and stressing in proper places, establish- 
ing a balance of lights and shadows in the back- 
ground and foreground, and thus imparting a 
unique value to our personality in all its com- 
pleteness. 

So long as we have faith in this value, our energy 
is steadily sustained in its creative activity that 
reveals the eternal Man. This faith is helped on 
all sides by literature, arts, legends, symbols, cere- 
monials, by the remembrance of heroic souls who 
have personified it in themselves, 

Our religion is the inner principle that compre- 
hends these endeavours and expressions and dreams 
through which we approach Him in whose image 
we are made. To keep alive our faith in the reality 
of the ideal perfection is the function of civiliza- 
tion, which is mainly formed of sentiments and the 
images that represent that ideal. In other words, 

124 



THE MUSIC MAKER 

civilization is a creation of art, created for the 
objective realization of our vision of the spiritually 
perfect It is the product of the art of religion. We 
stop its course of conquest when we accept the cult 
of realism and forget that realism is the worst form 
of untruth, because it contains a minimum of truth. 
It is like preaching that only in the morgue can 
we comprehend the reality of the human body 
the body which has its perfect revelation when seen 
in life. All great human facts are surrounded by 
an immense atmosphere of expectation. They are 
never complete if we leave out from them what 
might be, what should be, what is not yet proven 
but profoundly felt, what points towards the im- 
mortal. This dwells in a perpetual surplus in the 
individual, that transcends all the desultory facts 
about him. 

The realism in Man is the animal in him, whose 
life is a mere duration of time; the human in him 
is his reality which has life everlasting for its back- 
ground. Rocks and crystals being complete defi- 
nitely in what they are, can keep as "mute insen- 
sate things" a kind of dumb dignity in their stol- 
idly limited realism ; while human facts grow un- 
seemly and diseased^ breeding germs of death, 
when divested of their creative ideal the ideal of 
Man the divine, The difference between the notes 
as mere facts of sound and music as a truth of ex- 
pression is immense. For music though it compre- 

125 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

hends a limited number of notes yet represents the 
infinite. It is for man to produce the music of the 
spirit with all the notes which he has in his psy- 
chology and which, through inattention or per* 
versity, can easily be translated into a frightful 
noise. In music man is revealed and not in a noise. 



CHAPTER IX 
THE ARTIST 

THE fundamental desire of life is the desire to 
exist. It claims from us a vast amount of training 
and experience about the necessaries of livelihood. 
Yet it does not cost me much to confess that the 
food that I have taken, the dress that I wear, the 
house where I have my lodging, represent a stu- 
pendous knowledge, practice and organization 
which I helplessly lack; for I find that I am not 
altogether despised for such ignorance and ineffi- 
ciency. Those who read me seem fairly satisfied 
that I am nothing better than a poet or perhaps a 
philosopher which latter reputation I do not 
claim and dare not hold through the precarious 
help of misinformation. 

It is quite evident in spite of my deficiency that 
in human society I represent a vocation, which 
though superfluous has yet been held worthy of 
commendation. In fact, I am encouraged in my 
rhythmic futility by being offered moral and mate- 
rial incentives for its cultivation. If a foolish 
blackbird did not know how to seek its food, to 
build its nest, or to avoid Its enemies, but special- 

127 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

ized in singing, its fellow creatures, urged by their 
own science of genetics, would dutifully allow it 
to starve and perish. That I am not treated in a 
similar fashion is the evidence of an immense dif- 
ference between the animal existence and the civil- 
ization of man. His great distinction dwells in the 
indefinite margin of life in him which affords a 
boundless background for his dreams and creations. 
And it is in this realm of freedom that he realizes 
his divine dignity, his great human truth, and is 
pleased when I as a poet sing victory to him, to 
Man the self-revealer, who goes on exploring ages 
of creation to find himself in perfection. 

Reality, in all its manifestations, reveals itself 
in the emotional and imaginative background of 
our mind. We know it, not because we can think 
of it, but because we directly feel it. And there- 
fore, even if rejected by the logical mind, it is not 
banished from our consciousness. As an incident 
it may be beneficial or injurious, but as a revelation 
its value lies in the fact that it offers us an experi- 
ence through emotion or imagination ; we feel our- 
selves in a special field of realization. This feeling 
itself is delightful when it is not accompanied by 
any great physical or moral risk, we love to feel 
even fear or sorrow if it is detached from all prac- 
tical consequences. This is the reason of our enjoy- 
ment of tragic dramas, in which the feeling of pain 
rouses our consciousness to a white heat of intensity. 

128 



THE ARTIST 

The reality of my own self is immediate and 
indubitable to me. Whatever else affects me in a 
like manner is real for myself, and it inevitably 
attracts and occupies my attention for its own sake, 
blends itself with my personality, making it richer 
and larger and causing it delight. My friend may 
not be beautiful, useful, rich or great, but he is real 
to me ; in him I feel my own extension and my joy. 

The consciousness of the real within me seeks 
for its own corroboration the touch of the Real 
outside me. When it fails the self in me is de- 
pressed. When our surroundings are monotonous 
and insignificant, having no emotional reaction 
upon our mind, we become vague to ourselves. For 
we are like pictures, whose reality is helped by 
the background if it is sympathetic. The punish- 
ment we suffer in solitary confinement consists in 
the obstruction to the relationship between the 
world of reality and the real in ourselves, causing 
the latter to become indistinct in a haze of inactive 
imagination: our personality is blurred, we miss 
the companionship of our own being through the 
diminution of our self. The world of our knowl- 
edge is enlarged for us through the extension of our 
information ; the world of our personality grows in 
its area with a large and deeper experience of our 
personal self in our own universe through sym- 
pathy and imagination. 

As this world, that can be known through knowl- 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

edge, is limited to us owing to our ignorance, so 
the world of personality, that can be realized by 
our own personal self, is also restricted by the 
limit of our sympathy and imagination. In the 
dim twilight of insensitiveness a large part of our 
world remains to us like a procession of nomadic 
shadows. According to the stages of our conscious- 
ness we have more or less been able to identify our- 
selves with this world, if not as a whole, at least 
in fragments; and our enjoyment dwells in that 
wherein we feel ourselves thus united. In art we 
express the delight of this unity by which this 
world is realized as humanly significant to us. I 
have my physical, chemical and biological self ; my 
knowledge of it extends through the extension of 
my knowledge of the physical, chemical and bio- 
logical world. I have my personal self, which has 
its communication with our feelings, sentiments 
and imaginations, which lends itself to be coloured 
by our desires and shaped by our imageries. 

Science urges us to occupy by our mind the 
immensity of the knowable world; our spiritual 
teacher enjoins us to comprehend by our soul the 
infinite Spirit which is in the depth of the moving 
and changing facts of the world ; the urging of our 
artistic nature is to realize the manifestation of 
personality in the world of appearance, the reality 
of existence which is in harmony with the real 
within us. Where this harmony is not deeply felt, 

130 



THE ARTIST 

there we are aliens and perpetually homesick. For 
man by nature is an artist; he never receives 
passively and accurately in his mind a physical 
representation of things around him. There goes 
on a continual adaptation, a transformation of facts 
into human imagery, through constant touches of 
his sentiments and imagination. The animal has 
the geography of its birthplace ; man has his coun- 
try, the geography of his personal self. The vision 
of it is not merely physical ; it has its artistic unity, 
it is a perpetual creation. In his country, his con- 
sciousness being unobstructed, man extends his 
relationship, which is of his own creative person- 
ality. In order to live efficiently man must know 
facts and their laws. In order to be happy he must 
establish harmonious relationship with all things 
with which he has dealings. Our creation is the 
modification of relationship. 

The great men who appear in our history remain 
in our mind not as a static fact but as a living his- 
torical image. The sublime suggestions of their 
lives become blended into a noble consistency in 
legends made living in the life of ages. Those men 
with whom we live we constantly modify in our 
minds, making them more real to us than they 
would be in a bare presentation. Men's ideal of 
womanhood and women's ideal of manliness are 
created by the imagination through a mental 
grouping of qualities and conducts according to 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

our hopes and desires, and men and women con- 
sciously and unconsciously strive- towards its attain- 
ment. In fact, they reach a degree of reality for 
each other according to their success in adapting 
these respective ideals to their own nature. To say 
that these ideals are imaginary and therefore not 
true is wrong in man's case. His true life is in his 
own creation, which represents the infinity of man. 
He is naturally indifferent to things that merely 
exist; they must have some ideal value for him, 
and then only his consciousness fully recognizes 
them as real. Men are never true in their isolated 
self, and their imagination is the faculty that brings 
before their mind the vision of their own greater 
being. 

We can make truth ours by actively modulating 
its inter-relations. This is the work of art; for 
reality is not based in the substance of things but 
in the principal of relationship. Truth is the in- 
finite pursued by metaphysics; fact is the infinite 
pursued by science, while reality is the definition 
of the infinite which relates truth to the person. 
Reality is human ; it is what we are conscious of, 
by which we are affected, that which we express. 
When we are intensely aware of it, we are aware 
of ourselves and it gives us delight. We live in it, 
we always widen its limits. Our arts and literature 
represent this creative activity which is fundamen- 
tal in man. 

132 



TH E ARTIST 

But the mysterious fact about it is that though 
the individuals are separately seeking their ex- 
pression, their success is never individualistic in 
character. Men must find and feel and represent 
in all their creative works Man the Eternal, the 
creator. Their civilization is a continual discovery 
of the transcendental humanity. In whatever it 
fails it shows the failure of the artist, which is the 
failure in expression; and that civilization perishes 
in which the individual thwarts the revelation of 
the universal. For Reality is the truth of Man, 
who belongs to all times, and any individualistic 
madness of men against Man cannot thrive for 
long. 

Man is eager that his feeling for what is real to 
him must never die ; it must find an imperishable 
form. The consciousness of this self of mine is 
so intensely evident to me that it assumes the 
character of immortality, I cannot imagine that 
it ever has been or can be non-existent- In a similar 
manner all things that are real to me are for my- 
self eternal, and therefore worthy of a language 
that has a permanent meaning. We know indi- 
viduals who have the habit of inscribing their 
names on the walls of some majestic monument of 
architecture. It is a pathetic way of associating 
their own names with some works of art which 
belong to all times and to all men. Our hunger for 
reputation comes from our desire to make objec- 

133 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

lively real that which is inwardly real to us. He 
who is inarticulate is insignificant, like a dark star 
that cannot prove itself. He ever waits for the 
artist to give him his fullest worth, not for any- 
thing specially excellent in him but for the won- 
derful fact that he is what he certainly is, that he 
carries in him the eternal mystery of being. 

A Chinese friend of mine while travelling with 
me in the streets of Peking suddenly exclaimed 
with a vehement enthusiasm: "Look, here is a 
donkey!" Surely it was an utterly ordinary don- 
key, like an indisputable truism, needing no special 
introduction from him. I was amused ; but it made 
me think. This animal is generally classified as 
having certain qualities that are not recommend- 
able and then hurriedly dismissed. It was obscured 
to me by an envelopment of commonplace associa- 
tions ; I was lazily certain that I knew it and there- 
fore I hardly saw it. But my friend, who pos- 
sessed the artist mind of China, did not treat it 
with a cheap knowledge but could see it afresh 
and recognize it as real. When I say real, I mean 
that it did not remain at the outskirt of his con- 
sciousness tied to a narrow definition, but it easily 
blended in his imagination, produced a vision, a 
special harmony of lines, colours and life and 
movement, and became intimately his own. The 
admission of a donkey into a drawing-room is vio- 
lently opposed ; yet there is no prohibition against 

134 



THE ARTIST 

its finding a place in a picture which may be ad- 
miringly displayed on the drawing-room wall. 

The only evidence of truth in art exists when it 
compels us to say "I see". A donkey we may pass 
by in Nature, but a donkey in art we must acknowl- 
edge even if it be a creature that disreputably 
ignores all its natural history responsibility, even 
if it resembles a mushroom in its head and a palm- 
leaf in its tail. 

In the Upanishad it is said in a parable that 
there are two birds sitting on the same bough, 
one of which feeds and the other looks on. This is 
an image of the mutual relationship of the infinite 
being and the finite self. The delight of the bird 
which looks on is great, for it is a pure and free 
delight. There are both of these birds in man him- 
self, the objective one with its business of life, the 
subjective one with its disinterested joy of vision. 

A child comes to me and commands me to tell 
her a story. I tell her of a tiger which is disgusted 
with the black stripes on its body and comes to my 
frightened servant demanding a piece of soap. 
The story gives my little audience immense 
pleasure, the pleasure of a vision, and her mind 
cries out, "It is here, for I see!" She knows a tiger 
in the book of natural history, but she can see the 
tiger in the story of mine. 

I am sure that even this child of five knows that 
it is an impossible tiger that is out on its untigerly 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

quest of an absurd soap. The delightfulness of the 
tiger for her is not in its beauty, its usefulness, or 
its probability; but in the undoubted fact that she 
can see it in her mind with a greater clearness of 
vision than she can the walls around her the walls 
that brutally shout their evidence of certainty 
which is merely circumstantial. The tiger in the 
story is inevitable, it has the character of a com- 
plete image, which offers its testimonial of truth 
in itself. The listener's own mind is the eye-wit- 
ness, whose direct experience could not be contra- 
dicted. A tiger must be like every other tiger in 
order that it may have its place in a book of 
Science; there it must be a commonplace tiger to 
be at all tolerated. But in the story it is uncommon, 
it can never be reduplicated. We know a thing 
because it belongs to a class ; we see a thing because 
it belongs to itself. The tiger of the story com- 
pletely detached itself from all others of its kind 
and easily assumed a distinct individuality in the 
heart of the listener. The child could vividly see 
it, because by the help of her imagination it became 
her own tiger, one with herself, and this union of 
the subject and object gives us joy. Is it because 
there is no separation between them in truth, the 
separation being the Maya, which is creation? 

There come in our history occasions when the 
consciousness of a large multitude becomes sud- 
denly illumined with the recognition of a reality 

136 



THE ARTIST 

which rises far above the dull obviousness of daily 
happenings. The world becomes vivid; we see, 
we feel it with all our soul. Such an occasion there 
was when the voice of Buddha reached distant 
shores across physical and moral impediments. 
Then our life and our world found their profound 
meaning of reality in their relation to the central 
person who offered us emancipation of love. Men, 
in order to make this great human experience ever 
memorable, determined to do the impossible ; they 
made rocks to speak, stones to sing, caves to re- 
member; their cry of joy and hope took immortal 
forms along the hills and deserts, across barren 
solitudes and populous cities. A gigantic creative 
endeavour built up its triumph in stupendous 
carvings, defying obstacles that were overwhelm- 
ing. Such heroic activity over the greater part of 
the Eastern continents clearly answers the question : 
"What is Art?" It is the response of man's crea- 
tive soul to the call of the Real. 

Once there came a time, centuries ago in Bengal, 
when the divine love drama that has made its 
eternal playground in human souls was vividly 
revealed by a personality radiating its intimate 
realization of God. The mind of a whole people 
was stirred by a vision of the world as an instru- 
ment, through which sounded out invitation to the 
meeting of bliss. The ineffable mystery of God's 
love-call, taking shape in an endless panorama of 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

colours and forms, inspired activity in music that 
overflowed the restrictions of classical convention- 
alism. Our Kirtan music of Bengal came to its 
being like a star flung up by a burning whirlpool 
of emotion in the heart of a whole people, and their 
consciousness was aflame with a sense of reality 
that must be adequately acknowledged. 

The question may be asked as to what place 
music occupies in my theory that art is for evoking 
in our mind the deep sense of reality in its richest 
aspect. Music is the most abstract of all the arts, 
as mathematics is in the region of science. In fact 
these two have a deep relationship with each other. 
Mathematics is the logic of numbers and dimen- 
sions. It is therefore employed as the basis of our 
scientific knowledge. When taken out of its con- 
crete associations and reduced to symbols, it re- 
veals its grand structural majesty, the inevitable- 
ness of its own perfect concord. Yet there is not 
merely a logic but also a magic of mathematics 
which works at the world of appearance, producing 
harmony the cadence of inter-relationship. This 
rhythm of harmony has been extracted from its 
usual concrete context, and exhibited through the 
medium of sound. And thus the pure essence of 
expressiveness in existence is offered in music. Ex- 
pressiveness finds the least resistance in sound, hav- 
ing freedom unencumbered by the burden of facts 
and thoughts. This gives it a power to arouse in 

138 



THE ARTIST 

us an intimate feeling of reality. In the pictorial, 
plastic and literary arts, the object and our feelings 
with regard to it are closely associated, like the 
rose and its perfumes. In music, the feeling dis- 
tilled in sound, becoming itself an independent 
object It assumes a tune-form which is definite, 
but a meaning which is undefinable, and yet which 
grips our mind with a sense of absolute truth. 

It is the magic of mathematics, the rhythm 
which is in the heart of all creation, which moves 
in the atom and, in its different measures, fashions 
gold and lead, the rose and the thorn, the sun and 
the planets. These are the dance-steps of numbers 
in the arena of time and space, which weave the 
maya, the patterns of appearance, the incessant 
flow of change, that ever is and is not It is the 
rhythm that churns up images from the vague and 
makes tangible what is elusive. This is may a, this 
is the art in creation, and art in literature, which 
is the magic of rhythm. 

And must we stop here? What we know as in- 
tellectual truth, is that also not a rhythm of the 
relationship of facts, that weaves the pattern of 
theory, and produces a sense of convincingness to 
a person who somehow feels sure that he knows the 
truth? We believe any fact to be true because of 
a harmony, a rhythm in reason, the process of 
which is analysable by the logic of mathematics, 
but not its result in me, just as we can count the 

139 



THE RELIGION OP MAN 

notes but cannot account for the music. The mys- 
tery is that I am convinced, and this also belongs 
to the may a of creation, whose one important, in- 
dispensable factor is this self-conscious personality 
that I represent 

And the Other? I believe it is also a self-con- 
scious personality, which has its eternal harmony 
with mine. 



140 



CHAPTER X 
MAN'S NATURE 

FROM the time when Man became truly conscious 
of his own self he also became conscious of a mys- 
terious spirit of unity which found its manifesta- 
tion through him in his society. It is a subtle 
medium of relationship between individuals, which 
is not for any utilitarian purpose but for its own 
ultimate truth, not a sum of arithmetic but a value 
of life. Somehow Man has felt that this compre- 
hensive spirit of unity has a divine character which 
could claim the sacrifice of all that is individual in 
him, that in it dwells his highest meaning trans- 
cending his limited self, representing his best 
freedom, 

Man's reverential loyalty to this spirit of unity 
is expressed in his religion ; it is symbolized in the 
names of his deities. That is why, in the begin- 
ning, his gods were tribal gods, even gods of the 
different communities belonging to the same tribe. 
With the extension of the consciousness of human 
unity his God became revealed to him as one and 
universal, proving that the truth of human unity is 
the truth of Man's God. 

In the Sanskrit language, religion goes by the 
name dharma, which in the derivative meaning im- 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

plies the principle of relationship that holds us 
firm, and in its technical sense means the virtue of 
a thing, the essential quality of it; for instance, heat 
is the essential quality of fire, though in certain 
of its stages it may be absent 

Religion consists in the endeavour of men to 
cultivate and express those qualities which are in- 
herent in the nature of Man the Eternal, and to 
have faith in him. If these qualities were abso- 
lutely natural in individuals, religion could have 
no purpose. We begin our history with all the 
original promptings of our brute nature which 
helps us to fulfil those vital needs of ours that are 
immediate. But deeper within us there is a current 
of tendencies which runs in many ways in a con- 
trary direction, the life current of universal hu- 
manity. Religion has its function in reconciling 
the contradiction, by subordinating the brute na- 
ture to what we consider as the truth of Man. 
This is helped when our faith in the Eternal Man, 
whom we call by different names and imagine in 
different images, is made strong. The contradic- 
tion between the two natures in us is so great that 
men have willingly sacrificed their vital needs and 
courted death in order to express their dharma, 
which represents the truth of the Supreme Man. 

The vision of the Supreme Man is realized by 
our imagination, but not created by our mind. 
More real than individual men, he surpasses each 

142 



MAN'S NATURE 

of us in his permeating personality which is trans- 
cendental. The procession of his ideas, following 
his great purpose, is ever moving across obstruc- 
tive facts towards the perfected truth. We, the 
individuals, having our place in his composition, 
may or may not be in conscious harmony with his 
purpose, may even put obstacles in his path bring- 
ing down our doom upon ourselves. But we gain 
our true religion when we consciously co-operate 
with him, finding our exceeding joy through suf- 
fering and sacrifice. For through our own love for 
him we are made conscious of a great love that 
radiates from his being, who is Mahatma, the 
Supreme Spirit. 

The great Chinese sage Lao-tze has said : "One 
who may die, but will not perish, has life ever- 
lasting". It means that he lives in the life of the 
immortal Man. The urging for this life induces 
men to go through the struggle for a true survival. 
And it has been said in our scripture: "Through 
adharma (the negation of dharma] man prospers, 
gains what appears desirable, conquers enemies, 
but he perishes at the root." In this saying it is 
suggested that there is a life which is truer for men 
than their physical life which is transient. 

Our life gains what is called "value" in those of 
its aspects which represent eternal humanity in 
knowledge, in sympathy, in deeds, in character 
and creative works. And from the beginning of 

143 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

our history we are seeking, often at the cost of 
everything else, the value for our life and not 
merely success; in other words, we are trying to 
realize in ourselves the immortal Man, so that we 
may die but not perish. This is the meaning of the 
utterance in the Upanishad: "Tarn vedyam p<uru- 
sham veda, yatha ma vo mrityuh parivyathah" 
"Realize the Person so that thou mayst not suffer 
from death." 

The meaning of these words is highly paradoxi- 
cal, and cannot be proved by our senses or our rea- 
son, and yet its influence is so strong in men that 
they have cast away all fear and greed, defied all 
the instincts that cling to the brute nature, for the 
sake of acknowledging and preserving a life which 
belongs to the Eternal Person. It is all the more 
significant because many of them do not believe 
in its reality, and yet are ready to fling away for it 
all that they believe to be final and the only positive 
fact. 

We call this ideal reality "spiritual". That word 
is vague; nevertheless, through the dim light 
which reaches us across the barriers of physical 
existence, we seem to have a stronger faith in the 
spiritual Man than in the physical ; and from the 
dimmest period of his history, Man has a feeling 
that the apparent facts of existence are not final ; 
that his supreme welfare depends upon his being 
able to remain in perfect relationship with some 

144 



MAN'S NATURE 

great mystery behind the veil, at the threshold of 
a larger life, which is for giving him a far higher 
value than a mere continuation of his physical life 
in the material world. 

Our physical body has its comprehensive reality 
in the physical world, which may be truly called 
our universal body, without which our individual 
body would miss its function. Our physical life 
realizes its growing meaning through a widening 
freedom in its relationship with the physical 
world, and this gives it a greater happiness than 
the mere pleasure of satisfied needs. We become 
aware of a profound meaning of our own self at 
the consciousness of some ideal of perfection, some 
truth beautiful or majestic which gives us an inner 
sense of completeness, a heightened sense of our 
own reality. This strengthens man's faith, effec- 
tive even if indefinite his faith in an objective 
ideal of perfection comprehending the human 
world. His vision of it has been beautiful or dis- 
torted, luminous or obscure, according to the stages 
of development that his consciousness has attained. 
But whatever may be the name and nature of his 
religious creed, man's ideal of human perfection 
has been based upon a bond of unity running 
through individuals culminating in a supreme 
Being who represents the eternal in human person- 
ality. In his civilization the perfect expression of 
this idea produces the wealth of truth which is for 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

the revelation of Man and not merely for the suc- 
cess of life. But when this creative ideal which 
is dharma gives place to some overmastering pas- 
sion in a large body of men civilization bursts out 
in an explosive flame, like a star that has lighted 
its own funeral pyre of boisterous brilliancy. 

When I was a child I had the freedom to make 
my own toys out of trifles and create my own games 
from imagination. In my happiness my playmates 
had their full share, in fact the complete enjoy- 
ment of my games depended upon their taking part 
in them. One day, in this paradise of our child- 
hood, entered the temptation from the market 
world of the adult. A toy brought from an English 
shop was given to one of our companions; it was 
perfect, it was big and wonderfully life-like. He 
became proud of the toy and less mindful of the 
game ; he kept that expensive thing carefully away 
from us, glorying in his exclusive possession of it, 
feeling himself superior to his playmates whose 
toys were cheap. I am sure if he could use the 
modern language of history he would say that he 
was more civilized than ourselves to the extent of 
his owning that ridiculously perfect toy. 

One thing he failed to realize in his excitement 
a fact which at the moment seemed to him insig- 
nificant that this temptation obscured something 
a great deal more perfect than his toy, the revela- 
tion of the perfect child which ever dwells in the 

146 



MAN'S NATURE 

heart of man, in other words, the dharma of the 
child. The toy merely expressed his wealth but 
not himself, not the child's creative spirit, not the 
child's generous joy in his play, his identification 
of himself with others who were his compeers in 
his play world. Civilization is to express Man's 
dharma and not merely his cleverness, power and 
possession. 

Once there was an occasion for me to motor 
down to Calcutta from a place a hundred miles 
away. Something wrong with the mechanism made 
it necessary for us to have a repeated supply of 
water almost every half-hour. At the first village 
where we were compelled to stop, we asked the 
help of a man to find water for us. It proved quite 
a task for him, but when we offered him his re- 
ward, poor though he was, he refused to accept it 
In fifteen other villages the same thing happened. 
In a hot country, where travellers constantly need 
water and where the water supply grows scanty in 
summer, the villagers consider it their duty to offer 
water to those who need it They could easily make 
a business out of it, following the inexorable law 
of demand and supply. But the ideal which they 
consider to be their dharma has become one with 
their life. They do not claim any personal merit 
for possessing it. 

Lao-tze, speaking about the man who is truly 
good, says: "He quickens but owns not He acts 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

but claims not. Merit he accomplishes but dwells 
not in it. Since he does not dwell in it, it will never 
leave him." That which is outside ourselves we 
can sell ; but that which is one with our being we 
cannot sell. This complete assimilation of truth 
belongs to the paradise of perfection ; it lies beyond 
the purgatory of self-consciousness. To have 
reached it proves a long process of civilization. 

To be able to take a considerable amount of 
trouble in order to supply water to a passing 
stranger and yet never to claim merit or reward 
for it seems absurdly and negligibly simple com- 
pared with the capacity to produce an amazing 
number of things per minute. A millionaire tour- 
ist, ready to corner the food market and grow rich 
by driving the whole world to the brink of starva- 
tion, is sure to feel too superior to notice this sim- 
ple thing while rushing through our villages at 
sixty miles an hour. 

Yes, it is simple, as simple as it is for a gentle- 
man to be a gentleman ; but that simplicity is the 
product of centuries of culture. That simplicity 
is difficult of imitation. In a few years' time, it 
might be possible for me to learn how to make 
holes in thousands of needles simultaneously by 
turning a wheel, but to be absolutely simple in 
one's hospitality to one's enemy, or to a stranger, 
requires generations of training. Simplicity takes 
no account of its own value, claims no wages, and 

148 



MAN'S NATURE 

therefore those who are enamoured of power do 
not realize that simplicity of spiritual expression 
is the highest product of civilization. 

A process of disintegration can kill this rare 
fruit of a higher life, as a whole race of birds pos- 
sessing some rare beauty can be made extinct by 
the vulgar power of avarice which has civilized 
weapons. This fact was clearly proved to me when 
I found that the only place where a price was 
expected for the water given to us was a suburb at 
Calcutta, where life was richer, the water supply 
easier and more abundant and where progress 
flowed in numerous channels in all directions. It 
shows that a harmony of character which the peo- 
ple once had was lost the harmony with the inner 
self which is greater in its universality than the 
self that gives prominence to its personal needs. 
The latter loses its feeling of beauty and generos- 
ity in its calculation of profit; for there it repre- 
sents exclusively itself and not the universal Man. 

There is an utterance in the Atharva Veda, 
wherein appears the question as to who it was that 
gave Man his music. Birds repeat their single 
notes, or a very simple combination of them, but 
Man builds his world of music and establishes ever 
new rhythmic relationship of notes. These reveal 
to him a universal mystery of creation which can- 
not be described. They bring to him the inner 
rhythm that transmutes facts into truths. They 

149 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

give him pleasure not merely for his sense of hear- 
ing, but for his deeper being, which gains satisfac- 
tion in the ideal of perfect unity. Somehow man 
feels that truth finds its body in such perfection; 
and when he seeks for his own best revelation he 
seeks a medium which has the harmonious unity, 
as has music. Our impulse to give expression to 
Universal Man produces arts and literature. They 
in their cadence of lines, colours, movements, 
words, thoughts, express vastly more than what they 
appear to be on the surface. They open the win- 
dows of our mind to the eternal reality of man. 
They are the superfluity of wealth of which we 
claim our common inheritance whatever may be 
the country and time to which we belong; for they 
are inspired by the universal mind. And not merely 
in his arts, but in his own behaviour, the individual 
must for his excellence give emphasis to an ideal 
which has some value of truth that ideally belongs 
to all men. In other words, he should create a 
music of expression in his conduct and surround- 
ings which makes him represent the supreme Per- 
sonality. And civilization is the creation of the 
race, its expression of the universal Man. 

When I first visited Japan I had the opportu- 
nity of observing where the two parts of the human 
sphere strongly contrasted ; one, on which grew up 
the ancient continents of social ideal, standards of 
beauty, codes of personal behaviour ; and the other 

150 



MAN'S NATURE 

part, the fluid element, the perpetual current that 
carried wealth to its shores from all parts of the 
world. In half a century's time Japan has been 
able to make her own the mighty spirit of progress 
which suddenly burst upon her one morning in a 
storm of insult and menace. China also has had 
her rousing, when her self-respect was being 
knocked to pieces through series of helpless years, 
and I am sure she also will master before long the 
instrument which hurt her to the quick. But the 
ideals that imparted life and body to Japanese 
civilization had been nourished in the reverent 
hopes of countless generations through ages which 
were not primarily occupied in an incessant hunt 
for opportunities. They had those large tracts of 
leisure in them which are necessary for the blos- 
soming of Life's beauty and the ripening of her 
wisdom. 

On the one hand we can look upon the modern 
factories in Japan with their numerous mechanical 
organizations and engines of production and de- 
struction of the latest type. On the other hand, 
against them we may see some fragile vase, some 
small piece of silk, some architecture of sublime 
simplicity, some perfect lyric of bodily movement. 
We may also notice the Japanese expression of 
courtesy daily extracting from them a considerable 
amount of time and trouble. All these have come 
not from any accurate knowledge of things but 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

from an intense consciousness of the value of real- 
ity which takes time for its fullness. What Japan 
reveals in her skilful manipulation of telegraphic 
wires and railway lines, of machines for manufac- 
turing things and for killing men, is more or less 
similar to what we see in other countries which 
have similar opportunity for training. But in her 
art of living, her pictures, her code of conduct, the 
various forms of beauty which her religious and 
social ideals assume Japan expresses her own per- 
sonality, her dharma, which, in order to be of any 
worth, must be unique and at the same time repre- 
sent Man of the Everlasting Life. 

Lao-tze has said: "Not knowing the eternal 
causes passions to rise ; and that is evil". He has 
also said: "Let us die, and yet not perish". For 
we die when we lose our physical life, we perish 
when we miss our humanity. And humanity is the 
dharma of human beings. 

What is evident in this world is the endless pro- 
cession of moving things; but what is to be real- 
ized, is the supreme human Truth by which the 
human world is permeated. 

We must never forget to-day that a mere move- 
ment is not valuable in itself, that it may be a 
sign of a dangerous form of inertia. We must be 
reminded that a great upheaval of spirit, a uni- 
versal realization of true dignity of man once 
caused by Buddha's teachings in India, started a 

152 



MAN'S NATURE 

movement for centuries which produced illumina- 
tion of literature, art, science and numerous efforts 
of public beneficence. This was a movement whose 
motive force was not some additional accession of 
knowledge or power or urging of some overwhelm- 
ing passion. It was an inspiration for freedom, the 
freedom which enables us to realize dharma, the 
truth of Eternal Man. 

Lao-tze in one of his utterances has said : "Those 
who have virtue (dharma) attend to their obliga- 
tions; those who have no virtue attend to their 
claims." Progress which is not related to an inner 
dharma, but to an attraction which is external, 
seeks to satisfy our endless claims. But civiliza- 
tion, which is an ideal, gives us the abundant 
power to renounce which is the power that realizes 
the infinite and inspires creation. 

This great Chinese sage has said : "To increase 
life is called a blessing." For, the increase of life 
realizes the eternal life and yet does not transcend 
the limits of life's unity* The mountain pine 
grows tall and great, its every inch maintains the 
rhythm of an inner balance, and therefore even in 
its seeming extravagance it has the reticent grace 
of self-control. The tree and its productions belong 
to the same vital system of cadence; the timber, 
the flowers, leaves and fruits are one with the tree ; 
their exuberance is not a malady of exaggeration, 
but a blessing. 

153 



CHAPTER XI 
THE MEETING 

OUR great prophets in all ages did truly realize 
in themselves the freedom of the soul in their con- 
sciousness of the spiritual kinship of man which is 
universal. And yet human races, owing to their 
external geographical condition, developed in 
their individual isolation a mentality that is ob- 
noxiously selfish. In their instinctive search for 
truth in religion either they dwarfed and deformed 
it in the mould of the primitive distortions of their 
own race-mind, or else they shut their God within 
temple walls and scriptural texts safely away, espe- 
cially from those departments of life where his 
absence gives easy access to devil-worship in vari- 
ous names and forms. They treated their God in 
the same way as in some forms of government the 
King is treated, who has traditional honour but no 
effective authority. The true meaning of God has 
remained vague in our minds only because our 
consciousness of the spiritual unity has been 
thwarted. 

One of the potent reasons for this our geo- 
graphical separation has now been nearly re- 
moved. Therefore the time has come when we 

154 



THE MEETING 

must, for the sake of truth and for the sake of that 
peace which is the harvest of truth, refuse to allow 
the idea of our God to remain indistinct behind 
unrealities of formal rites and theological misti- 
ness. 

The creature that lives its life screened and 
sheltered in a dark cave, finds its safety in the very 
narrowness of its own environment. The economi- 
cal providence of Nature curtails and tones down 
its sensibilities to such a limited necessity. But 
if these cave-walls were to become suddenly re- 
moved by some catastrophe, then either it must 
accept the doom of extinction, or carry on satis- 
factory negotiations with its wider surroundings. 

The races of mankind will never again be able 
to go back to their citadels of high-walled exclu- 
siveness. They are to-day exposed to one another, 
physically and intellectually. The shells, which 
have so long given them full security within their 
individual enclosures have been broken, and by no 
artificial process can they be mended again. So 
we have to accept this fact, even though we have 
not yet fully adapted our minds to this changed 
environment of publicity, even though through it 
we may have to run all the risks entailed by the 
wider expansion of life's freedom. 

A large part of our tradition is our code of 
adjustment which deals with the circumstances 
special to ourselves. These traditions, no doubt, 

155 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

variegate the several racial personalities with their 
distinctive colours colours which have their 
poetry and also certain protective qualities suitable 
to each different environment We may come to 
acquire a strong love for our own colourful race 
speciality; but if that gives us fitness only for a 
very narrow world, then, at the slightest variation 
in our outward circumstances, we may have to 
pay for this love with our life itself. 

In the animal world there are numerous in- 
stances of complete race-suicide overtaking those 
who fondly clung to some advantage which later 
on became a hindrance in an altered dispensation. 
In fact the superiority of man is proved by his 
adaptability to extreme surprises of chance 
neither the torrid nor the frigid zone of his destiny 
offering him insuperable obstacles. 

The vastness of the race problem with which 
we are faced to-day will either compel us to train 
ourselves to moral fitness in the place of merely 
external efficiency, or the complications arising 
out of it will fetter all our movements and drag us 
to our death. 1 

When our necessity becomes urgently insistent, 
when the resources that have sustained us so long 
are exhausted, then our spirit puts forth all its 
force to discover some other source of sustenance 
deeper and more permanent. This leads us from 

1 See Appendix iy, 

156 



THE MEETING 

the exterior to the interior of our store-house* 
When muscle does not fully serve us, we come to 
awaken intellect to ask for its help and are then 
surprised to find in it a greater source of strength 
for us than physical power. When, in their turn, 
our intellectual gifts grow perverse, and only help 
to render our suicide gorgeous and exhaustive, our 
soul must seek an alliance with some power which 
is still deeper, yet further removed from the rude 
stupidity of muscle. 

Hitherto the cultivation of intense race egotism 
is the one thing that has found its fullest scope at 
this meeting of men. In no period of human his- 
tory has there been such an epidemic of moral 
perversity, such a universal churning up of jeal- 
ousy, greed, hatred and mutual suspicion. Every 
people, weak or strong, is constantly indulging in 
a violent dream of rendering itself thoroughly 
hurtful to others. In this galloping competition of 
hurtfulness, on the slope of a bottomless pit, no 
nation dares to stop or slow down. A scarlet fever 
with a raging temperature has attacked the entire 
body of mankind, and political passion has taken 
the place of creative personality in all departments 
of life. 

It is well known that when greed has for its 
object material gain then it can have no end. It 
is like the chasing of the horizon by a lunatic. To 
go on in a competition multiplying millions be- 

J57 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

comes a steeplechase of insensate futility that has 
obstacles but no goal. It has for its parallel the 
fight with material weapons weapons which 
must perpetually be multiplied, opening up new 
vistas of destruction and evoking new forms of 
insanity in the forging of frightfulness. Thus 
seems now to have commenced the last fatal ad- 
venture of drunken Passion riding on an intellect 
of prodigious power. 

To-day, more than ever before in our history, 
the aid of spiritual power is needed. Therefore, I 
believe its resources will surely be discovered in 
the hidden depths of our being. Pioneers will 
come to take up this adventure and suffer, and 
through suffering open out a path to that higher 
elevation of life in which lies our safety. 

Let me, in reference to this, give an instance 
from the history of Ancient India, There was a 
noble period in the early days of India when, to 
a band of dreamers, agriculture appeared as a 
great idea and not merely useful fact The heroic 
personality of Ramachandra, who espoused its 
cause, was sung in popular ballads, which in a 
later age forgot their original message and were 
crystallized into an epic merely extolling some 
domestic virtues of its hero. It is quite evident, 
however, from the legendary relics lying entombed 
in the story, that a new age ushered in by the 
spread of agriculture came as a divine voice to 

158 



those who could hear. It lifted up the primeval 
screen of the wilderness, brought the distant near, 
and broke down all barricades- Men who had 
formed separate and antagonistic groups in their 
sheltered seclusions were called upon to form a 
united people. 

In the Vedic verses, we find constant mention of 
conflicts between the original inhabitants of An- 
cient India and the colonists. There we find the 
expression of a spirit that was one of mutual dis- 
trust and a struggle in which was sought either 
wholesale slavery or extermination for the oppo- 
nents carried on in the manner of animals who 
live in the narrow segregation imposed upon them 
by their limited imagination and imperfect sym- 
pathy. This spirit would have continued in all its 
ferocious vigour of savagery had men failed tc 
find the opportunity for the discovery that man's 
highest truth was in the union of co-operation and 
love. 

The progress of agriculture was the first exter- 
nal step which led to such a discovery* It not onl} 
made a settled life possible for a large number oJ 
men living in close proximity, but it claimed foi 
its very purpose a life of peaceful co-operation 
The mere fact of such a sudden change from 
nomadic to an agricultural condition would no 
have benefited Man if he had not developed there 
with his spiritual sensitiveness to an inner principL 

159 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

of truth. We can realize, from our reading of the 
Ramayana, the birth of idealism among a section 
of the Indian colonists of those days, before whose 
mind's eye was opened a vision of emancipation 
rich with the responsibility of a higher life. The 
epic represents in its ideal the change of the peo- 
ple's aspiration from the path of conquest to that 
of reconciliation. 

At the present time, as I have said, the human 
world has been overtaken by another vast change 
similar to that which had occurred in the epic age 
of India. So long men had been cultivating, almost 
with a religious fervour, that mentality which is 
the product of racial isolation; poets proclaimed, 
in a loud pitch of bragging, the exploits of their 
popular fighters; money-makers felt neither pity 
nor shame in the unscrupulous dexterity of their 
pocket-picking; diplomats scattered lies in order 
to reap concessions from the devastated future of 
their own victims. Suddenly the walls that sep- 
arated the different races are seen to have given 
way, and we find ourselves standing face to face. 

This is a great fact of epic significance. Man, 
suckled at the wolf's breast, sheltered in the 
brute's den, brought up in the prowling habit of 
depredation, suddenly discovers that he is Man, 
and that his true power lies in yielding up his 
brute power for the freedom of spirit. 

The God of humanity has arrived at the gates 

160 



THE ME ETING 

of the ruined temple of the tribe. Though he has 
not yet found his altar, I ask the men of simple 
faith, wherever they may be in the world, to bring 
their offering of sacrifice to him, and to believe 
that it is far better to be wise and worshipful than 
to be clever and supercilious. I ask them to claim 
the right of manhood to be friends of men, and 
not the right of a particular proud race or nation 
which may boast of the fatal quality of being the 
rulers of men. We should know for certain that 
such rulers will no longer be tolerated in the new 
world, as it basks in the open sunlight of mind and 
breathes life's free air. 

In the geological ages of the infant earth the 
demons of physical force had their full sway. The 
angry fire, the devouring flood, the fury of the 
storm, continually kicked the earth into frightful 
distortions. These titans have at last given way 
to the reign of life. Had there been spectators in 
those days who were clever and practical they 
would have wagered their last penny on these titans 
and would have waxed hilariously witty at the 
expense of the helpless living speck taking its 
stand in the arena of the wrestling giants. Only 
a dreamer could have then declared with unwaver- 
ing conviction that those titans were doomed be- 
cause of their very exaggeration, as are, to-day : 
those formidable qualities which, in the parlance 
of schoolboy science, are termed Nordic. 

161 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

I ask once again, let us, the dreamers of the East 
and the West, keep our faith firm in the Life that 
creates and not in the Machine that constructs 
in the power that hides its force and blossoms in 
beauty, and not in the power that bares its arms 
and chuckles at its capacity to make itself obnox- 
ious. Let us know that the Machine is good when 
it helps, but not so when it exploits life; that 
Science is great when it destroys evil, but not when 
the two enter into unholy alliance. 



162 



CHAPTER XII 
THE TEACHER 

I HAVE already described how the nebulous idea 
of the divine essence condensed in my conscious- 
ness into a human realization. It is definite and 
finite at the same time, the Eternal Person mani- 
fested in all persons. It may be one of the numer- 
ous manifestations of God, the one in which is com- 
prehended Man and his Universe. But we can 
never know or imagine him as revealed in any 
other inconceivable universe so long as we remain 
human beings. And therefore, whatever character 
our theology may ascribe to him, in reality he is 
the infinite ideal of Man towards whom men move 
in their collective growth, with whom they seek 
their union of love as individuals, in whom they 
find their ideal of father, friend and beloved. 

I am sure that it was this idea of the divine 
Humanity unconsciously working in my mind, 
which compelled me to come out of the seclusion 
of my literary career and take my part in the world 
of practical activities. The solitary enjoyment of 
the infinite in meditation no longer satisfied me, 
and the texts which I used for my silent worship 

163 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

lost their inspiration without my knowing it. I am 
sure I vaguely felt that my need was spiritual self- 
realization in the life of Man through some disin- 
terested service. This was the time when I founded 
an educational institution for our children in Ben- 
gal. It has a special character of its own which 
is still struggling to find its fulfilment; for it is a 
living temple that I have attempted to build for 
my divinity. In such a place education necessarily 
becomes the preparation for a complete life of 
man which can only become possible by living 
that life, through knowledge and service, enjoy- 
ment and creative work. The necessity was my 
own, for I felt impelled to come back into a ful- 
ness of truth from my exile in a dream-world. 

This brings to my mind the name of another poet 
of ancient India, Kalidasa, whose poem of Meg- 
haduta reverberates with the music of the sorrow 
of an exile. 

It was not the physical home-sickness from 
which the poet suffered, it was something far more 
fundamental, the home-sickness of the soul. We 
feel from almost all his works the oppressive at- 
mosphere of the kings' palaces of those days, 
dense with things of luxury, and also with the 
callousness of self-indulgence, albeit an atmos- 
phere of refined culture based on an extravagant 
civilization. 

The poet in the royal court lived in banishment 

164 



THE TEACHER 

banishment from the immediate presence of the 
eternal. He knew it was not merely his own ban- 
ishment, but that of the whole age to which he was 
born, the age that had gathered its wealth and 
missed its well-being, built its storehouse of things 
and lost its background of the great universe. 
What was the form in which his desire for perfec- 
tion persistently appeared in his drama and poems? 
It was the form of the tapovana, the forest-dwell- 
ing of the patriarchal community of ancient India. 
Those who are familiar with Sanskrit literature 
will know that this was not a colony of people with 
a primitive culture and mind. They were seekers 
after truth, for the sake of which they lived in an 
atmosphere of purity but not of Puritanism, of the 
simple life but not the life of self-mortification. 
They never advocated celibacy and they had con- 
stant intercommunication with other people who 
lived the life of worldly interest. Their aim and 
endeavour have briefly been suggested in the 
Upanishad in these lines : 

Te sarvagam sarvatah prapya dhira 
yuktatmanah sarvamevavisanti. 

(Those men of serene mind enter into the All, having realized 
and being in union everywhere with the omnipresent Spirit.) 

It was never a philosophy of renunciation of a 
negative character, but a realization completely 
comprehensive. How the tortured mind of Kali- 

165 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

dasa in the prosperous city of Ujjaini, and the 
glorious period of Vikramaditya, closely pressed 
by all-obstructing things and all-devouring self, 
let his thoughts hover round the vision of a tapo- 
vana for his inspiration of life! 

It was not a deliberate copy but a natural coin- 
cidence that a poet of modern India also had the 
similar vision when he felt within him the misery 
of a spiritual banishment In the time of Kalidasa 
the people vividly believed in the ideal of tapo- 
vana, the forest colony, and there can be no doubt 
that even in the late age there were communities 
of men living in the heart of nature, not ascetics 
fiercely in love with a lingering suicide, but men 
of serene sanity who sought to realize the spiritual 
meaning of their life. And, therefore, when Kali- 
dasa sang of the tapovana, his poems found their 
immediate communion in the living faith of his 
hearers. But to-day the idea has lost any definite 
outline of reality, and has retreated into the far- 
away phantom-land of legend. Therefore the 
Sanskrit word in a modern poem would merely 
be poetical, its meaning judged by a literary stand- 
ard of appraisement. Then, again, the spirit of the 
forest-dwelling in the purity of its original shape 
would be a fantastic anachronism in the present 
age, and therefore, in order to be real, it must find 
its reincarnation under modern conditions of life. 
It must be the same in truth, but not identical in 

166 



THE TEACHER 

fact. It was this which made the modern poet's 
heart crave to compose his poem in a language of 
tangible words. 

But I must give the history in some detail. 
Civilized man has come far away from the orbit of 
his normal life. He has gradually formed and in- 
tensified some habits that are like those of the bees 
for adapting himself to his hive-world. We often 
see men suffering from ennui, from world-weari- 
ness, from a spirit of rebellion against their envi- 
ronment for no reasonable cause whatever. Social 
revolutions are constantly ushered in with a sui- 
cidal violence that has its origin in our dissatisfac- 
tion with our hive-wall arrangement the too 
exclusive enclosure that deprives us of the perspec- 
tive which is so much needed to give us the proper 
proportion in our art of living. All this is an indi- 
cation that man has not been moulded on the model 
of the bee and therefore he becomes recklessly 
anti-social when his freedom to be more than social 
is ignored. 

In our highly complex modern condition 
mechanical forces are organized with such effi- 
ciency that materials are produced that grow far 
in advance of man's selective and assimilative 
capacity to simplify them into harmony with his 
nature and needs. 

Such an intemperate overgrowth of things, like 
rank vegetation in the tropics, creates confinement 

167 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

for man. The nest is simple, it has an early rela- 
tionship with the sky; the cage is complex and 
costly ; it is too much itself excommunicated from 
whatever lies outside. And man is building his 
cage, fast developing his parasitism on the monster 
Thing, which he allows to envelop him on all 
sides. He is always occupied in adapting himself 
to its dead angularities, limits himself to its limita- 
tions, and merely becomes a part of it. 

This may seem contrary to the doctrine of those 
who believe that a constant high pressure of living, 
produced by an artificially cultivated hunger of 
things, generates and feeds the energy that drives 
civilization upon its endless journey. Personally, I 
do not believe that this has ever been the principal 
driving force that has led to eminence any great 
civilization of which we know in history. 

I was born in what was once the metropolis of 
British India. My own ancestors came floating to 
Calcutta upon the earliest tide of the fluctuating 
fortune of the East India Company. The uncon- 
vential code of life for our family has been a 
confluence of three cultures, the Hindu, Moham- 
medan and British. My grandfather belonged to 
that period when the amplitude of dress and cour- 
tesy and a generous leisure were gradually being 
clipped and curtailed into Victorian manners, eco- 
nomical in time, in ceremonies, and in the dignity 
of personal appearance. [This will show that I 

168 



THE TEACHER 

came to a world in which the modern citybred 
spirit of progress had just begun driving its trium- 
phal car over the luscious green life of our ancient 
village community. Though the trampling process 
was almost complete round me, yet the wailing cry 
of the past was still lingering over the wreckage. 

Often I had listened to my eldest brother de- 
scribing with the poignancy of a hopeless regret 
a society hospitable, sweet with the old-world 
aroma of natural kindliness, full of simple faith 
and the ceremonial-poetry of life. But all this was 
a vanishing shadow behind me in the dusky golden 
haze of a twilight horizon the all-pervading fact 
around my boyhood being the modern city newly 
built by a company of western traders and the 
spirit of the modern time seeking its unaccustomed 
entrance into our life, stumbling against countless 
anomalies. 

But it always is a surprise to me to think that 
though this closed-up hardness of a city was my 
only experience of the world, yet my mind was 
constantly haunted by the home-sick fancies of an 
exile. It seems that the sub-conscious remem- 
brance of a primeval dwelling-place, where, in 
our ancestor's minds, were figured and voiced the 
mysteries of the inarticulate rocks, the rushing 
water and the dark whispers of the forest, was con- 
stantly stirring my blood with its call. Some 
shadow-haunting living reminiscence in me seemed 

169 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

to ache for the pre-natal cradle and playground it 
shared with the primal life in the illimitable magic 
of the land, water and air. The shrill, thin cry of 
the high-flying kite in the blazing sun of the dazed 
Indian midday sent to a solitary boy the signal of 
a dumb distant kinship. The few coconut plants 
growing by the boundary wall of our house, like 
some war captives from an older army of invaders 
of this earth, spoke to me of the eternal compan- 
ionship which the great brotherhood of trees has 
ever offered to man. 

Looking back upon those moments of my boy- 
hood days, when all my mind seemed to float 
poised upon a large feeling of the sky, of the light, 
and to tingle with the brown earth in its glistening 
grass, I cannot help believing that my Indian 
ancestry had left deep in my being the legacy of 
its philosophy the philosophy which speaks of 
fulfilment through our harmony with all things. 
The founding of my school had its origin in the 
memory of that longing for the freedom of con- 
sciousness, which seems to go back beyond- the 
skyline of my birth. 

Freedom in the mere sense of independence has 
no content, and therefore no meaning. Perfect 
freedom lies in a perfect harmony of relationship, 
which we realize in this world not through our 
response to it in knowing, but in being. Objects of 
knowledge maintain an infinite distance from us 

170 



THE TEACHER 

are the knowers. For knowledge is not union. 
Therefore the further world of freedom awaits us 
there where we reach truth, not through feeling it 
by our senses or knowing it by our reason, but 
through the union of perfect sympathy. 

Children with the freshness of their senses come 
lirectly to the intimacy of this world. This is the 
5rst great gift they have. They must accept it 
laked and simple and must never again lose their 
Dower of immediate communication with it. For 
3ur perfection we have to be vitally savage and 
nentally civilized ; we should have the gift to be 
latural with nature and human with human 
society. My banished soul sitting in the civilized 
isolation of the town-life cried within me for the 
enlargement of the horizon of its comprehension. 
[ was like the torn-away line of a verse, always in 
i state of suspense, while the other line, with which 
it rhymed and which could give it fulness, was 
smudged by the mist away in some undecipherable 
listance. The inexpensive power to be happy, 
which, along with other children, I brought to 
this world, was being constantly worn away by 
friction with the brick-and-mortar arrangement 
3f life, by monotonously mechanical habits and the 
customary code of respectability. 

In the usual course of things I was sent to school, 
but possibly my suffering was unusually greater 
than that of most other children. The non-civilized 

171 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

in me was sensitive; it had the great thirst for 
colour, for music, for movement of life. Our city- 
built education took no heed of that living fact. 
It had its luggage-van waiting for branded bales of 
marketable result. The relative proportion of the 
non-civilized to the civilized in man should be 
in the proportion of the water and the land in our 
globe, the former predominating. But the school 
had for its object a continual reclamation of the 
civilized. Such a drain in the fluid element causes 
an aridity which may not be considered deplorable 
under city conditions. But my nature never got ac- 
customed to those conditions, to the callous decency 
of the pavement The non-civilized triumphed in 
me only too soon and drove me away from school 
when I had just entered my teens. I found myself 
stranded on a solitary island of ignorance, and had 
to rely solely upon my own instincts to build up 
my education from the very beginning. 

This reminds me that when I was young I had 
the great good fortune of coming upon a Bengali 
translation of Robinson Crusoe. I still believe that 
it is the best book for boys that has ever been 
written. There was a longing in me when young 
to run away from my own self and be one with 
everything in Nature. This mood appears to be 
particularly Indian, the outcome of a traditional 
desire for the expansion of consciousness. One has 
to admit that such a desire is too subjective in its 

172 



THE TEACHER 

character ; but this is inevitable in the geographical 
circumstances which we have to endure. We live 
under the extortionate tyranny of the tropics, pay- 
ing heavy toll every moment for the barest right of 
existence. The heat, the damp, the unspeakable 
fecundity of minute life feeding upon big life, the 
perpetual sources of irritation, visible and invis- 
ible, leave very little margin of capital for extrava- 
gant experiments. Excess of energy seeks obstacles 
for its self-realization. That is why we find so 
often in Western literature a constant emphasis 
upon the malignant aspect of Nature, in whom the 
people of the West seem to be delighted to discover 
an enemy for the sheer enjoyment of challenging 
her to fight. The reason which made Alexander 
express his desire to find other worlds to conquer, 
when his conquest of the world was completed, 
makes the enormously vital people of the West 
desire, when they have some respite in their sub- 
lime mission of fighting against objects that are 
noxious, to go out of their way to spread their coat- 
tails in other people's thoroughfares and to claim 
indemnity when these are trodden upon. In order 
to make the thrilling risk of hurting themselves 
they are ready to welcome endless trouble to hurt 
others who are inoffensive, such as the beautiful 
birds which happen to know how to fly away, the 
timid beasts, which have the advantage of inhabit- 
ing inaccessible regions, and but I avoid the dis~ 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

courtesy of mentioning higher races in this con- 
nection. 

Life's fulfilment finds constant contradictions in 
its path ; but those are necessary for the sake of its 
advance. The stream is saved from the sluggish- 
ness of its current by the perpetual opposition of 
the soil through which it must cut its way. It is 
this soil which forms its banks. The spirit of fight 
belongs to the genius of life. The tuning of an 
instrument has to be done, not because it reveals 
a proficient perseverance in the face of difficulty, 
but because it helps music to be perfectly realized. 
Let us rejoice that in the West life's instrument is 
being tuned in all its different chords owing to the 
great fact that the West has triumphant pleasure 
in the struggle with obstacles. The spirit of crea- 
tion in the heart of the universe will never allow, 
for its own sake, obstacles to be completely re- 
moved. It is only because positive truth lies in that 
ideal of perfection, which has to be won by our 
own endeavour in order to make it our own, that 
the spirit of fight is great But this does not imply 
a premium for the exhibition of a muscular 
athleticism or a rude barbarism of ravenous 
rapacity. 

In Robinson Crusoe, the delight of the union 
with Nature finds its expression in a story of ad- 
venture in which the solitary Man is face to face 
with solitary Nature, coaxing her, co-operating 

174 



THE TEACHER 

with her, exploring her secrets, using all his facul- 
ties to win her help. 

This is the heroic love-adventure of the West, 
the active wooing of the earth. I remember how, 
once in my youth, the feeling of intense delight 
and wonder followed me in my railway journey 
across Europe from Brindisi to Calais, when I 
realized the chaste beauty of this continent every- 
where blossoming in a glow of health and richness 
under the age-long attention of her chivalrous 
lover, Western humanity. He had gained her, 
made her his own, unlocked the inexhaustible gen- 
erosity of her heart. And I had intently wished 
that the introspective vision of the universal soul, 
which an Eastern devotee realizes in the solitude 
of his mind, could be united with this spirit of its 
outward expression in service, the exercise of will 
in unfolding the wealth of beauty and well-being 
from its shy obscurity to the light. 

I remember the morning when a beggar woman 
in a Bengal village gathered in the loose end of her 
sari the stale flowers that were about to be thrown 
away from the vase on my table; and with an 
ecstatic expression of tenderness buried her face 
in them, exclaiming, "Oh, Beloved of my Heart!" 
Her eyes could easily pierce the veil of the outward 
form and reach the realm of the infinite in these 
flowers, where she found the intimate touch of her 
Beloved, the great, the universal Human. But in 

175 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

spite of it all she lacked that energy of worship, 
that Western form of direct divine service, the 
service of man, which helps the earth to bring out 
her flowers and spread the reign of beauty on the 
desolate dust. I refuse to think that the twin spirits 
of the East and the West, the Mary and Martha, 
can never meet to make perfect the realization of 
truth. And in spite of our material poverty in the 
East and the antagonism of time I wait patiently 
for this meeting. 

Robinson Crusoe's island conies to my mind 
when I think of some institution where the first 
great lesson in the perfect union of Man and 
Nature, not only through love, but through active 
communication and intelligent ways, can be had 
unobstructed. We have to keep in mind the fact 
that love and action are the only intermediaries 
through which perfect knowledge can be obtained ; 
for the object of knowledge is not pedantry but 
wisdom. The primary object of an institution 
should not be merely to educate one's limbs and 
mind to be in efficient readiness for all emergen- 
cies, but to be in perfect tune in the symphony of 
response between life and world, to find the balance 
of their harmony which is wisdom. The first im- 
portant lesson for children in such a place would 
be that of improvisation, the constant imposition 
of the ready-made having been banished from 
here. It is to give occasions to explore one's 

176 



THE TEACHER 

capacity through surprises of achievement I must 
make it plain that this means a lesson not in simple 
life, but in creative life. For life may grow com- 
plex, and yet if there is a living personality in its 
centre, it will still have the unity of creation; it 
will carry its own weight in perfect grace, and will 
not be a mere addition to the number of facts that 
only goes to swell a crowd. 

I wish I could say that I had fully realized my 
dream in my school. I have only made the first 
introduction towards it and have given an oppor- 
tunity to the children to find their freedom in 
Nature by being able to love it. For love is free- 
dom; it gives us that fulness of existence which 
saves us from paying with our soul for objects that 
are immensely cheap. Love lights up this world 
with its meaning and makes life feel that it has that 
"enough" everywhere which truly is its "feast". 
I know men who preach the cult of simple life by 
glorifying the spiritual merit of poverty. I refuse 
to imagine any special value in poverty when it is a 
mere negation. Only when the mind has the sensi- 
tiveness to be able to respond to the deeper call of 
reality is it naturally weaned away from the lure 
of the fictitious value of things. It is callousness 
which robs us of our simple power to enjoy, and 
dooms us to the indignity of a snobbish pride in 
furniture and the foolish burden of expensive 
things. But the callousness of asceticism pitted 

*77 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

against the callousness of luxury is merely fighting 
one evil with the help of another, inviting the piti- 
less demon of the desert in place of the indiscrimi- 
nate demon of the jungle, 

I tried my best to develop in the children of my 
school the freshness of their feeling for Nature, 
a sensitiveness of soul in their relationship with 
their human surroundings, with the help of litera- 
ture, festive ceremonials and also the religious 
teaching which enjoins us to come to the nearer 
presence of the world through the soul,, thuscjo 
gain it more than can be measured like gaining 
an instrument in truth by bringing out its music. 



178 



CHAPTER XIII 
SPIRITUAL FREEDOM 

THERE are injuries that attack our life; they hurt 
the harmony of life's functions through which is 
maintained the harmony of our physical self with 
the physical world; and these injuries are called 
diseases. There are also factors that oppress our 
intelligence. They injure the harmony of relation- 
ship between our rational mind and the universe 
of reason; and we call them stupidity, ignorance 
or insanity. They are uncontrolled exaggerations 
of passions that upset all balance in our personal- 
ity. They obscure the harmony between the spirit 
of the individual man and the spirit of the uni- 
versal Man; and we give them the name sin. In 
all these instances our realization of the universal 
Man, in his physical, rational and spiritual aspects, 
is obstructed, and our true freedom in the realms 
of matter, mind and spirit is made narrow or 
distorted. 

All the higher religions of India speak of the 
training for Mukti, the liberation of the soul. In 
this self of ours we are conscious of individuality 
and all its activities are engaged in the expressior 

179 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

and enjoyment of our finite and individual nature. 
In our soul we are conscious of the transcendental 
truth in us, the Universal, the Supreme Man ; and 
this soul, the spiritual self, has its enjoyment in the 
renunciation of the individual self for the sake of 
the supreme soul. This renunciation is not in the 
negation of self, but in the dedication of it The 
desire for it comes from an instinct which very 
often knows its own meaning vaguely and gropes 
for a name that would define its purpose. This 
purpose is in the realization of its unity with some 
objective ideal of perfections, some harmony of 
relationship between the individual and the infinite 
man. It is of this harmony, and not of a barren 
isolation that the Upanishad speaks, when it says 
that truth no longer remains hidden in him who 
finds himself in the All. 

Once when I was on a visit to a remote Bengali 
village, mostly inhabited by Mahomedan culti- 
vators, the villagers entertained me with an op r - 
eratic performance the literature of which belonged 
to an obsolete religious sect that had wide influence 
centuries ago. Though the religion itself is dead, 
its voice still continues preaching its philosophy to 
a people, who, in spite of their different culture, 
are not tired of listening. It discussed according 
to its own doctrine the different elements, material 
and transcendental, that constitute human person- 
ality, comprehending the body, the self and the 

180 



SPIRITUAL FREEDOM 

soul. Then came a dialogue, during the course of 
which was related the incident of a person who 
wanted to make a journey to Brindaban, the Gar- 
den of Bliss, but was prevented by a watchman 
who startled him with an accusation of theft. The 
thieving was proved when it was shown that inside 
his clothes he was secretly trying to smuggle into 
the garden the self, which only finds its fulfilment 
by its surrender. The culprit was caught with the 
incriminating bundle in his possession which 
barred for him his passage to the supreme goal. 
Under a tattered canopy, supported on bamboo 
poles and lighted by a few smoking kerosene 
lamps, the village crowd, occasionally interrupted 
by howls of jackals in the neighbouring paddy 
fields, attended with untired interest, till the small 
hours of the morning, the performance of a drama 
that discussed the ultimate meaning of all things 
in a seemingly incongruous setting of dance, music 
and humorous dialogue. 

This illustration will show how naturally, in 
India, poetry and philosophy have walked hand in 
hand, only because the latter has claimed its right 
to guide men to the practical path of their life's 
fulfilment. What is that fulfilment? It is our free- 
dom in truth, which has for its prayer : 

Lead us from the unreal to reality, 

For satyam is anandam, the Real is Joy. 

181 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

In the world of art, our consciousness being 
freed from the tangle of self interest, we gain an 
unobstructed vision of unity, the incarnation of 
the real, which is a joy for ever. 

As in the world of art, so in the spiritual world, 
our soul waits for its freedom from the ego to 
reach that disinterested joy which is the source and 
goal of creation. It cries for its mukti, its freedom 
in the unity of truth. The idea of mukti has af- 
fected our lives in India, touched the springs of 
pure emotions and supplications; for it soars 
heavenward on the wings of poesy. We constantly 
hear men of scanty learning and simple faith sing- 
ing in their prayer to Tara, the Goddess Re- 
deemer : 

"For what sin should I be compelled to remain 
in this dungeon of the world of appearance?" 

They are afraid of being alienated from the 
world of truth, afraid of perpetual drifting amidst 
the froth and foam of things, of being tossed about 
by the tidal waves of pleasure and pain and never 
reaching the ultimate meaning of life. Of these 
men, one may be a carter driving his cart to mar- 
ket, another a fisherman plying his net. They may 
not be prompt with an intelligent answer if they 
are questioned about the deeper import of the song 
they sing, but they have no doubt in their^mind, 
that the abiding cause of all misery is not so much 
in the lack of life's furniture as in the obscurity 

182 



SPIRITUAL FREEDOM 

of life's significance. It is a common topic with 
such to decry an undue emphasis upon "me" and 
"mine", which falsifies the perspective of truth. 
For have they not often seen men, who are not 
above their own level in social position or intellec- 
tual acquirement, going out to seek Truth, leaving 
everything that they have behind them? 

They know that the object of these adventurers 
is not betterment in worldly wealth and power 
it is muktij freedom. They possibly know some 
poor fellow villager of their own craft, who re- 
mains in the world carrying on his daily vocation 
and yet has the reputation of being emancipated in 
the heart of the Eternal. I myself have come across 
a fisherman singing with an inward absorption of 
mind, while fishing all day in the Ganges, who was 
pointed out to me by my boatman, with awe, as a 
man of liberated spirit He is out of reach of the 
conventional prices that are set upon men by so- 
ciety, and which classify them like toys arranged 
in the shop-windows according to the market 
standard of value. 

When the figure of this fisherman comes to my 
mind, I cannot but think that their number is not 
small who with their lives sing the epic of the 
unfettered soul, but will never be known in his- 
tory. These unsophisticated Indian peasants know 
that an Emperor is merely a decorated slave, re- 
maining chained to his Empire, that a millionaire 

183 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

is kept pilloried by his fate in the golden cage of 
his wealth, while this fisherman is free in the realm 
of light When, groping in the dark, we stumble 
against objects, we cling to them believing them 
to be our only hope.. When light comes, we slacken 
our hold, finding them to be mere parts of the 
All to which we are related. The simple man of 
the village knows what freedom is freedom from 
the isolation of self, from the isolation of things, 
which imparts a fierce intensity to our sense of 
possession. He knows that this freedom is not the 
mere negation of bondage, in the bareness of our 
belongings, but in some positive realization which 
gives pure joy to our being, and he sings: "To 
him who sinks into the deep, nothing remains 
unattained." He says again: 

Let my two minds meet and combine, 
And lead me to the city Wonderful. 

When that one mind of ours which wanders in 
search of things in the outer region of the varied, 
and the other which seeks the inward vision of 
unity, are no longer in conflict, they help us to 
realize the ajab, the anirvachaniya, the ineffable. 
The poet saint Kabir has also the same message 
when he sings : 

By saying that Supreme Reality only dwells in the inner realm 
of spirit, we shame the outer world of matter; and also when 
we say that he is only in the outside, we do not speak the 
truth. 

184 



SPIRITUAL FREEDOM 

According to these singers, truth is in unity, and 
therefore freedom is in its realization. The texts 
of our daily worship and meditation are for train- 
ing our mind to overcome the barrier of separate- 
ness from the rest of existence and to realize 
advaitam, the Supreme Unity which is anantam, in- 
finitude. It is philosophical wisdom, having its 
universal radiation in the popular mind in India, 
that inspires our prayer, our daily spiritual prac- 
tices. It has its constant urging for us to go beyond 
the world of appearances, in which facts as facts 
are alien to us, like the mere sounds of foreign 
music; it speaks to us of an emancipation in the 
inner truth of all things, where the endless Many 
reveal the One. 

Freedom in the material world has also the 
same meaning expressed in its own language. 
When nature's phenomena appeared to us as 
irrelevant, as heterogeneous manifestations of an 
obscure and irrational caprice, we lived in an alien 
world never dreaming of our swaraj within'its ter- 
ritory. Through the discovery of the harmony of 
its working with that of our reason, we realize our 
unity with it, and therefore our freedom. 

Those who have been brought up in a mis- 
understanding of this world's process, not knowing 
that it is one with themselves through the relation- 
ship of knowledge and intelligence, are trained as 
cowards by a hopeless faith in the ordinance of 

185 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

a destiny darkly dealing its blows. They submit 
without struggle when human rights are denied 
them, being accustomed to imagine themselves 
born as outlaws in a world constantly thrusting 
upon them incomprehensible surprises of accidents. 

Also in the social or political field, the lack of 
freedom is based upon the spirit of alienation, on 
the imperfect realization of the One. There our 
bondage is in the tortured link of union. One may 
imagine that an individual who succeeds in dis- 
sociating himself from his fellow attains real free- 
dom, inasmuch as all ties of relationship imply 
obligation to others. But we know that, though it 
may sound paradoxical, it is true that in the human 
world only a perfect arrangement of interdepend- 
ence gives rise to freedom. The most individualis- 
tic of human beings who own no responsibility are 
the savages who fail to attain their fulness of man- 
ifestation. They live immersed in obscurity, like 
an ill-lighted fire that cannot liberate itself from 
its envelope of smoke. Only those may attain their 
freedom from the segregation of an eclipsed life 
who have the power to cultivate mutual under- 
standing and co-operation. The history of the 
growth of freedom is the history of the perfection 
of human relationship. 

It has become possible for men to say that exist- 
ence is evil, only because in our blindness we have 
missed something wherein our existence has its 

186 



SPIRITUAL FREEDOM 

truth. If a bird tries to soar with only one of its 
wings, it is offended with the wind for buffeting it 
down to the dust All broken truths are evil. They 
hurt because they suggest something they do not 
offer. Death does not hurt us, but disease does,- 
because disease constantly reminds us of health 
and yet withholds it from us. And life in a half- 
world is evil because it feigns finality when it is 
obviously incomplete, giving us the cup but not 
the draught of life. All tragedies result from truth 
remaining a fragment, its cycle not being com- 
pleted. That cycle finds its end when the indi- 
vidual realizes the universal and thus reaches 
freedom. 

But because this freedom is in truth itself and 
not in an appearance of it, no hurried path of suc- 
cess, forcibly cut out by the greed of result, can be 
a true path. And an obscure village poet, unknown 
to the world of recognized respectability, sings: 

O cruel man of urgent need, must you scorch with fire the 
mind which still is a bud? You will burst it into bits, destroy 
its perfume in your impatience. Do you not see that my Lord, 
the Supreme Teacher, takes ages to perfect the flower and never 
is in a fury of haste? But because of your terrible greed, you 
only rely on force, and what hope is there for you, O man of 
urgent need? "Prithi", says Madan the poet, "Hurt not the 
mind of my Teacher. Know that only he who follows the 
simple current and loses himself, can hear the voice, O man of 
urgent need." 

This poet knows that there is no external means of 

187 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

taking freedom by the throat. It is the inward 
process of losing ourselves that leads to it Bondage 
in all its forms has its stronghold in the inner self 
and not in the outside world; it is in the dimming 
of our consciousness, in the narrowing of our per- 
spective, in the wrong valuation of things. 

Let me conclude this chapter with a song of the 
Baiil sect in Bengal, over a century old, in which 
the poet sings of the eternal bond of union between 
the infinite and the finite soul, from which there can 
be no mukti, because love is ultimate, because it is 
an inter-relation which makes truth complete, be- 
cause absolute independence is the blankness of 
utter servility. The song runs thus : 

It goes on blossoming for ages, the soul-lotus, in which I am 
bound, as well as thou, without escape. There is no end to the 
opening of its petals, and the honey in it has so much sweetness 
that thou, like an enchanted bee, canst never desert it, and 
therefore thou art bound, and I am, and mukti is nowhere. 



188 



CHAPTER XIV 
THE FOUR STAGES OF LIFE 

I HAVE expressly said that I have concentrated my 
attention upon the subject of religion which is 
solely related to man, helping him to train his atti- 
tude and behaviour towards the infinite in its hu- 
man aspect. At the same time it should be under- 
stood that the tendency of the Indian mind has 
ever been towards that transcendentalism which 
does not hold religion to be ultimate but rather to 
be a means to a further end. This end consists in 
the perfect liberation of the individual in the uni- 
versal spirit across the furthest limits of humanity 
itself. 

Such an extreme form of mysticism may be ex- 
plained to my Western readers by its analogy in 
science. For science may truly be described as 
mysticism in the realm of material knowledge. It 
helps us to go beyond appearances and reach the 
inner reality of things in principles which are 
abstractions; it emancipates our mind from the 
thraldom of the senses to the freedom of reason. 

The commonsense view of the world that is ap- 
parent to us has its vital importance for ourselves. 

189 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

For all our practical purposes the earth is flat, the 
sun does set behind the western horizon and what- 
ever may be the verdict of the great mathematician 
about the lack of consistency in time's dealings we 
should fully trust it in setting our watches right 
In questions relating to the arts and our ordinary 
daily avocations we must treat material objects as 
they seem to be and not as they are in essence. But 
the revelations of science even when they go far 
beyond man's power of direct perception give him 
the purest feeling of disinterested delight and a 
supersensual background to his world. Science 
offers us the mystic knowledge of matter which 
very often passes the range of our imagination. We 
humbly accept it following those teachers who 
have trained their reason to free itself from the 
trammels of appearance or personal preferences. 
Their mind dwells in an impersonal infinity where 
there is no distinction between good and bad, high 
and low, ugly and beautiful, useful and useless, 
where all things have their one common right of 
recognition, that of their existence. 

The final freedom of spirit which India aspires 
after has a similar character of realization* It is 
beyond all limits of personality, divested of all 
moral, or aesthetic distinctions ; it is the pure con- 
sciousness of Being, the ultimate reality which has 
an infinite illumination of bliss. Though science 
brings our thoughts to the utmost limit of mind's 

190 



THE FOUR STAGES OF LIFE 

territory it cannot transcend its own creation made 
of a harmony of logical symbols. In it the chick 
has come out of its shell but not out of the defini- 
tion of its own chickenhood. But in India it has 
been said by the yogi that through an intensive 
process of concentration and quietude our con- 
sciousness does reach that infinity where knowledge 
ceases to be knowledge, subject and object become 
one, a state of existence that cannot be defined. 

We have our personal self. It has its desires 
which struggle to create a world where they could 
have their unrestricted activity and satisfaction. 
While it goes on we discover that our self-realiza- 
tion reaches its perfection in the abnegation of self. 
This fact has made us aware that the individual 
finds his meaning in a fundamental reality compre- 
hending all individuals the reality which is the 
moral and spiritual basis of the realm of human 
values. This belongs to our religion. As science is 
the liberation of our knowledge in the universal 
reason which cannot be other than human reason, 
religion is the liberation of our individual person- 
ality in the universal Person who is human all the 
same. 

The ancient explorers in psychology in India 
who declare that our emancipation can be carried 
still further into a realm where infinity is not 
bounded by human limitations, are not content 
with advancing this as a doctrine; they advocate 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

its pursuit for the attainment of the highest goal of 
man. And for its sake the path of discipline has 
been planned which should be opened out across 
our life through all its stages helping us to develop 
our humanity to perfection so that we may surpass 
it in a finality of freedom. 

Perfection has its two aspects in man which can 
to some extent be separated, the perfection in 
being, and perfection in doing. It can be imagined 
that through some training or compulsion good 
works may possibly be extorted from a man who 
personally may not be good. Activities that have 
fatal risks are often undertaken by cowards even 
though they are conscious of the danger. Such works 
may be useful and may continue to exist beyond the 
lifetime of the individual who produced them. And 
yet where the question is not that of utility but of 
moral perfection we hold it important that the 
individual should be true in his goodness. His 
outer good work may continue to produce good 
results but the inner perfection of his personality 
has its own immense value which for him is spirit- 
ual freedom and for humanity is an endless asset 
though we may not know it. For goodness repre- 
sents the detachment of our spirit from the exclu- 
siveness of our egoism; in goodness we identify 
ourselves with the universal humanity. Its value 
is not merely in some benefit for our fellow beings 
but in its truth itself through which we realize 

192 



THE FOUR STAGES OF LIFE 

within us that man is not merely an animal bound 
by his individual passions and appetites but a spirit 
that has its unfettered perfection. Goodness is the 
freedom of our self in the world of man, as is love. 
We have to be true within, not for worldly duties 
but for that spiritual fulfilment, which is in har- 
mony with the Perfect, in union with the Eternal. 
If this were not true, then mechanical perfection 
would be considered to be of higher value than the 
spiritual. In order to realize his unity with the 
universal, the individual man must live his perfect 
life which alone gives him the freedom to tran- 
scend it 

Doubtless Nature, for its own biological pur- 
poses, has created in us a strong faith in life, by 
keeping us unmindful of death. Nevertheless, not 
only our physical existence, but also the environ- 
ment which it builds up around itself, may desert 
us in the moment of triumph, the greatest pros- 
perity comes to its end, dissolving into emptiness; 
the mightiest empire is overtaken by stupor amidst 
the flicker of its festival lights. All this is none the 
less true because its truism bores us to be reminded 
of it 

And yet it is equally true that, though all our 
mortal relationships have their end, we cannot 
ignore them with impunity while they last If we 
behave as if they do not exist, merely because they 
will not continue forever, they will all the same 

193 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

exact their dues, with a great deal over by way of 
penalty. Trying to ignore bonds that are real, 
albeit temporary, only strengthens and prolongs 
their bondage. The soul is great, but the self has 
to be crossed over in order to reach it. We do not 
attain our goal by destroying our path. 

Our teachers in ancient India realized the soul 
of man as something very great indeed. They saw 
no end to its dignity, which found its consumma- 
tion in Brahma himself. Any limited view of man 
would therefore be an incomplete view. He could 
not reach his finality as a mere Citizen or 
Patriot, for neither City nor Country nor the bub- 
ble called the World, could contain his eternal 
soul. 

Bhartrihari, who was once a king, has said : 

What if you have secured the fountain-head of all desires ; what 
if you have put your foot on the neck of your enemy, or by 
your good fortune gathered friends around you? What, even, 
if you have succeeded in keeping mortal bodies alive for ages 
tatah kirn, what then? 

That is to say, man is greater than all these ob- 
jects of his desire. He is true in his freedom. 

But in the process of attaining freedom one must 
bind his will in order to save its forces from dis- 
traction and wastage, so as to gain for it the veloc- 
ity which comes from the bondage itself. Those 
also, who seek liberty in a purely political plane, 
constantly curtail it and reduce their freedom of 

194 



THE FOUR STAGES OF LIFE 

thought and action to that narrow limit which is 
necessary for making political power secure, very 
often at the cost of liberty of conscience. 

India had originally accepted the bonds of her 
social system in order to transcend society, as the 
rider puts reins on his horse and stirrups on his 
own feet in order to ensure greater speed towards 
his goal. 

The Universe cannot be so madly conceived that 
desire should be an interminable song with no 
finale. And just as it is painful to stop in the mid- 
dle of the tune, it should be as pleasant to reach its 
final cadence. 

India has not advised us to come to a sudden 
stop while work is in full swing. It is true that the 
unending procession of the world has gone on, 
through its ups and downs, from the beginning of 
creation till to-day; but it is equally obvious that 
each individual's connection therewith does get 
finished. Must he necessarily quit it without any 
sense of fulfilment? 

So, in the divisions of man's world-life which 
we had in India, work came in the middle, and 
freedom at the end. As the day is divided into 
morning, noon, afternoon and evening, so India 
had divided man's life into four parts, following 
the requirements of his nature. The day has the 
waxing and waning of its light; so has man the 
waxing and waning of his bodily powers. Ac- 

J9S 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

knowledging this, India gave a connected meaning 
to his life from start to finish. 

First came brahmacharya, the period of disci- 
pline in education; then garhasthya, that of the 
world's work; then vanaprasthya, the retreat for 
the loosening of bonds; and finally pravrajya, the 
expectant awaiting of freedom across death. 

We have come to look upon life as a conflict 
with death, the intruding enemy, not the natural 
ending, in impotent quarrel with which we spend 
every stage of it. When the time comes for youth 
to depart, we would hold it back by main force. 
When the fervour of desire slackens, we would 
revive it with fresh fuel of our own devising. When 
our sense organs weaken, we urge them to keep up 
their efforts. Even when our grip has relaxed we 
are reluctant to give up possession. We are not 
trained to recognize the inevitable as natural, and 
so cannot give up gracefully that which has to go, 
but needs must wait till it is snatched from us. The 
truth comes as conqueror only because we have 
lost the art of receiving it as guest 

The stem of the ripening fruit becomes loose, 
its pulp soft, but its seed hardens with provision 
for the next life. Our outward losses, due to age, 
have likewise corresponding inward gains. But, 
in man's inner life, his will plays a dominant part, 
so that these gains depend on his own disciplined 

196 



THE FOUR STAGES OF LIFE 

striving; that is why, in the case of undisciplined 
man, who has omitted to secure such provision for 
the next stage, it is so often seen that his hair is 
grey, his mouth toothless, his muscles slack, and 
yet his stem-hold on life has refused to let go its 
grip, so much so that he is anxious to exercise his 
will in regard to worldly details even after death. 

But renounce we must, and through renuncia- 
tion gain, that is the truth of the inner world. 

The flower must shed its petals for the sake of 
fruition, the fruit must drop off for the re-birth of 
the tree. The child leaves the refuge of the womb 
in order to achieve the further growth of body and 
mind in which consists the whole of the child life; 
next, the soul has to come out of this self-contained 
stage into the fuller life, which has varied relations 
with kinsman and neighbour, together with whom 
it forms a larger body; lastly comes the decline of 
the body, the weakening of desire, and, enriched 
with its experiences, the soul now leaves the nar- 
rower life for the universal life, to which it dedi- 
cates its accumulated wisdom and itself enters into 
relations with the Life Eternal; so that, when 
finally the decaying body has come to the very end 
of its tether, the soul views its breaking away quite 
simply and without regret, in the expectation of 
its own entry into the Infinite. 

From individual body to community, from com- 

197 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

munity to universe, from universe to Infinity, 
this is the soul's normal progress. 

Our teachers, therefore, keeping in mind the 
goal of this progress, did not, in life's first stage 
of education, prescribe merely the learning of 
books or things, but brahmacharya, the living in 
discipline, whereby both enjoyment and its renun- 
ciation would come with equal ease to the strength- 
ened character. Life being a pilgrimage, with lib- 
eration in Brahma as its object, the living of it was 
as a spiritual exercise to be carried through its dif- 
ferent stages, reverently and with a vigilant deter- 
mination. And the pupil, from his very initiation, 
had this final consummation always kept in his 
view. 

Once the mind refuses to be bound by temperate 
requirements, there ceases to be any reason why it 
should cry halt at any particular limit; and so, 
like trying to extinguish fire with oil, its acquisi- 
tions only make its desires blaze up all the fiercer. 
That is why it is so essential to habituate the mind, 
from the very beginning, to be conscious of, and 
desirous of, keeping within the natural limits; to 
cultivate the spirit of enjoyment which is allied 
with the spirit of freedom, the readiness for renun- 
ciation. 

After the period of such training comes the 
period of world-life, the life of the householder. 
Manu tells us: 

198 



THE FOUR STAGES OF LIFE 

It is not possible to discipline ourselves so effectively if out of 
touch with the world, as while pursuing the world-life with 
wisdom. 

That is to say, wisdom does not attain complete- 
ness except through the living of life; and disci- 
pline divorced from wisdom is not true discipline, 
but merely the meaningless following of custom, 
which is only a disguise for stupidity. 

Work, especially good work, becomes easy only 
when desire has learnt to discipline itself. Then 
alone does the householder's state become a centre 
of welfare for all the world, and instead of being 
an obstacle, helps on the final liberation. 

The second stage of life having been thus spent, 
the decline of the bodily powers must be taken as 
a warning that it is coming to its natural end. This 
must not be taken dismally as a notice of dismissal 
to one still eager to stick to his post, but joyfully 
as maturity may be accepted as the stage of ful- 
filment. 

After the infant leaves the womb, it still has to 
remain close to its mother for a time, remaining 
attached in spite of its detachment, until it can 
adapt itself to its new freedom. Such is the case 
in the third stage of life, when man though aloof 
from the world still remains in touch with it while 
preparing himself for the final stage of complete 
freedom. He still gives to the world from his store 
of wisdom and accepts its support ; but this inter- 

199 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

change is not of the same intimate character as in 
the stage of the householder, there being a new 
sense of distance. 

Then at last comes a day when even such free 
relations have their end, and the emancipated soul 
steps out of all bonds to face the Supreme Soul. 

Only in this way can man's world-life be truly 
lived from one end to the other, without being en- 
gaged at every step in trying "conclusions with 
death, not being overcome, when death comes in 
due course, as by a conquering enemy. 

For this fourfold way of life India attunes man 
to the grand harmony of the universal, leaving no 
room for untrained desires of a rampant individu- 
alism to pursue their destructive career unchecked, 
but leading them on to their ultimate modulation 
in the Supreme. 

If we really believe this, then we must uphold 
an ideal of life in which everything else, the dis- 
play of individual power, the might of nations, 
must be counted as subordinate and the soul of man 
must triumph and liberate itself from the bond of 
personality which keeps it in an ever revolving 
circle of limitation. 

If that is not to be, tatah kirn, what then? 

But such an ideal of the utter extinction of the 
individual separateness has not a universal sanction 
in India. There are many of us whose prayer is 
for dualism so that for them the bond of devotion 

200 



THE FOUR STAGES OP LIFE 

with God may continue forever. For them religion 
is a truth which is ultimate and they refuse to envy 
those who are ready to sail for the further shore of 
existence across humanity. They know that human 
imperfection is the cause of our sorrow but there 
is a fulfilment in love within the range of our lim- 
itation which accepts all sufferings and yet rises 
above them. 



201 



CHAPTER XV 
CONCLUSION 

IN the Sanskrit Language the bird is described 
as "twice-born" once in its limited shell and then 
finally in the freedom of the unbounded sky. Those 
of our community who believe in the liberation of 
man's limited self in the freedom of the spirit re- 
tain the same epithet for themselves. In all de- 
partments of life man shows this dualism his 
existence within the range of obvious facts and his 
transcendence of it in a realm of deeper meaning. 

Having this instinct inherent in his mind which 
ever suggests to him the crossing of the border, 
he has never accepted what is apparent as final and 
his incessant struggle has been to break through 
the shell of his limitations. In this attempt he 
often goes against the instincts of his vital nature, 
and even exults in his defiance of the extreme penal 
laws of the biological kingdom. The best wealth 
of his civilization has been achieved by his follow- 
ing the guidance of this instinct in his ceaseless 
adventure of the Endless Further, His achieve- 
ment of truth goes far beyond his needs and the 
realization of his self strives across the frontier 

202 



CONCLUSION 

of its individual interest. This proves to him his 
infinity and makes his religion real to him by his 
own manifestation in truth and goodness. Only 
for man there can be religion because his evolution 
is from efficiency in nature towards the perfection 
of spirit. 

According to some interpretations of the Ve- 
danta doctrine Brahman is the absolute Truth, the 
impersonal It, in which there can be no distinction 
of this and that, the good and the evil, the beauti- 
ful and its opposite, having no other quality except 
its ineffable blissfulness in the eternal solitude of 
its consciousness utterly devoid of all things and 
all thoughts. But, as our religion can only have its 
significance in this phenomenal world compre- 
hended by our human self, this absolute conception 
of Brahman is outside the subject of my discussion. 
What I have tried to bring out in this book is the 
fact that whatever name may have been given to 
the divine Reality it has found its highest place 
in the history of our religion owing to its human 
character, giving meaning to the idea of sin and 
sanctity, and offering an eternal background to all 
the ideals of perfection which have their harmony 
with man's own nature. 

We have the age-long tradition in our country, 
as I have already stated, that through the process 
of yoga man can transcend the utmost bounds of 
his humanity and find himself in a pure state of 

203 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

consciousness of his undivided unity with Para- 
brahman, There is none who has the right to con- 
tradict this belief ; for it is a matter of direct ex- 
perience and not of logic. It is widely known in 
India that there are individuals who have the 
power to attain temporarily the state of Samadhi, 
the complete merging of the self in the infinite, a 
state which is indescribable. While accepting their 
testimony as true, let us at the same time have faith 
in the testimony of others who have felt a profound 
love, which is the intense feeling of union, for a 
Being who comprehends in himself all things that 
are human in knowledge, will and action. And he 
is God, who is not merely a sum total of facts, but 
the goal that lies immensely beyond all that is 
comprised in the past and the present 



204 



APPENDICES 



APPENDIX I 
THE BAttL SINGERS OF BENGAL 

(The following account of the Baiils in Northern India has 
been given in the Visvabharati Quarterly by my friend 
and fellow-worker, Professor Kshiti Mohun Sen of 
Santiniketan, to whom I am grateful for having kindly 
allowed me to reproduce what he has written in this 
Appendix. ) 

Baiil means madcap, from bayu (Skt. Vayu) in its 
sense of nerve current, and has become the appel- 
lation of a set of people who do not conform to 
established social usage. This derivation is sup- 
ported by the following verse of Narahari : 

That is why, brother, I became a madcap Baiil. 
No master I obey, nor injunctions, canons or custom. 
Now no men-made distinctions have any hold on me, 
And I revel only in the gladness of my own welling love. 
In love there's no separation, but commingling always. 
So I rejoice in song and dance with each and all. 

These lines also introduce us to the main tenets of 
the cult The freedom, however, that the Baiils 
seek from all forms of outward compulsion goes 
even further, for among such are recognized as 
well the compulsions exerted by our desires and 
antipathies. Therefore, according to this cult, in 
order to gain real freedom, one has first to die to 
the life of the world whilst still in the flesh for 
only then can one be rid of all extraneous claims. 
Those of the Baiils who have Islamic leanings call 
such "death in life'* fana, a term -used by the Sufis 

207 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

to denote union with the Supreme Being. True 
love, according to the Baiils, is incompatible with 
any kind of compulsion. Unless the bonds of neces- 
sity are overcome, liberation is out of the question. 
Love represents the wealth of life which is in excess 
of need. . . . From hard, practical politics touch- 
ing our earth to the nebulous regions of abstract 
metaphysics, everywhere India expressed the 
power of her genius equally well. . , And yet 
none of these, neither severally nor collectively, 
constituted her specific genius; none showed the 
full height to which she could raise herself, none 
compassed the veritable amplitude of her inner- 
most reality. It is when we come to the domain 
of the Spirit, of God-realization, that we find the 
real nature and stature and genius of the Indian 
people ; it is here that India lives and moves as in 
her own home of Truth. 

The Baiil cult is followed by householders as 
well as homeless wanderers, neither of whom ac- 
knowledge class or caste, special deities, temples 
or sacred places. Though they congregate on the 
occasion of religious festivals, mainly of the Vaish- 
navas, held in special centres, they never enter any 
temple. They do not set uj> any images of divini- 
ties, or religious symbols, in their own places of 
worship or mystic realization. True, they some- 
times maintain with care and reverence spots sacred 
to some esteemed master or devotee, but they per- 
form no worship there. Devotees from the lowest 
strata of the Hindu and Moslem communities are 
welcomed into their ranks, hence the Bauls are 
looked down upon by both. It is possible that their 
own contempt for temples had its origin in the 

208 



A PPENDICES 

denial of admittance therein to their low class 
brethren. What need, say they, have we of other 
temples, is not this body of ours the temple where 
the Supreme Spirit has His abode? The human 
body, despised by most other religions, is thus for 
them the holy of holies, wherein the Divine is 
intimately enshrined as the Man of the Heart. 
And in this wise is the dignity of Man upheld by 
them. 

Kabir, Nanak, Ravidas, Dadu and his followers 
have also called man's body the temple of God 
the microcosm in which the cosmic abode of the 
all-pervading Supreme Being is represented. 

Kabir says : 

In this body is the Garden of Paradise; herein are comprised 
the seven seas and the myriad stars ; here is the Creator mani- 
fest (I. 101.) 

Dadu says: 

This body is my scripture; herein the All-Merciful has written 
for me His message. 

Rajjab (Dadu's chief Moslem disciple) says: 

Within the devotee is the paper on which the scriptures are 
written in letters of Life. But few care to read them; they 
turn a deaf ear to the message of the heart. 

Most Indian sects adopt some distinct way of keep- 
ing the hair of head and face as a sign of their 
sect or order. Therefore, so as to avoid being 
dragged into any such distinctions, the Baiils allow 
hair and beard and moustache to grow freely. 
Thus do we remain simple, they say. The similar 
practice of the Sikhs in this matter is to be noted. 

209 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

Neither do the Baiils believe that lack of clothing 
or bareness of body conduce to religious merit 
According to them the whole body should be kept 
decently covered. Hence their long robe, for 
which, if they cannot afford a new piece of cloth, 
they gather rags and make it of patches. In this 
they are different from the ascetic sanyasins, but 
resemble rather the Buddhist monks* 

The Baiils do not believe in aloofness from, or 
renunciation of, any person or thing; their central 
idea is yoga, attachment to and communion with 
the divine and its manifestations, as the means of 
realization. We fail to recognize the temple of 
God in the bodily life of man, they explain, be- 
cause its lamp is not alight The true vision must 
be attained in which this temple will become mani- 
fest in each and every human body, whereupon 
mutual communion and worship will spontane- 
ously arise. Truth cannot be communicated to 
those on whom you look down. You must be able 
to see the divine light that shines within them, for 
it is your own lack of vision that makes all seem 
dark. 

Kabir says the same thing: 

In every abode the light doth shine; it is you who are blind 
that cannot see. When by dint of looking and looking you at 
length can discern it, the veils of this world will be torn 
asunder. (II. 33.) 

It is because the devotee is not in communion that he says 
the goal is far away. (II. 34.) 

Many such similarities are to be observed between 
the sayings of the B axils and those of the Upper 
Indian devotees of the Middle Ages, but, unlike 
the case of the followers of the latter, the Baiils 
210 



APPENDICES 

did not become crystallized into any particular 
order or religious organization. So, in the Baiils 
of Bengal, there is to be found a freedom and in- 
dependence of mind and spirit that resists all 
attempt at definition. Their songs are unique in 
courage and felicity of expression. But under 
modern conditions they are becoming extinct, or 
at best holding on to external features bereft of 
their original speciality. It would be a great pity 
if no record of their achievements should be kept 
before their culture is lost to the world. 

Though the Baiils count amongst their follow- 
ing a variety of sects and castes, both Hindu and 
Moslem, chiefly coming from the lower social 
ranks, they refuse to give any other account of 
themselves to the questioner than that they are 
Baiils. They acknowledge none of the social or 
religious formalities, but delight in the ever-chang- 
ing play of life, which cannot be expressed in mere 
words but of which something may be captured in 
song, through the ineffable medium of rhythm 
and tune. 

Their songs are passed on from Master to disci- 
ple, the latter when competent adding others of 
his own, but, as already mentioned, they are never 
recorded in book form. Their replies to questions 
are usually given by singing appropriate selections 
from these songs. If asked the reason why, they 
say: "We are like birds. We do not walk on our 
legs, but fly with our wings." 

There was a Brahmin of Bikrampur, known as 
Chhaku Thakur, who was the disciple of a Baiil 
of the Namasudra caste (accounted one of the low- 
est) and hence had lost his place in his own com- 

2X1 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

munity. When admonished to be careful about 
what he uttered, so as to avoid popular odium, he 
answered with the song: 

Let them relieve their minds by saying what they will, 

I pursue my own simple way, fearing none at all. 

The Mango seed will continue to produce Mango trees, no 

Jambolans. 
This seed of mine will produce the real me all glory to my 

Master ! 

Love being the main principle according to the 
Baiils, a Vaishnava once asked a Baiil devotee 
whether he was aware of the different kinds of 
love as classified in the Vaishnava scriptures. 
"What should an illiterate ignoramus like me 
know of the scriptures?" was the reply. The 
Vaishnava then offered to read and explain the 
text, which he proceeded to do, while the Baul 
listened with such patience as he could muster. 
When asked for his opinion, after the reading was 
over, he sang: 

A goldsmith, methinks, has come into the flower garden. 
He would appraise the lotus, forsooth, 
By rubbing it on his touchstone! 

Recruits from the higher castes are rare amongst 
the Baiils. When any such do happen to come, 
they are reduced to the level of the rest. Are the 
lower planks of a boat of any lesser importance 
than the upper? say they. 

Once in Vikrampur, I was seated on the river 
bank by the side of a Baiil. "Father", I asked him, 
"why is it that you keep no historical record of 
yourselves for the use of posterity?" "We follow 
the sahaj (simple) way", he replied, "and so leave 
no trace behind us." The tide had then ebbed, and 

2X2 



APPENDICES 

there was but little water in the river bed. Only 
a few boatmen were to be seen pushing their boats 
along the mud. The Baxil continued : "Do the boats 
that sail over the flooded river leave any mark? 
What should these boatmen of the muddy track, 
urged on by their need, know of the sahaj (sim- 
ple) way? The true endeavour is to keep oneself 
simply afloat in the stream of devotion that flows 
through the lives of devotees to mingle one's own 
devotion with theirs. There are many classes of 
men amongst the Baiils, but they are all Baiils 
they have no other achievement or history. All the 
streams that fall into the Ganges become the 
Ganges. So must we lose ourselves in the common 
stream, else will it cease to be living." 

On another Baiil being asked why they did not 
follow the scriptures, "Are we dogs", he replied, 
"that we should lick up the leavings of others? 
Brave men rejoice in the output of their own 
energy, they create their own festivals. These 
cowards who have not the power to rejoice in them- 
selves have to rely on what others have left. Afraid 
lest the world should lack festivals in the future, 
they save up the scraps left over by their predeces- 
sors for later use. They are content with glorify- 
ing their forefathers because they know not how 
to create for themselves." 

If you would know that Man, 

Simple must fae your endeavour. 

To the region of the simple must you fare. 

Pursuers of the path of man's own handiwork, 

Who follow the crowd, gleaning their f alsp leavings, 

What news can they get of the Real? 

It is hardly to be wondered at that people wH< 
think thus should have no use for history I 

213 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

We have already noticed that, like all the fol- 
lowers of the simple way, the Baiils have no faith 
in specially sacred spots or places of pilgrimage, 
but that they nevertheless congregate on the occa- 
sion of religious festivals. If asked why, the Baiil 
says: 

We would be within hail of the other Boatmen, to hear their 

calls, 
That we may make sure our boat rightly floats on the sahaj 

stream. 

Not what men have said or done in the past, but 
the living human touch is what they find helpful. 
Here is a song giving their ideas about pilgrimage : 

I would not go, my heart, to Mecca or Medina, 
For behold, I ever abide by the side of my Friend. 
Mad would I become, had I dwelt afar, not knowing Him. 
There's no worship in Mosque or Temple or special holy day. 
At every step I have my Mecca and Kashi; sacred is every 
moment. 

If a Baiil is asked the age of his cult whether it 
comes before or after this one or that, he says, 
"Only the artificial religions of the world are 
limited by time. Our sahaj (simple, natural) reli- 
gion is timeless, it has neither beginning nor end, 
it is of all time." The religion of the Upanishads 
and Puranas, even that of the Vedas, is, according 
to them, artificial. 

The followers of the sahaj cult believe only in 
living religious experience. Truth, according to 
them, has two aspects, inert and living. Confined 
to itself truth has no value for man. It becomes 
priceless when embodied in a living personality. 
The conversion of the inert into living truth by the 

214 



APPENDICES 

devotee they compare to the conversion into milk 
by the cow of its fodder, or the conversion by the 
tree of dead matter into fruit He who has this 
power of making truth living, is the Guru or Mas- 
ter. Such Gurus they hold in special reverence, for 
the eternal and all-pervading truth can only be 
brought to man's door by passing through his life. 
The Baiils say that emptiness of time and space 
is required for a playground. That is why God has 
preserved an emptiness in the heart of man, for the 
sake of His own play of Love. Our wise and 
learned ones were content with finding in Brahma 
the tat (lit. "that" the ultimate substance). The 
Baiils, not being Pandits, do not profess to under- 
stand all this fuss about thatness, they want a Per- 
son. So their God is the Man of the Heart (maner 
manush) sometimes simply the Man (purush). 
This Man of the Heart is ever and anon lost in 
the turmoil of things. Whilst He is revealed 
within, no worldly pleasures can give satisfaction. 
Their sole anxiety is the finding of this Man. 

The Baiil sings: 

Ah, where am I to find Him, the Man of my Heart? 
Alas, since I lost Him, I wander in search of Him, 
Thro* lands near and far. 

The agony of separation from Him cannot be miti- 
gated for them by learning or philosophy : 

Oh, these words and words, my mind would none of them, 
The Supreme Man it must and shall discover* 
So long as Him I do not see, these mists slake not my thirst. 
Mad am I ; for lack of that Man I madly run about ; 
For his sake the world IVe left ; for Bisha naught eke will 
serve, 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

This Bisha was a bhuin-mali, by caste, disciple of 
Bala, the Kaivarta, 

This cult of the Supreme Man is only to be 
found in the Vedas hidden away in the Purusha- 
sukta (A.V. 19.6). It is more freely expressed by 
the Upper Indian devotees of the Middle Ages. 
It is all in all with the Bauls. The God whom 
these illiterate outcastes seek so simply and natu- 
rally in their lives is obscured by the accredited 
religious leaders in philosophical systems and 
terminology, in priestcraft and ceremonial, in in- 
stitutions and temples. 

Not satisfied with the avatars (incarnations of 
God) mentioned in the scriptures, the Baiil sings: 

As we look on every creature, we find each to be His avatar. 
What can you teach us of His ways? In ever-new play He 
wondrously revels. 

And Kabir also tells us: 

All see the Eternal One, but only the devotee, in his solitude, 
recognizes him. 

A friend of mine was once much impressed by the 
reply of a Baiil who was asked why his robe was 
not tinted with ascetic ochre: 

Can the colour show outside, unless the inside is first tinctured? 
Can the fruit attain ripe sweetness by the painting of its skin? 

This aversion of the Baiil from outward marks of 
distinction is also shared by the Upper Indian 
devotees, as I have elsewhere noticed. 

The age-long controversy regarding Jvaita 
(dualism) and advaita (monism) is readily solved 
by these wayfarers on the path of Love. Love is 

216 



APPENDICES 

the simple striving, love the natural communion, 
so believe the Baiils. "Ever two and ever one, of 
this the name of Love", say they. In love, oneness 
is achieved without any loss of respective self- 
hood. 

The same need exists for the reconcilement of the 
antagonism between the outer call of the material 
world and the inner call of the spiritual world, as 
for the realization of the mutual love of the indi- 
vidual and Supreme self. The God who is Love, 
say the Baiils, can alone serve to turn the currents 
of the within and the without in one and the same 
direction. 

Kabir says: 

If we say He is only within, then the whole Universe is shamed. 
If we say He is only without, then that is false. 
He, whose feet rest alike on the sentient and on the inert, 
fills the gap between the inner and the outer world. 

The inter-relations of man's body and the Universe 
have to be realized by spiritual endeavour. Such 
endeavour is called Kaya Sadhan (Realization 
through the body) . 

One process in this Kaya Sadhan of the Baiils 
is known as Urdha-srota (the elevation of the cur- 
rent). Waters flow downwards according to the 
ordinary physical law. But with the advent of> 
Life the process is reversed. When the living seed 
sprouts the juices are drawn upwards, and on the 
elevation that such flow can attain depends the 
height of the tree. It is the same in the life of man. 
His desires ordinarily flow downward towards ani- 
mality. The endeavour of the expanding spirit is 
to turn their current upwards towards the light* 

217 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

The cu-rrents of jiva (animal life) must be con- 
verted into the current of Shiva (God life). They 
form a centre round the ego ; they must be raised 
by the force of love. 

Says Dadu's daughter, Nanimata : 

My life is the lamp afloat on the stream. 

To what bourne shall it take me ? 

How is the divine to conquer the carnal, 

The downward current to be upward turned? 

As when the wick is lighted the oil doth upward flow, 

So simply is destroyed the thirst of the body. 

The Yoga Vasistha tells us : 

Uncleansed desires bind to the world, purified desires give 
liberation. 

References to this reversal of current are also to be 
found in the Atharva Veda (X. 2.9; 2.34). This 
reversal is otherwise considered by Indian devotees 
as the conversion of the sthula (gross) in the 
sukshma (fine). 

The Baiil sings: 

Love is my golden touch it turns desire into service : 
Earth seeks to become Heaven, man to become God. 

Another aspect of the idea of reversal has been put 
thus by Rabindranath Tagore in his Broken Ties: 
"If I keep going in the same direction along which 
He comes to me, then I shall be going further and 
further away from Him. If I proceed in the oppo- 
site direction, then only can we meet He loves 
form, so He is continually descending towards 
form. We cannot live by form alone, so we must 
art 



APPENDICES 

ascend towards His formlessness. He is free, so 
His play is within bonds. We are bound, so we 
find our joy in freedom. All our sorrow is because 
we cannot understand this. He who sings, proceeds 
from his joy to the tune ; he who hears, from the 
tune to joy. One comes from freedom into bond- 
age, the other goes from bondage into freedom; 
only thus can they have their communion. He 
sings and we hear. He ties the bonds as He sings to 
us, we untie them as we listen to Him." 

This idea also occurs in our devotees of the 
Middle Ages. 

The "sahaj" folk endeavour to seek the bliss of 
divine union only for its own sake. Mundane de- 
sires are therefore accounted the chief obstacles in 
the way. But for getting rid of them, the wise 
Guru, according to the Bauls, does not advise 
renunciation of the good things of the world, but 
the opening of the door to the higher self. Thus 
guided, says Kabir, 

I close not my eyes, stop not my ears, nor torment my body* 
But every path I then traverse becomes a path of pilgrimage, 

whatever work I engage in becomes service. 
This simple consummation is the best. 

The simple way has led its votaries easily and nat- 
urally to their living conception of Humanity. 

Raj jab says: 

All the world is the Veda, all creations the Koran. Why read 
paper scriptures, O Rajjab. 

Gather ever fresh wisdom from the Universe. The eternal wis- 
dom shines within the concourse 

of the millions of Humanity. 

219 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

The Baiil sings: 

The simple has its thirty million strings whose mingled sym- 
phony ever sounds. 

Take all the creatures of the World into yourself. Drown your- 
self in that eternal music. 

I conclude with a few more examples of Baiil 
songs, esoteric and otherwise, from amongst many 
others of equal interest. 

By Gangaram, the Namasudra 

Realize how finite and unbounded are One, 

As you breathe in and out. 

Of all ages, then, you will count the moments, 

In every moment find the ages, 

The drop in the ocean, the ocean in the drop. 

If your endeavour be but sahaj, beyond argument and cogita- 
tion, 

You will taste the precious quintessence. 

Blinded are you by over-much journeying from bourne to 
bourne, 

O Gangaram, be simple! Then alone will vanish all your 
doubts. 

By Bisha, the disciple of Bala: 

The Simple Man was in the Paradise of my heart, 

Alas, how and when did I lose Him, 

That now no peace I know, at home or abroad ? 

By meditation and telling of beads, in worship and travail, 

The quest goes on for ever ; 

But unless the Simple Man comes of Himself, 

Fruitless is it all ; 

For he yields not to forge tfulness of striving. 

Bisha's heart has understood right well, 

That by His own simple way alone is its door unlocked. 

"Listen, O brother man", declares Chandidas, "the 
Truth of Man is the highest of truths ; there is no 
other truth above it" 
220 



APPENDIX II 
NOTE ON THE NATURE OF REALITY 

(A conversation between Rabindranath Tagore and Professor 
Albert Einstein, in the afternoon of July 14, 1930, at the 
Professor's residence in Kaputh.) 

E. : Do you believe in the Divine as isolated 
from the world? 

T. : Not isolated. The infinite personality of 
Man comprehends the Universe. There cannot be 
anything that cannot be subsumed by the human 
personality, and this proves that the truth of the 
Universe is human truth. I have taken a scientific 
fact to illustrate this Matter is composed of pro- 
tons and electrons, with gaps between them; but 
matter may seem to be solid. Similarly humanity 
is composed of individuals, yet they have their 
inter-connection of human relationship, which 
gives living solidarity to man's world. The entire 
universe is linked up with us in a similar manner, 
it is a human universe. I have pursued this 
thought through art, literature and the religious 
consciousness of man. 

E. : There are two different conceptions about 
the nature of the universe: (i) The world as a 
unity dependent on humanity. (2) The world as 
a reality independent of the human factor. 

T. : When our universe is in harmony with Man, 
the eternal, we know it as truth, we feel it as 
beauty. 

221 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

E,: This is a purely human conception of the 
universe. 

T.: There can be no other conception. This 
world is a human world the scientific view of it 
is also that of the scientific man. There is some 
standard of reason and enjoyment which gives it 
truth, the standard of the Eternal Man whose ex- 
periences are through our experiences. 

E.: This is a realization of the human entity. 

T. : Yes, one eternal entity. We have to realize 
it through our emotions and activities. We realize 
the Supreme Man who has no individual limita- 
tions through our limitations. Science is concerned 
with that which is not confined to individuals; it 
is the impersonal human world of truths. Religion 
realizes these truths and links them up with our 
deeper needs; our individual consciousness of 
truth gains universal significance. Religion ap- 
plies values to truth, and we know truth as good 
through our own harmony with it. 

E. : Truth, then, or Beauty, is not independent 
of man? 

T.:No. 

E.: If there would be no human beings any 
more, the Apollo of Belvedere would no longer be 
beautiful. 

T.:No. 

E.: I agree with regard to this conception of 
Beauty, but not with regard to Truth. 

T,: Why not? Truth is realized through man. 

E. : I cannot prove that my conception is right, 
but that is my religion. 

T.: Beauty is in the ideal of perfect harmony 
which is in the Universal Being; Truth the perfect 

222 



APPE NDI CES 

comprehension of the Universal Mind. We indi- 
viduals approach it through our own mistakes and 
blunders, through our accumulated experience, 
through our illumined consciousness *how, other- 
wise, can we know Truth? 

E. : I cannot prove scientifically that truth must 
be conceived as a truth that is valid independent 
of humanity; but I believe it firmly. I believe, for 
instance, that the Pythagorean theorem in geom- 
etry states something that is approximately true, 
independent of the existence of man. Anyway, if 
there is a reality independent of man there is also 
a truth relative to this reality; and in the same 
way the negation of the first engenders a negation 
of the existence of the latter. 

T\: Truth, which is one with the Universal 
Being, must essentially be human, otherwise what- 
ever we individuals realize as true can never be 
called truth at least the truth which is described 
as scientific and can only be reached through the 
process of logic, in other words, by an organ of 
thoughts which is human. According to Indian 
Philosophy there is Brahman the absolute Truth, 
which cannot be conceived by the isolation of the 
individual mind or described by words, but can 
only be realised by completely merging the indi- 
vidual in its infinity. But such a truth cannot be- 
long to Science* The nature of truth which we are 
discussing is an appearance that is to say what 
appears to be true to the human mind and there- 
fore is human, and may be called maya, or illusion, 

E. : So according to your conception, which may 
be the Indian conception, it is not the illusion of 
the individual, but of humanity as a whole. 

223 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

T. : In science we go through the discipline of 
eliminating the personal limitations of our indi- 
vidual minds and thus reach that comprehension 
of truth which is in the mind of the Universal 
Man. 

E. : The problem begins whether Truth is inde- 
pendent of our consciousness. 

T. : What we call truth lies in the rational har- 
mony between the subjective and objective aspects 
of reality, both of which belong to the super- 
personal man. 

E. : Even in our everyday life we feel compelled 
to ascribe a reality independent of man to the ob- 
jects we use. We do this to connect the experiences 
of our senses in a reasonable way. For instance, if 
nobody is in this house, yet that table remains 
where it is. 

T. : Yes, it remains outside the individual mind, 
but not outside the universal mind. The table 
which I perceive is perceptible by the same kind 
of consciousness which I possess. 

E. : Our natural point of view in regard to the 
existence of truth apart from humanity cannot be 
explained or proved, but it is a belief which no- 
body can lack no primitive beings even. We 
attribute to Truth a. super-human objectivity; it is 
indispensable for us, this reality which is inde- 
pendent of our existence and our experience and 
our mind though we cannot say what it means. 

T. : Science has proved that the table as a solid 
object is an appearance, and therefore that which 
the human mind perceives as a table would not 
exist if that mind were naught. At the same time 
it must be admitted that the fact, that the ultimate 

224 



APPENDICES 

physical reality of the table is nothing but a mul- 
titude of separate revolving centres of electric 
forces, also belongs to the human mind. 

In the apprehension of truth there is an eternal 
conflict between the universal human mind and the 
same mind confined in the individual. The per- 
petual process of reconciliation is being carried on 
in our science and philosophy, and in our ethics. 
In any case, if there be any truth absolutely unre- 
lated to humanity then for us it is absolutely non- 
existing. 

It is not difficult to imagine a mind to which the 
sequence of things happens not in space, but only 
in time like the sequence of notes in music. For 
such a mind its conception of reality is akin to the 
musical reality in which Pythagorean geometry 
can have no meaning. There is the reality of 
paper, infinitely different from the reality of lit- 
erature. For the kind of mind possessed by the 
moth, which eats that paper, literature is abso- 
lutely non-existent, yet for Man's mind literature 
has a greater value of truth than the paper itself, 
In a similar manner, if there be some truth which 
has no sensuous or rational relation to the human 
mind it will ever remain as nothing so long as we 
remain human beings. 

E,: Then I am more religious than you arel 

T. : My religion is in the reconciliation of ^thc 
Super-personal Man, the Universal human spirit 
in my own individual being* This has been the 
subject of my Hibbert Lectures, which I have 
called "The Religion of Man". 



225 



APPENDIX III 
DADU AND THE MYSTERY OF FORM 

(From an article in the Vwuabharati Quarterly 
by Professor Kshiti Mohan Sen.) 

THE language of man has been mainly occupied 
with telling us about the elements into which the 
finite world has been analysed ; nevertheless, now 
and again, it reveals glimpses of the world of the 
Infinite as well ; for the spirit of man has discov- 
ered rifts in the wall of Matter. Our intellect can 
count the petals, classify the scent, and describe the 
colour of the rose, but its unify finds its expression 
when we rejoice in it. 

The intellect at best can give us only a broken 
view of things. The marvellous vision of the Seer, 
in spite of the scoffing in which both Science and 
Metaphysics so often indulge, can alone make 
manifest to us the truth of a thing in its complete- 
ness. When we thus gain a vision of unity, we are 
no longer intellectually aware of detail, counting, 
classifying, or distinguishing for them we have 
found admittance into the region of the spirit, 
and there we simply measure the truth of our 
realization by the intensity of our joy. 

What is the meaning of this unutterable joy? 
That which we know by intellectual process is 
something outside ourselves. But the vision of any- 
thing in the fulness of its unity involves the reali- 

226 



APPENDI C ES 

zation of the unity of the self within, as well as of 
the relation between the two. The knowledge of 
the many may make us proud, but it makes us glad 
when our kinship with the One is brought home to 
us. Beauty is the name that we give to this ac- 
knowledgment of unity and of its relationship with 
ourselves. 

It is through the beauty of Nature, or of Human 
Character, or Service, that we get our glimpses of 
the Supreme Soul whose essence is bliss. Or rather, 
it is when we become conscious of Him in Nature, 
or Art, or Service, that Beauty flashes out And 
whenever we thus light upon the Dweller-within, 
all discord disappears and Love and Beauty are 
seen inseparable from Truth. It is really the com- 
ing of Truth to us as kinsman which floods our 
being with Joy. 

This realization in Joy is immediate, self-suffi- 
cient, ultimate. When the self experiences Joy 
within, it is completely satisfied and has nothing 
more to ask from the outside world. Joy, as we 
know it, is a direct, synthetic measure of Beauty 
and neither awaits nor depends upon any analyti- 
cal process. In our Joy, further, we behold not only 
the unity, but also the origin, for the Beauty which 
tells us of Him can be nothing but radiance re- 
flected, melody re-echoed, from Him; else would 
all this have been unmeaning indeed Society, 
Civilization, Humanity. The progress of Man 
would otherwise have ended in an orgy of the 
gratification of his animal passions. 

The power of realization, for each particular 
individual, is limited. All do not attain the privi- 
lege of directly apprehending the universal Unity. 

227 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

Nevertheless, a partial vision of it, say in a flower, 
or in a friend, is a common experience; moreover, 
the potentiality is inherent in every individual soul, 
by dint of disciplined striving, to effect its own 
expansion and thereupon eventually to achieve the 
realization of the Supreme SouL 

By whom, meanwhile, are these ineffable tidings 
from the realm of the Spirit, the world of the In- 
finite, brought to us? Not by potentates or phi- 
losophers, but by the poor, the untutored, the 
despised. And with what superb assurance do they 
lead us out of the desert of the intellect into the 
paradise of the Spirit! 

When our metaphysicians, dividing themselves 
into rival schools of Monism, Dualism or Monis- 
tic-Dualism, had joined together in dismissing the 
world as Maya, then, up from the depths of their 
social obscurity, rose these cobblers, weavers, and 
sewers of bags, proclaiming such theorems of the 
intellect to be all nonsense; for the metaphysicians 
had not seen with their own inner vision how the 
world overflowed with Truth and Love, Beauty 
and Joy. 

Dadu, Ravidas, Kabir and Nanafc were not 
ascetics; they bore no message of poverty, or re- 
nunciation, for their own sake; they were poets 
who had pierced the curtain of appearances and 
had glimpses of the world of Unity, where God 
himself is a poet Their wprds cannot stand the 
glare of logical criticism; they babble, like babes, 
of the joy of their vision of Him, of the ecstasy 
into which His music has thrown them. 

Nevertheless, it is they, not the scientists or phi- 
losophers, who have taught us of reality. On the 

228 



APP E NDICES 

one side the Supreme Soul is alone, on the other 
my individual soul is alone. If the two do not come 
together, then indeed there befalls the greatest of 
all calamities, the utter emptiness of chaos. For 
all the abundance of His inherent joy, God is in 
want of my joy of Him; and Reality in its perfec- 
tion only blossoms where we meet 

"When I look upon the beauty of this Universe", 
says Dadu, "I cannot help asking: 'How, O Lord, 
did you come to create it? What sudden wave of 
joy coursing through your being compelled its own 
manifestation? Was it really due to desire for self- 
expression, or simply on the impulse of emotion? 
Or was it perhaps just your fancy to revel in the 
play of form? Is this play then so delightful to 
you ; or is it that you would see your own inborn 
delight thus take shape?' Oh, how can these ques- 
tions be answered in words?" cries Dadu. "Only 
those who know will understand." 

"Why not go to him who has wrought this mar- 
vel", says Dadu elsewhere, "and ask: 'Cannot your 
own message make clear this wondrous making of 
the One into the many?' When I look on creation 
as beauty of form, I see only Form and Beauty. 
When I look on it as life, everywhere I see Life. 
When I look on it as Brahma, then indeed is Dadu 
at a loss for words. When I see it in relation, it is 
of bewildering variety. When I see it in my own 
soul, all its variousness is merged in the beauty of 
the Supreme Soul. This eye of mine then becomes 
also the eye of Brahma, and in this exchange of 
mutual vision does Dadu behold Truth." 

The eye cannot see the face for that purpose a 
mirror is necessary. That is to say, either the face 

229 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

has to be put at a distance from the eye, or the eye 
moved away from the face in any case what was 
one has to be made into two. The image is not the 
face itself, but how else is that to be seen? 

So does God mirror Himself in Creation; and 
since He cannot place Himself outside His own 
Infinity, He can only gain a vision of Himself 
and get a taste of His own joy through my joy in 
Him and in His Universe. Hence the anxious 
striving of the devotee to keep himself thoroughly 
pure not through any pride of puritanism, but 
because his soul is the playground where God 
would revel in Himself. Had not God's radiance, 
His beauty, thus found its form in the Universe, 
its joy in the devotee, He would have remained 
mere formless, colourless Being in the nothingness 
of infinity. 

This is what makes the Mystery so profound, so 
inscrutable. Whether we say that only Brahma is 
true, or only the universe is true, we are equally 
far from the Truth, which can only be expressed 
as both this and that, or neither this nor that. 

And Dadu can only hint at it by saying: "Neither 
death nor life is He; He neither goes out, nor does 
He come in; nor sleeps, nor wakes; nor wants, nor 
is satisfied. He is neither I nor you, neither One 
nor Two, For no sooner do I say that all is One, 
than I find us both ; and when I say there are two, 
I see we're One. So, O Dadu, rest content to look 
on Him just as He is, in the dee of your heart, 
and give up wrestling with vain imaginings and 
empty words." 

"Words shower", Dadu goes on, "when spouts 
the fount of the intellect; but where realization 

230 



APPENDICES 

grows, there music has its seat" When the intellect 
confesses defeat, and words fail, then, indeed, from 
the depth of the heart wells up the song of the joy 
of realization. What words cannot make clear, 
melody can; to its strains one can revel in the 
vision of God in His revels. 

"That is why", cries Dadu, "your universe, this 
creation of yours, has charmed me so your waters 
and your breezes, and this earth which holds them, 
with its ranges of mountains, its great oceans, its 
snow-capped poles, its blazing sun, because, 
through all the three regions of earth, sky and 
heaven, amidst all their multifarious life, it is your 
ministration, your beauty, that keeps me en- 
thralled. Who can know you, O Invisible, Unap- 
proachable, Unfathomable! Dadu has no desire 
to know ; he is satisfied to remain enraptured with 
all this beauty of yours, and to rejoice in it with 



To look upon Form as the play of His love is not 
to belittle it. In creating the senses God did not 
intend them to be starved, "And so", says Dadu, 
"the eye is feasted with colour, the ear with music, 
the palate with flowers, wondrously provided." 
And we find that the body longs for the spirit, the 
spirit for the body; the flower for the scent the 
scent for the flower ; our words for truth, the Truth 
for words; form for its ideal, the ideal for form; 
all thus mutual worship is but the worship of the 
ineffable Reality behind, by whose Presence every 
one of them is glorified. And Dadu struggles not, 
but simply keeps his heart open to this shower of 
love and thus rejoices in perpetual Springtime. 

Every vessel of form the Formless fills with 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

Himself, and in their beauty He gains them in re- 
turn. With His love the Passionless fulfils every 
devoted heart and sets it a-dance, and their love 
streams back to the Colourless, variegated with the 
tints of each. Beauteous Creation yields up her 
charms, in all their purity, to her Lord. Need she 
make further protestation, in words of their mutual 
love? So Dadu surrenders his heart, mind and 
soul at the feet of his Beloved. His one care is that 
they be not sullied. 

If any one should object that evanescent Form is 
not worthy to represent the Eternal, Dadu would 
answer that it is just because Form is fleeting that 
it is a help, not a hindrance, to His worship. While 
returning back to its Origin, it captures our mind 
and takes it along with itself. The call of Beauty 
tells us of the Unthinkable, towards whom it lies. 
In passing over us, Death assures us of the truth 
of Life, 



232 



APPENDIX IV 
NIGHT AND MORNING 

(An address in the Chapel of Manchester College, Oxford, on 
Sunday, May 25, 1930, by Rabindranath Tagore.) 

IN his early youth, stricken with a great sorrow at 
the death of his grandmother, my father painfully 
groped for truth when his world had darkened, 
and his life lost its meaning. At this moment of 
despair a torn page of a manuscript carried by a 
casual wind was brought to his notice. The text it 
contained was the first verse of the Ishopanishad : 

Isavasyam fdam survam 

Yat Kincha jagatyam jagat. 
tena tyaktena bhunjitha 

Ma grdhah Kasyasvitdhanam. - 

It may be thus translated : 

"Thou must know that whatever moves in this moving world 
in enveloped by God. And therefore find thy enjoyment in 
renunciation, never coveting what belongs to others." 

In this we are enjoined to realize that all facts that 
move and change have their significance in their 
relation to one everlasting truth. For then we can 
be rid of the greed of acquisition, gladly dedicat- 
ing everything we have to that Supreme Truth. 
The change in our mind is immense in its generos- 
ity of expression when an utter sense of vanity and 
vacancy is relieved at the consciousness of a per- 
vading reality. 

333 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

I remember once while on a boat trip in a strange 
neighbourhood I found myself unexpectedly at the 
confluence of three great rivers as the daylight 
faded and the night darkened over a desolation 
dumb and inhospitable. A sense of dread pos- 
sessed the crew and an oppressive anxiety bur- 
dened my thoughts, with its unreasonable exag- 
geration all through the dark hours. The morning 
came and at once the brooding obsession vanished. 
Everything remained the same only the sky was 
filled with light. 

The night had brought her peace, the peace of a 
black ultimatum in which all hope ceased in an 
abyss of nothingness, but the peace of the morning 
appeared like that of a mother's smile, which in its 
serene silence utters, "I am here". I realized why 
birds break out singing in the morning, and felt 
that their songs are their own glad answers to the 
emphatic assurance of a Yes in the morning light 
in which they find a luminous harmony of their 
own existence. Darkness drives our being into an 
isolation of insignificance and we are frightened 
because in the dark the sense of our own truth 
dwindles into a minimum. Within us we carry a 
positive truth, the consciousness of our personality, 
which naturally seeks from our surroundings its 
response in a truth which is positive, and then in 
this harmony we find our wealth of reality and arc 
gladly ready to sacrifice. That which distinguishes 
man from the animal is the fact that he expresses 
himself not in his claims, in his needs, but in his 
sacrifice, which has the creative energy that builds 
his home, his society, his civilization. It proves 
that his instinct acknowledges the inexhaustible 

234 



APPENDICES 

wealth of a positive truth which gives highest value 
to existence. In whatever we are mean, greedy 
and unscrupulous, there are the dark bands in the 
spectrum of our consciousness; they prove chasms 
of bankruptcy in our realization of the truth that 
the world moves, not in a blank sky of negation, 
but in the bosom of an ideal spirit of fulfil- 
ment. 

Most often crimes are committed when it is 
night. It must not be thought that the only reason 
for this is that in the dark they are likely to remain 
undetected. But the deeper reason is that in the 
dark the negative aspect of time weakens the posi- 
tive sense of our own humanity. Our victims, as 
well as we ourselves, are less real to us in the 
night, and that which we miss within we desper- 
ately seek outside us. Wherever in the human 
world the individual self forgets its isolation, the 
light that unifies is revealed the light of the Ever- 
lasting Yes, whose sound-symbol in India is OM. 
Then it becomes easy for man to be good not be- 
cause his badness is restrained, but because of his 
joy in the positive background of his own reality, 
because his mind no longer dwells in a fathomless 
night of an anarchical world of denial. 

Man finds an instance of this in the idea of his 
own country, which reveals to him a positive truth, 
the idea that has not the darkness of negation which 
is sinister, which generates suspicion, exaggerates 
fear, encourages uncontrolled greed ; for his own 
country is an indubitable reality to him which 
delights his soul. In such intense consciousness of 
reality we discover our own greater self that 
spreads beyond our physical life and immediate 

235 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

present, and offers us generous opportunities of 
enjoyment in renunciation. 

In the introductory chapter of our civilization 
individuals by some chance found themselves to- 
gether within a geographic enclosure. But a mere 
crowd without an inner meaning of inter-relation 
is negative, and therefore it can easily be hurtful. 
The individual who is a mere component part of 
an unneighbourly crowd, who in his exclusiveness 
represents only himself, is apt to be suspicious of 
others, with no inner control in hating and hitting 
his fellow-beings at the very first sight This sav- 
age mentality is the product of the barren spirit 
of negation that dwells in the spiritual night But 
when the morning of mutual recognition broke out, 
the morning of co-operative life, that divine mys- 
tery which is the creative spirit of unity, imparted 
meaning to individuals in a larger truth named 
"people". These individuals gladly surrendered 
themselves to the realization of their true human- 
ity, the humanity of a great wholeness composed of 
generations of men consciously and unconsciously 
building up a perfect future. They realized peace 
according to the degree of unity which they at- 
tained in their mutual relationship, and within 
that limit they found the one sublime truth which 
pervades time that moves, the things that change, 
the life that grows, the thoughts that flow onwards. 
They united with themselves the surrounding 
physical nature in her hills and rivers, in the dance 
of rhythm in all her forms and colours, in the blue 
of her sky, the tender green of her corn shoots. 

In gradual degrees men became aware that the 
subtle intricacies of human existence find their per- 

236 * 



APPENDICES 

faction in the harmony of interdependence, never 
in the vigorous exercise of elbows by a mutually 
pushing multitude, in the arrogant assertion of 
independence which fitly belongs to the barren 
rocks and deserts grey with the pallor of death. 

For rampant individualism is against what is 
truly human that is to say spiritual it belongs 
to the primitive poverty of the animal life, it is the 
confinement of a cramped spirit, of restricted con- 
sciousness. 

The limited boundaries of a race or a country 
within which the supreme truth of humanity has 
been more or less realized in the past are crossed 
to-day from the outside. The countries are physi- 
cally brought closer to each other by science. But 
science has not brought with it the light that helps 
understanding. On the contrary science on its prac- 
tical side has raised obstacles among them against 
the development of a sympathetic knowledge. 

But I am not foolish enough to condemn science 
as materialistic. No truth can be that Science 
means intellectual probity in our knowledge and 
dealings with the physical world and such con- 
scientiousness has a spiritual quality that encour- 
ages sacrifice and martyrdom. But in science the 
oft-used half-truth that honesty is the best policy 
is completely made true and our mind's honesty 
in this field never fails to bring us the best profit 
for our living. Mischief finds its entry through 
this back-door of utility, tempting the primitive 
in man, arousing his evil passions. And through 
this the great meeting of races has been obscured 
of its great meaning. When I view it in my mind 
I am reminded of the fearful immensity of the 

237 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

meeting of the three mighty rivers where I found 
myself unprepared in a blackness of universal 
menace. Over the vast gathering of peoples the 
insensitive night darkly broods, the night of un- 
reality. The primitive barbarity of limitless suspi- 
cion and mutual jealousy fills the world's atmos- 
phere to-day the barbarity of the aggressive indi- 
vidualism of nations, pitiless in its greed, un- 
ashamed of its boastful brutality. 

Those that have come out for depredation in this 
universal night have the indecent audacity to say 
that such conditions are eternal in man, that the 
moral ideals are only for individuals but that the 
race belongs to the primitive nature of the animal. 

But when we see that in the range of physical 
power man acknowledges no limits in his dreams, 
and is not even laughed at when he hopes to visit 
the neighbouring planet; must he insult his hu- 
manity by proclaiming that human nature has 
reached its limit of moral possibility? We must 
work with all our strength for the seemingly im- 
possible ; we must be sure that faith in the perfect 
builds the path for the perfect that the external 
fact of unity which has surprised us must be sub- 
limated in an internal truth of unity which would 
light up the Truth of Man the Eternal. 

Nations are kept apart not merely by interna- 
tional jealousy, but also by their Karma, their own 
past, handicapped by the burden of the dead. They 
find it hard to think that the mentality which they 
fondly cultivated within the limits of a narrow 
past has no continuance in a wider future, they are 
never tired of uttering the blasphemy that warfare 
is eternal, that physical might has its inevitable 

238 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

right of moral cannibalism where the flesh is 
weak. The wrong that has been done in the past 
seeks to justify itself by its very perpetuation, like 
a disease by its chronic malignity, and it sneers 
and growls at the least proposal of its termi- 
nation. Such an evil ghost of a persistent past, the 
dead that would cling to life, haunts the night to- 
day over mutually alienated countries, and men 
that are gathered together in the dark cannot see 
each other's faces and features. 

We in India are unfortunate in not having the 
chance to give expression to the best in us in creat- 
ing intimate relations with the powerful nations, 
whose preparations are all leading to an enormous 
waste of resources in a competition of brow-beating 
and bluff. Some great voice is waiting to be heard 
which will usher in the sacred light of truth in the 
dark hours of the nightmare of politics, the voice 
which will proclaim that "God is over all", and 
exhort us never to covet, to be great in renunciation 
that gives us the wealth of spirit, strength of truth, 
leads us from the illusion of power to the fullness 
of perfection, to the Sdntam, who is peace eternal, 
to the Advaltam who is the infinite One in the 
heart of the manifold. But we in India have not 
yet had the chance. Yet we have our own human 
voice which truth demands. The messengers of 
truth have ever joined hands across centuries, 
across the seas, across historical barriers, and they 
help to raise up the great continent of human 
brotherhood from avidya, from the slimy bottom 
of spiritual apathy. We individuals, however 
small may be our power and whatever corner of 
the world we may belong to, have a claim upon 

239 



THE RELIGION OF MAN 

us to add to the light of the consciousness that com- 
prehends all humanity. And for this cause I ask 
your co-operation, not only because co-operation 
gives us strength in our work, but because co- 
operation itself is the best aspect of the truth we 
represent; it is an end and not merely the means. 

Let us keep our faith firm in the objectivity of 
the source of our spiritual ideal of unity, though 
it cannot be proved by any mathematical logic. Let 
us proclaim in our conduct that it has already been 
given to us to be realized, like a song which has 
only to be mastered and sung, like the morning 
which has only to be welcomed by raising the 
screens, opening the doors. 

The idea of a millennium is treasured in our 
ancient legends. The instinct cradled and nour- 
ished in them has profound meaning. It is like 
the instinct of a chick which dimly feels that an 
infinite world of freedom is already given to it, 
truer than the narrow fact of its immediate life 
within the egg. An agnostic chick has the rational 
right to doubt it, but at the same time it cannot 
help pecking at its shell. The human soul, confined 
in its limitation, has also dreamt of millennium, 
and striven for a spiritual emancipation which 
seems impossible of attainment, and yet it feels its 
reverence for some ever-present source of inspira- 
tion in which all its experience of the true, the 
good and beautiful finds its reality. 

And therefore it has been said by the Upani- 
shad: "Thou must know that God pervades all 
things that move and change in this moving world ; 
find thy enjoyment in renunciation, covet not what 
belongs to others." 

240 



APPENDICES 

Ya eko varno bahudha saktiyogat 
Varnan ariekan nihitartho dadhati. 
Vichaiti chante visvamadau sa devah 
Sa no buddhya subhaya samjrunaktu. 

He who is one, and who dispenses the inherent 
needs of all peoples and all times, who is in the 
beginning and the end of all things, may he unite 
us with the bond of truth, of common fellowship, 
of righteousness. 



241 



INDEX 



Ahwa Mazda, 76, 78, etc. 

Aryan, 79 

Aryans, 113 

Atharva Veda, 42, 49, etc-, 

Baiil, 1 6, 207, etc. 
Bengal, 16, etc. 
Bikrampur, 211 
Bisha, 216 

Brahma, 67, 68, etc., 113 
Brahman, 203 
Brahma Vidya, 9 
Brahminhood, 90 
Brindisi, 175 
British, 168 
Buddha, 67, 68, etc. 
Buddhistic, 234 

Calais, 175 
Calcutta, 147 
Chandidas, in 
Chhaku Thakur, 211 
China, 54> 87 
Chinese, 134, 143 

Dadu, 209 
Drummond, Mrs., 8 
Drummond, Dr. W., 8 

Einstein, A., 221 
Europe, 8 
Eve, 36 
Everest, Mount, 36 



Gangaram, 220 
Ganges, 109, 213 
Gathas, 76 

149 Geiger, Dr., 74 
Gita, 8 1 
Greece, 54 
Guru, 215 

Hibbert Lectures, 7, 225 

Hindu, 168 

Hindu Scripture, 64 

India, 40, 54, etc., 158, etc. 
Irani, D. J., 77, 78, etc, 
Is ha, 22 
Ishopanishat, 116 

Japan, 35> *5O, 151 
Jivan-Dcvata, 95 
Judaea, 54, 83 

Kabir, 184, 209, 228 
Kalidasa, 164, 1 66 
Karapan, 81 
Kashi, 214 
Kavi, 8 1 
Kirtan, 138 
Koran, 219 
Ku-Klux-Klan, 58 

Lao-Tze, 143, 152, 153, etc. 



Mahatma, 143 
Manchester College, 7 



343 



INDEX 



Manu, 198 
Martha, 176 
Mary, 176 
Maya, 139 
Mecca, 214 
Medina, 214 
Mohammedan, 168 
Monism, 228 
Monistic Dualism, 228 

Namasudra, 211 
Nanak, 209, 228 
Nanimata, 218 
Nordic, 161 

Orion, 46 
Oxford, 7, 8 

Pandit, 215 
Parabrahman, 204 
Paradise, 209 
Peking, 134 
Persia, 54, 81 
Persian, 79 
Pur anas, 214 
Puritanism, 165 
Purushah f 65 
Purusha-sukta, 216 
Pythagorean, 223 

Raj jab, no, 209 
Ravidas, 209, 228 
Rishi, US 



Robinson Crusoe, 172 
Rome, 54, 58, 59> etc. 

Samadhit 204 

Sanskrit, 83, 202 

Sati, 83 

Self universal, 21 

Semitic mythology, 36 

Sen, Prof. Kshiti Mohan, 207 

226 

Sikhs, 209 
Siva, 83 

Tagore, Rabindranath, 218, 221 
Tara, 182 

Ujjaini, 166 

Upanishad, 20, 120, 135, 144 

Vaisnava, 103 
Vedanta, 203 
Vedic, 108 
Victorian, 168 
Visvabharati, 207, 226 
Visvakarma, 67 

Western, 189 
Wordsworth, in 

Tfajna, 81 
Hoga, 65 
Yoga Vasistha, 218 

Zarathustra, 74, 76, etc. 



244 

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