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Passing Thoughts
Volume I - Feb.
12, 1910 - No. 32
Vedantic Art
The
progress a new tendency or a new movement is making can be measured by the
amount of opposition it meets, and it is encouraging to note that the revival
of Indian Art exciting intellectual opponents to adverse criticism. Mr.
Vincent Smith, a solid and well-equipped scholar and historian but not hitherto
noted as an art-critic, recently lectured on Indian Art, ancient and modern. It
is not surprising that he should find little to praise in the characteristic Vedantic Art of our country and seek to limit its excellence to a few
masterpieces. Neither is it surprising that he should object to the revival of
the national traditions as restoring Brahminic separateness from the traditions of the rest of the world. These are
arguments that are as obvious as they are superficial. But it is strange to
find him basing his opinion of the inferiority of the Vedantic style on its
appeal not being universal. This merely means that the Vedantic motive and
conventions are new to the European mind, and the average eye, enslaved to old
associations, cannot immediately welcome what is new and ill-understood. Every
new step forward in artistic tradition within Europe itself has been met by the
same limited comprehension and has had to get the assent first of the trained
and sensitive taste and then of the average mind before it could be said to be
universally recognised. The real question is whether the Vedantic style has
anything in it that is true, deep and universal, whether it has a motive, a
power of interpretation, a success in making Truth reveal itself in form, such
as will ensure its conquest of prejudices based purely on inability to receive
or welcome new impressions. The answer to that crucial question cannot be
doubtful. Vedantic Art reveals spirit, essential truth, the soul in the body,
the lasting type or idea in the mutable form with a power and masterly
revelation of which European art is incapable. It is therefore sure to conquer
Europe as steadily
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as Indian thought and knowledge are
conquering the hard and narrow materialism of the nineteenth century.
Asceticism
and Enjoyment
Small things are
often indicative of great and far-reaching tendencies. While glancing at the
Modern Review, — always the best worth perusal of our Indian monthlies, — our
attention was arrested by a slight illustrated article on Railways in India and
America. The writer contrasts the squalor, indigence and discomfort of railway
travelling in this Paradise of the efficient Anglo-Indian with the lavish
comfort and opulence of railway furnishings and appointments in the United
States. The contrast is indicative of the immense gulf between the teeming
wealth of America and the miserable indigence of India, once the richest
country in the world. America is the land above all lands where enjoyment, Bhoga, is frankly recognised and accepted. India,
many would say, is the land above all lands where Bhoga is sternly refused.
That is the common view; we are not inclined to think it the correct view. The
asceticism of India is a phase, a characteristic of a civilisation dominated by
an unfavourable environment and driven in upon itself. The classical period
when India was full of life, activity, development, abounding vigour, defending
herself successfully against the impact of the outer barbarian, was a period of
frank and lavish enjoyment far more intellectual, artistic, perfect than any
thing Europe has ever been capable of, even at its best. In yet older
literature we find the true spirit of India, a splendid capacity for Bhoga and Tyaga in their highest terms, the utter enjoyment
of the householder, the utter renunciation of the Sannyasin.
To take the utmost joy of life, to be capable of the utmost renunciation of
life, at one and the same time, in the same mind and body, to be master of both
capacities and bound by neither, — this was the secret of India, the mighty
discipline of which Janaka was the
traditional exemplar. "Renounce all that thou mayest
enjoy all", — this is India's characteristic message, — not Buddha's
absolute renunciation, not the European's enslavement to his bodily, vital and intellec-
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tual desires and appetites. Tyaga within, Bhoga
without, — Ananda, the divine delight of the
purified soul, embracing both.
Aliens
in Ancient India
We extract
elsewhere a brief article on the above subject from the December Indian
Review for which we had no space in our
former issues. The ancient Indian treatment of foreign residents forms a
curious contrast to the spirit of exclusion which is growing upon modern
nations. We have our own doubts about that little privilege of exemption from
suits for debt which Mr. Hayavadana Rau
mentions with appreciation; it would obviously place the alien merchant at a
disadvantage when compared with the scrupulous honesty of the Indian traders,
and we are not sure that it may not have been a subtle stroke of Chanakya-like diplomacy to coddle the resident
foreign middle-man out of existence while favouring the non-resident importer.
The chief importance of the article is, however, the incidental light it throws
on the organisation of life in ancient India. We are too apt to forget how
noble, great and well-appointed a life it was. There were no railways,
telegraphs or steamships, it is true, and democracy was beginning to go out of
fashion in favour of a centralised bureaucratic monarchy. But in spite of
these drawbacks, the ancient life of India was as splendid, as careful, as
convenient, as humane, as enlightened in its organisation as that of any modern
society or administration.
The
Scholarship of Mr. Risley
We are not concerned with the political issues of Mr. Risley's great oratorical effort in connection
with the Press Bill, for we have renounced politics;
but Mr. Risley as a scholar falls within our province, and we can only hope our
remarks on that subject will not expose us to the provision against bringing
officials into contempt. Even at that risk we must take leave to say that we
can only hope Mr. Risley's ethnological science is less remarkably
Page – 398
muddled than his knowledge of Indian civilisation
and literature. In his exhortation to Indian womanhood to stand fast to its ancient
moorings he jumbles together Swaymvaras, the
rape of the Sabines and Shacuntala in a miraculous fashion ! At no Swayamvara that we are aware of, did the women
come forward as peacemakers between the abducting hero and the disappointed
suitors. Mr. Risley has been misled by
pitch-forking his early memories of Roman history into Indian epic and
narrative. And need we say that there was neither Swayamvara,
nor fighting nor peacemaking in the story of Shacuntala ? This is the first time, moreover, that a
startled Indian public has been pointed to Shacuntala as the ideal Hindu woman. Sita, Draupadi, Savitri, Damayanti,
— these are familiar to us as ideals, but Shacuntala is Mr. Risley's own addition. To us she is a beautiful
poetic creation, not an exemplar of feminine conduct. We observe that the Bengalee
is full of admiration for Mr. Risley's poetic rapture over Shacuntala. We
do not know whom we should congratulate more, the poet of the Press Bill or his
admirer.
Anarchism
Are we not entitled, by the way, in the
interests of the English language, to protest against the misapplication of the
word Anarchists to the Indian Terrorists and Anarchism to their policy ? Their
methods are wild and lawless, their effort is to create anarchy; but Anarchism
and Anarchist are terms which imply something very different, a thing as yet
unknown either in practice or in theory to India. The Irish Fenians did the
same things as the Indian Terrorists are now practising, but nobody ever called
them Anarchists; to misapply this term is to bring anarchy into the modern use
of language. It is doubtful whether any Indian who has not been to Europe,
really knows what Anarchism is. Philosophically, it is the negation of the
necessity of government; in practice, it is often the use of assassination to
destroy all government irrespective of its nationality or nature. Democracy is
as abhorrent to the Anarchist as Czarism, a
national government as intolerable as the government of the foreigner.
Page – 399
All
government is to him an interference with the liberty of the individual, and he
sets out to assassinate Czar or democratic President, constitutional king or
imperial Caesar with a terrible impartiality, an insane logicality. For if we
ask him how liberty of any kind except the liberty of the strong to prey on the
weak can exist in the absence of government, he will probably answer that by
right education, right ideas and right feelings will be established and the
spirit of brotherhood will prevent the abuse of liberty, and if anyone
infringes this unwritten law, he must be destroyed as if he were a noxious wild
beast. And by a parallel logic he seeks to destroy all the living symbols of a
state of society which stands in the way of the coming of his millennium.
The
Gita and Terrorism
Mr. Risley repeats a charge we have grown familiar
with, that the Gita has been misused as a gospel of Terrorism. We cannot find
any basis for this accusation except the bare fact that the teaching of the
Gita was part of the education given by Upendranath Banerji in the Maniktola
garden. There is no evidence to show that its tenets were used to justify a
gospel of Terrorism. The only doctrine of the Gita the Terrorist can pervert to
his use, is the dictum that the Kshatriya
must slay as a part of his duty and he can do it without sin if he puts egoism
away and acts selflessly, without
attachment, in and for God, as a sacrifice, as an offering of action to the
Lord of action. If this teaching is in itself false, there is no moral basis
for the hero, the soldier, the judge, the king, the legislature which
recognises capital punishment. They must all be condemned as criminals and offenders against humanity. It is undoubtedly true
that since the revival of religious thought in India the Gita has ceased to be
what Mr. Risley calls it, a transcendental philosophy, and has been made a rule
of life. It is undoubtedly true that selflessness, courage, a free and noble
activity have been preached as the kernel of the ethics of the Gita. That
teaching has in no country been condemned as ignoble, criminal or subversive of
morality, nor is a philosophy of any value to any sensible being if it is only
transcendental and
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cannot
be lived. We strongly protest against the brand of suspicion that has been
sought to be placed in many quarters on the teaching and possession of the Gita, — our chief national heritage, our hope for
the future, our great force for the purification of the moral weaknesses that
stain and hamper our people.
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