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In Either Case
THERE
are two movements of humanity, upward and downward, and both are irresistible.
It may seem for a moment that the downward movement is arrested and an upward
lift may for a while rejoice the hearts that are attached to a cause forsaken
by God and Destiny. The majestic or impetuous rise of a religion, an idea, a
nation, may for a fleeting period be held back by main force and with a fierce
and infinite labour the wheel may be driven back for the space of an inch or
even two. But God cannot be deceived and God cannot be conquered by violence.
Where He is the Charioteer, victory is certain and if He wheels back, it is
only to leave ground which is no longer advantageous to Him and shift the
conflict to terrain fixed beforehand for the victory. Often He forces His
adversaries to drive Him from ground
conquered and occupied in order that they may exhaust their strength on a
position never meant to be permanently held and by their very triumph prepare
a more decisive overthrow.
Minute minds fix themselves on details and say, "Here we have
failed, there we have prevailed"; and if the record of defeats seems to
be long and ill-balanced by doubtful successes, they grow discouraged and
apprehend the ruin of their cause. So men deceive themselves as to the trend of
events by not keeping their eyes open to the great stream of inevitable
tendency which prevails over all backwashes and petty currents. And where defeat
is predestined for a season, their want of faith leads to the very calamity
which they apprehended. The eye of faith is not one with the eye of knowledge; — Faith divines in the large what knowledge sees
distinctly and clearly; but in the main thing Faith and Knowledge are one and
the wisdom of the Lover is justified and supported by the wisdom of the Seer.
Faith fights for God, while knowledge is waiting for fulfilment, and so long as
the latter is withheld, the former is necessary. For without
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indomitable
Faith or inspired Wisdom no great cause can conquer.
We must look therefore to the great tendency of things and interpret
in their light the minute events that are passing at the moment. Is the main
tendency of things upward or downward ? If
it is downward, even then we must strive, for the man who abandons a cause
which is right because it is denied success, is despicable, and he inflicts a
wound on mankind in the present and the future. Great causes which are fought
out boldly to the end are made sacred by courage and suffering
and their resurrection and final victory is inevitable. Only those which are
supported by cowards and meanly abandoned, are erased from the books of the
future. The mediaeval movement of civic liberty in France and Italy failed and
gave place to Teutonic despotism, but it revived with a hundredfold force in
the French Revolution and it was the impetuous rush earthwards
of the souls that had fought for it hundreds of years before that shattered to
pieces the once victorious feudal system. But if, as we are assured, the
movement is upward, then we may persist in
absolute confidence, sure that reverses in details are only meant to prepare
and point the true way to victory.
Persistence does not imply persistence in methods that have proved
to be infructuous or from which, though
temporarily fruitful, God has withdrawn His
sanction. We must remember that we are a nation not yet trained in the vaster
movements of modern politics. Not only our rank and file, but our captains and
our strategists need the training of events, the wisdom of experience to make
them perfect. Fire, impetuosity, self-sacrifice, intellectual vigour, subtlety,
wealth of idea, fertility of resource to meet unexpected happenings, these have
been given to us in abundance. But the perfect experience of the veteran in
great battles, the acute political intelligence which comes of long familiarity
with the handling of high affairs and national destinies, these are yet in us
immature and in a state of pupillage. But God Himself is our master and
teacher, for He would give to His chosen nation a faultless training and a
perfect capacity. Only we must be ready to acknowledge our mistakes, to change
our path, to learn. Then only shall we victoriously surmount
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all
obstacles and move steadily, impetuously, but without stumbling or swerving, to
our goal.
Moreover, we have weaknesses that are still rampant and uncorrected in our midst. It is our first duty to
purge these out of our hearts with a merciless surgery. If the intellectual
equipment is deficient, the spiritual equipment is also far from perfect. Our
leaders and our followers both require a deeper Sadhana,
a more direct communion with the Divine Guru and Captain of our
movement, an inward uplifting, a grander and more impetuous force behind
thought and deed. It has been driven home to us by experience after experience
that not in the strength of a raw unmoralised
European enthusiasm shall we conquer. Indians !
it is the spirituality of India, the Sadhana of India, tapasyā, Jñānam, śakti that must make us free and
great. And these great things of the East are ill-rendered by their inferior
English equivalents, discipline, philosophy, strength. Tapasyā is more
than discipline; it is the materialisation in ourselves by spiritual means of
the divine energy creative, preservative and destructive. Jñānam is more than philosophy, it is the
inspired and direct knowledge which comes of what our ancients called drsti, spiritual sight.
Śakti is more
than strength, it is the universal energy which moves the stars, made
individual. It is the East that must conquer in India's uprising. It is the Yogin who must stand behind the political leader
or manifest within him; Ramadas must be born in one body
with Shivaji, Mazzini
mingle with Cavour. The divorce of intellect
and spirit, strength and purity may help a European revolution, but by a
European strength we shall not conquer.
The movements of the last century failed because they were too
purely intellectual and had not an enlightened heart behind them. Nationalism
has striven to supply the deficiency; it has poured the inspirations of the
heart into a swifter and more discerning intellectual activity. But
Nationalism also has been defective; it has been Indian in sentiment and
aspiration, European in practice and actuality. It has helped itself with the
intellect, rejoicing in its own lightness, clearness, accuracy, shrewd
insight, but it has not been sufficiently
supported by inspired wisdom. It has attached itself to imaginations and
idealisms,
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but
has not learned to discern the deeper Truth and study the will of God. It has
been driven by ardent and vehement emotions, but was defective in clear
will-power and the pure energy that is greater and more impetuous than any
passionate feeling. Either Nationalism will purify itself, learn a more sacred
truth and command a diviner impulse, or it will have to abandon utterly its
old body and get itself a new. The pressure of events seems to be pointing in
the latter direction. But in either case, defeat cannot be the end, victory
must be the end.
In all the events of the last year and a half the voice of the
divine Teacher can be heard crying to us, "Abandon that you may possess; do my will and know yourselves, purify
yourselves, cease to follow your fancies." He that has ears, let him hear.
Knowledge will not come without self-communion, without light from within, not
even the knowledge of the practical steps that can lead to success. Every step
that is taken in the light of a lower wisdom will fail until the truth is
driven home.
The work that was begun at Dakshineshwar
is far from finished, it is not even understood. That which Vivekananda received and strove to develop, has
not yet materialised. The truth of the future that Bijoy Goswami hid within himself, has not yet been
revealed utterly to his disciples. A less discrete revelation prepares, a more
concrete force manifests, but where it comes, when it comes, none knoweth.
Vol. I - March 26, 1910 - No. 38
Page – 412
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