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FOUR
His Versatility
WHENEVER
a literary man gives proof of a high
capacity in action people always talk about it as if a miracle had happened. The vulgar theory is that worldly abilities
are inconsistent with the poetic genius. Like most vulgar theories it is a conclusion made at a jump from a few superficial
appearances. The inference to be drawn from a sympathetic
study of the lives of great thinkers and great writers is that except
in certain rare cases versatility is one condition of genius. Indeed
the literary ability may be said to contain all the others, and the
more so when it takes the form of criticism or of any art, such as
the novelist's, which proceeds principally from criticism. Goethe
in Germany, Shakespeare, Fielding and Matthew Arnold in
England are notable instances. Even where practical abilities
seem wanting, a close study will often reveal their existence
rusting in a lumber-room of the man's mind. The poet and the
thinker are helpless in the affairs of the world, because they
choose to be helpless: they sacrifice the practical impulse in their
nature, that they may give full expression to the imaginative or
speculative impulse; they choose to burn the candle at one end
and not at the other, but for all that the candle has two ends
and not one. Bankim, the greatest of novelists, had the versatility developed to its highest expression. Scholar, poet, essayist,
novelist, philosopher, lawyer, critic, official, philologian and religious innovator, — the whole world seemed to be shut up in his
single brain. At first sight he looks like a bundle of contradictions. He had a genius for language and a gift for law; he could
write good official papers and he could write a matchless prose;
he could pass examinations and he could root out an organised
tyranny; he could concern himself with the largest problems of
metaphysics and with the smallest details of word-formation: he
had a feeling for the sensuous facts of life and a feeling for the
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delicate spiritualities of religion: he could learn grammar and
he could write poetry.
What shall we say in the presence of this
remarkable versatility ? Overborne by the pomp of it and the show, shall we set it
down as an adjunct of intellectual kingliness ? Yes, to have it is an
adjunct of intellectual kingliness, but to give expression to it is
an intellectual mistake. To give impartial expression to all your
gifts is to miss your vocation. Bankim was never so far led astray
as that. His province was literature, prose literature, and he
knew it. His lyrics are enchanting, but few; metaphysics he
followed at the end of his life and law at the beginning; and he
used scholarship and philology simply as other great writers
have used them, to give subtlety of suggestion and richness of
word-colour to his literary style. Even in the province of prose
literature, where he might have worked out his versatility
to advantage, he preferred to specialise. He never stepped
unpardonably out of his province, but he was occasionally
led astray by this or that lure to allow small drains on his
fund of energy; and so far as he did so, he sinned against his
own soul. The one great and continuous drain was the tax put
upon him by official drudgery. Under the morbid and wasteful
conditions of middle-class life in India genius, when not born in
the purple, has put before it, like the fair Rosamund of
Norman romance, a choice between two methods of suicide,
the Services and the Law. It must either take the poisoned
bowl or the dagger. And in this limited circle of professions the
Educational Service with its system of respites and remissions,
and the Executive Service with its indirect rather than direct tax on the pure
intellect, present, it may be, the points of least repulsion. But they are none the less a fearful drain because they
are, under existing circumstances, necessary.
In this versatility Bankim was only a type of the intellectual
Hindu. This gift, at once a blessing and a curse, is the most
singular characteristic of those two Hindu races which have the
destinies of the country in their keeping. It is the evidence of our high blood, our patent of nobility among the nations; for it
comes of the varied mental experience of our forefathers, of the
nation's three thousand years of intellectual life. But it is at the
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same time a rock ahead, of which the Hindu genius has yet to
pilot itself clear. To find your vocation and keep to it, that is not
indeed a showy, but it is a simple and solid rule of life. We however prefer to give an impartial expression to all our gifts, forgetting that the mind is as mortal and as much subject to wear and
tear as any perishable thing, forgetting that specialism is one
condition of the highest accomplishment, forgetting that our
stock of energy is limited and that what we expend in one direction, we lose in another. We insist on burning the candle at both
ends. This spirit appears in our system of public instruction, the
most ingeniously complete machine for murder that human
stupidity ever invented, and murder not only of a man's body
but of a man's soul, of that sacred fire of individuality in him
which is far holier and more precious than this mere mortal
breath. It appeared too with melancholy effects in the literary
fate of Kashinath Telang. It was one reason why he, a man of
such large abilities, the most considerable genius a highly intellectual people has produced, yet left nothing to which the world
will return with unfailing delight. Telang, it is true, worked mainly
in English, a language he had learned; and in a language you
have learned, you may write graciously, correctly, pleasingly,
but you will never attain to the full stature of your genius. But
it was a yet more radical mistake that he, whose power was pre-eminently literary, as any eye trained to these things can see that
it was, yet allowed it to run in every direction except the very
one that nature had marked out for it. Bankim was more
fortunate. He wrote in his own beautiful mother tongue,
his best work was literary and his immense originality would
in any case have forced its way out. But one cannot think
without a pang of the many delightful masterpieces he might
have brought into his garner, if he had had leisure to work
single-heartedly in the field of his richest harvests. The body of
work he gave us in nearly forty years of intellectual activity
amounts to ten novels, two critical works on religion and some
scattered literature. Small in quantity, it is pure gold in quality.
And it may be that in no case would he have written much.
Nature gives us quartz profusely and mixed alloy in abundance,
but pure gold only in rare parcels and infinitesimal portions.
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