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ONE
Epistles from Abroad
Dearly beloved,
You, my alter ego, my second existence,
now sitting comfortably at home and, doubtless, reading the
romantic fictions of the Empire by the light of heavily-priced
kerosine; I, who roam uncomfortably in foreign climes, sighing
for the joys of the Press Act and the house-search; these faces,
white and unfamiliar, that surround me; these miles of soulless
brick and faultless macadam, the fitting body for a point-device
and dapper civilisation which has lost sight of grandeur, beauty
and nobility in life, — are we, I wonder, flitting visions of a
nightmare that passes or real men and women made in God's
image? Was life always so trivial, always so vulgar, always so
loveless, pale and awkward as the Europeans have made it? This well-appointed
comfort oppresses me, this perfection of machinery will not allow the soul to remember that it is not itself a
machine.
Is this then the end of the long march of human civilisation,
this spiritual suicide, this quiet petrifaction of the soul into
matter ? Was the successful businessman that grand culmination
of manhood toward which evolution was striving ? After all, if
the scientific view is correct, why not ? An evolution that started
with the protoplasm and flowered in the ourang-outang and the
chimpanzee, may well rest satisfied with having created hat,
coat and trousers, the British Aristocrat, the American Capitalist
and the Parisian Apache. For these, I believe, are the chief
triumphs of the European enlightenment to which we bow our heads. For these
Augustus created Europe, Charlemagne refounded civilisation, Louis XIV regulated society, Napoleon systematised the French Revolution. For these Goethe thought,
Shakespeare imagined and created, St. Francis loved, Christ was
crucified. What a bankruptcy! What a beggary of things that
were rich and noble!
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Europe boasts of her science and its marvels. But an Indian
cannot content himself with asking like Voltaire, as the supreme
question, "What have you invented?" His glance is at the soul;
it is that into which he is accustomed to enquire. To the braggart
intellect of Europe he is bound to reply, "I am not interested in
what you know, I am interested in what you are. With all your discoveries and
inventions, what have you become? Your enlightenment is great, — but what are these strange creatures that
move about in the electric light you have installed and imagine
that they are human?" Is it a great gain for the human intellect
to have grown more acute and discerning, if the human soul
dwindles?
But Science does not admit the existence of soul. The soul,
it says, is only an organised republic of animalcules, and it is in
the mould of that idea Europe has recast herself; — that is what
the European nations are becoming, organised republics of animalcules, — very intelligent, very methodical, very wonderful
talking and reasoning animalcules but still animalcules. Not
what the race set out to be, creatures made in the image of the
Almighty, gods that having fallen from heaven remember and
strive to recover their heritage. Man in Europe is descending
steadily from the human level and approximating to the ant and
the hornet. The process is not complete but it is progressing apace,
and if nothing stops the debacle, we may hope to see its culmination in this twentieth century. After all our superstitions were
better than this enlightenment, our social abuses less murderous
to the hopes of the race than this social perfection.
It is a very pleasant inferno they have created in Europe, a
hell not of torments but of pleasures, of lights and carriages, of
balls and dances and suppers, of theatres and cafes and music-halls, of libraries and clubs and Academies, of National Galleries
and Exhibitions, of factories, shops, banks and Stock Exchanges.
But it is hell all the same, not the heaven of which the saints
and the poets dreamed, the new Jerusalem, the golden city.
London and New York are the holy cities of the new religion,
Paris its golden Paradise of Pleasure.
It is not with impunity that men decide to believe that they
are animals and God does not exist. For what we believe, that
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we become. The animal lives by a routine arranged for him by
Nature; his life is devoted to the satisfaction of his instincts bodily, vital and emotional, and he satisfies himself mechanically,
by a regular response to the working of those instincts. Nature
has regularised everything for him and provided the machinery.
Man in Europe arranges his own routine, invents his own machinery, and adds to the needs of which he is a slave, the intellectual.
But there will soon be no other difference.
System, organisation, machinery have attained their perfection. Bondage has been carried to its highest expression, and
from a passion for organising external liberty Europe is slaying
her spiritual freedom. When the inner freedom is gone, the
external liberty will follow it, and a social tyranny more terrible,
inquisitorial and relentless than any that caste ever organised in
India, will take its place. The process has already begun. The
shell of external liberty remains, the core is already being eaten away. Because
he is still free to gratify his senses and enjoy himself, the European thinks himself free. He does not know what
teeth are gnawing into the heart of his liberty.
Still in his inmost self he has an uneasy consciousness of
something terribly, vitally wrong, and therefore he is turning
more and more to Socialism among the thinking or cultured,
among the unthinking to Anarchism. The Socialist hopes, by
accepting, swiftly fulfilling and thoroughly organising the inevitable tyranny of society, at least to recover leisure and create
a breathing space in which to realise the dignity, beauty and repose of the god in man. The Anarchist sees in Government and
Society the enemy of the race and gropes for the bomb and the
revolver to recover individual liberty and destroy the tyranny of
the majority. Both are guilty of the same fallacy, the mechanical
fallacy. One hopes to liberate man by perfecting machinery, the
other by destroying it.
And yet the true secret is ready to their hand in the formula
of the great Revolution. Two ideas of that formula Europe has
pursued with some eagerness, Liberty and Equality; but she has
totally rejected the third and most necessary. Brotherhood. In
its place she has erected the idol of her heart. Machinery, and
called it Association; for Association without Brotherhood is
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merely Machinery. Yet what can be more evident than that the
French thinkers were perfectly guided in their selection of the
three things necessary for an ideal associated happiness? It is
only Love that can prevent the misuse of Liberty; it is only
Brotherhood which can make Equality tolerable.
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TWO
Epistles from Abroad
Friend and Brother,
I am as yet among the unregenerate. Instead of my eccentric notions of life changing under the pressure
of victorious European enlightenment, they seem to harden and
fix their hold. Here I am in Paris, the centre of civilisation, and
I am still the same dark-skinned barbarian you knew. Neither
the complexion of my face nor the complexion of my thoughts
has improved. I still believe in God and Vedanta, in India and
impossibilities. Man is still to my eyes divine and not an animal.
I believe in the soul and am afflicted with the imagination that it
has a past and a future, that it neither came ready made into the
world out of the mother's womb nor will disintegrate at the end
whether on the pyre or in the coffin. That our first stage is an
embryo and our last worms or ashes, is a creed I hold to be still
unproved and unprovable. I believe that nothing in this world is
made, but everything grows; that body cannot create soul and
that a mass of cells is not Buddha or Napoleon. And if you ask
for my ground of belief, I shall still refuse to base it on the logical
reason which can only argue and cannot see, and I shall give the
answer of the visionary, the victim of hallucinations, that I have
seen my soul and talked face to face with my Creator.
There are excellent logicians in Paris. One of them spoke
the other day of the power of telepathy and, while admitting it
to be a fact, argued that to develop the power would be to go
back to the savage; it would be a denial of Science and civilisation. The civilised man sees with his eyes, talks with his tongue;
to see with the soul, mind to talk with mind is a thing weird and
barbarous. That is what the logical reason is. It can support
the grossest absurdity under the sun and yet satisfy its user. The
savage had the power, the civilised man has renounced it as an
encumbrance or a superstition; to develop the power is to go
back from civilisation to the savage. The argument is unde-
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niable. Whether it is not worth while, in this respect, to go back
to the savage, is a question my logical friend refuses to discuss. To entertain
it would be an insult to civilisation. Another gentleman of equal clarity poohpoohed the idea of considering the
existence of God and immortality on the ground that the very
motion would be retrograde. "It would be going back," he cried,
"it would be going back. We have got rid of God; we have
finished with the superstition of immortality. Will you deny the
progress of enlightenment? My friend, let these ghosts rest in
their shadows." And nothing would induce him to give God a
chance. Darwin and Huxley and Haeckel had settled the Creator's hash for Him; it was res judicata. It is wonderful how
easily man tramples on one formula merely to bow reverently
before another. Nature replaces God, Progress dethrones Immortality. Yet, in fact, these are merely different names for one
thing in its varying aspects. Nature is God manifest in Matter;
Progress is possible because the soul of man is immortal.
This talk wearies you. You would prefer perhaps that I
should write of the municipality in Paris, the merits and defects
of the sewer system, the latest plays at the theatres, a description
of boulevard and café or the debates in the Chamber or some
hint as to whether I have made acquaintance with any of the
French Academicians. "Plague take the fellow!" you will cry,
"he is like the Englishman who marches about in the full panoply of Europe in the heats of a Calcutta summer; wherever he
goes he takes India with him." Pardon me, my friend; that is
not wholly correct. I have forgotten for the time what a detective looks like. I no longer look round at every fifty yards to see
how many policemen in plain clothes are following me. Dacoits
and approvers are growing as far away from my mind as Titus
Oates or Tiberius. I no longer pant to know our excellent
Baikuntha Babu's latest blank question or withdrawn resolution in Bengal's new
Parliament or what Bengal's only Maharajadhiraj thinks about English coolies. I have left India behind; I
have not brought it with me.
But in the sense you mean, I have brought India with me,
that which is eternal in India. Danton, when pressed to escape
from the coming doom to Switzerland, answered, "One does not
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carry one's country away with one on the sole of one's shoes."
That is the materialist's answer, to whom the body is all. No,
one cannot carry it on the shoe-soles, but one can carry it in one's
heart and one can carry it in one's soul. When I listen to the
nightingale singing on English river-bank or garden-reaches or
see the Seine flowing through the modern gaiety of Paris, I can
hear again the manifold noise of the birds on an Indian morning and see rather
Ganges flowing grandiose and leonine to her Eastern seas. The body is bound to its surroundings, but the heart
exceeds them, and I carry the love of India with me even to the
coldest climes. The soul is yet more free. It will be well when
every Indian, instead of taking a waxlike stamp from his foreign
surroundings, is able to carry India with him wherever he goes.
For that will mean that India is destined to conquer and place her
stamp upon the whole world.
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THREE
Epistles from Abroad
Dear Biren,
Your list of questions is rather a long one.
I will answer you in the mass rather than in detail; and chiefly I
will attack two fallacies with which your letter teems, if I may use
such an expression, and which lie at the root of your very disfavourable attitude. There are two Hinduisms; one which takes
its stand on the kitchen and seeks its Paradise by cleaning the
body; another which seeks God, not through the cooking pot and the social
convention, but in the soul. The latter is also Hinduism and it is a good deal older and more enduring than the other;
it is the Hinduism of Bhishma and Srikrishna, of Shankara and
Chaitanya, the Hinduism which exceeds Hindusthan, was from of
old and will be for ever, because it grows eternally through the
aeons. Its watchword is not kriyā, but karma; not śāstra, but
jñānam; not ācāra, but bhakti. Yet it accepts kriyā, śāstra and
ācāra, not as ends to be followed for their own sake, but as means
to perfect karma, jñāna and bhakti. Kriyā in its dictionary means
every practice which helps the gaining of higher knowledge, such
as the mastering of the breath, the repetition of the Mantra, the
habitual use of the Name, the daily meditation on the idea. By
śāstra it means the knowledge which regulates karma, which
fixes the kartavyam and the akartavyam, that which should be
done and that which should not, and it recognizes two sources
of that knowledge, — the eternal wisdom, as distinct from the
temporary injunctions in our ancient books and the book that is
written by God in the human heart, the eternal and apauruṣeya
Veda. By ācāra it understands all moral discipline by which the
heart is purified and made a fit vessel for divine love. There are
certain kriyās, certain rules of śāstra, certain details of ācāra,
which are for all time and of perpetual application; there are
others which are temporary, changing with the variation of deśa, kāla and pātra, time, place and needs of humanity. Among
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the temporary laws the cooking pot and the lustration had their
place, but they are not for all, nor for ever. It was in a time of
calamity, of contraction, under external pressure that Hinduism
fled from the inner temple and hid itself in the kitchen.
The higher and truer Hinduism is also of two kinds, sectarian and unsectarian, disruptive and synthetic, that which binds
itself up in the aspect and that which seeks the All. The first is
born of rajasic or tamasic attachment to an idea, an experience,
an opinion or set of opinions, a temperament, an attitude, a
particular Guru, a chosen Avatar. This attachment is intolerant,
arrogant, proud of a little knowledge, scornful of knowledge
that is not its own. It is always talking of the ku-samskāras, superstitions, of others and is blind to its own; or it says, "My Guru
is the only Guru, and all others are either charlatans or inferior,"
or, "My temperament is the right temperament, and those who
do not follow my path are fools or pedants or insincere," or
"My Avatar is the real God Himself and all the others are only
lesser revelations;" or "My iṣṭadevatā is God, the others are
only His partial manifestations." When the soul rises higher, it follows by
preference its own ideas, experiences, opinions, temperament, Guru, iṣṭa,
but it does not turn an ignorant and exclusive eye upon others. "There are many paths," it cries, "and
all lead equally to God. All men, even the sinner and the atheist
are my brothers in Sadhana and the Beloved is drawing them each
in His own way to the One without a second." But when the full
knowledge dawns, I embrace all experiences in myself, I know
all ideas to be true, all opinions useful, all experiences and attitudes means and stages in the acquisition of universal experience
and completeness, all Gurus imperfect channels or incarnations
of the one and only Teacher, all iṣṭas and Avatars to be God
Himself.
That is what Ramakrishna taught by His life and Sadhana
and therefore is He the Avatar of the age, the One who prepares
the future of humanity. But there is a danger of turning Him into
the Guru of a sect, the incarnate God of a dogmatic religion, to
stultify His own life and teachings by making Him the object of
a narrow attachment, an intolerant reverence, a sectarian worship. That must be avoided. It is the great curse which attends
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the organisation of religion. Let us have done with sects and
churches and worship God only.
The destruction of bondage, the realisation of freedom, the
trampling upon our fetters, that is the first need of the future.
It was to give mukti that Ramakrishna came, not to impose a
new bondage. Therefore was Vivekananda His Apostle to the
Gentiles, a man who in all things asserted freedom. The soul of
Hinduism languishes in an unfit body. Break the mould that the
soul may live. Is it not the first teaching of Yoga to destroy the
dehātmaka-buddhi, the blindness that identifies the soul with its
temporary body? If the body were young, adaptable, fit, the
liberated soul might use it, but it is decrepit, full of ill-health and
impurity. It must be changed, not by the spirit of Western iconoclasm which destroys the soul with the body, but by national
Yoga.
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