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THE SECRET OF THE VEDA
CHAPTER
I
The Problem and Its Solution
Is
there at all or is there still a secret of the Veda?
According to current conceptions the heart of that ancient
mystery has been plucked out and revealed to the gaze of all,
or rather no real secret ever existed. The hymns of the Veda
are the sacrificial compositions of a primitive and still barbarous
race written around a system of ceremonial and propitiatory
rites, addressed to personified Powers of Nature and replete with
a confused mass of half-formed myth and crude astronomical allegories yet in the
making. Only in the later hymns do we perceive the first appearance of deeper psychological and moral
ideas, — borrowed, some think, from the hostile Dravidians,
the "robbers" and "Veda-haters" freely cursed in the hymns
themselves, — and, however acquired, the first seed of the
later Vedantic speculations. This modern theory is in accord
with the received idea of a rapid human evolution from the
quite recent savage; it is supported by an imposing apparatus of critical research and upheld by a number of Sciences,
unhappily still young and still largely conjectural in their
methods and shifting in their results, — Comparative. Philology, Comparative Mythology and the Science of Comparative
Religion.
It is my Object in these chapters to suggest a new view of
the ancient problem. I do not propose to use a negative and
destructive method directed against the received solutions, but
simply to present, positively and constructively, a larger and, in
some sort, a complementary hypothesis built upon broader
foundations, — a hypothesis which, in addition, may shed light
on one or two important problems in the history of ancient
thought and cult left very insufficiently solved by the ordinary
theories.
We have in the Rig-veda, — the true and only Veda in the
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estimation of European scholars, — a body of sacrificial hymns
couched in a very ancient language which presents a number of
almost insoluble difficulties. It is full of ancient forms and words
which do not appear in later speech and have often to be fixed
in some doubtful sense by intelligent conjecture; a mass even
of the words that it has in common with classical Sanskrit seem
to bear or at least to admit another significance than in the later
literary tongue; and a multitude of its vocables, especially the
most common, those which are most vital to the sense, are
capable of a surprising number of unconnected significances
which may give, according to our preference in selection, quite
different complexions to whole passages, whole hymns and
even to the whole thought of the Veda. In the course of several
thousands of years there have been at least three considerable
attempts, entirely differing from each other in their methods
and results, to fix the sense of these ancient litanies. One of these
is prehistoric in time and exists only by fragments in the Brahmanas and Upanishads; but we possess in its entirety the traditional interpretation of the Indian scholar Sayana and we have
in our own day the interpretation constructed after an immense
labour of comparison and conjecture by modern European
scholarship. Both of them present one characteristic in common,
the extraordinary incoherence and poverty of sense which their
results stamp upon the ancient hymns. The separate lines can
be given, whether naturally or by force of conjecture, a good sense
or a sense that hangs together; the diction that results, if garish in style, if
loaded with otiose and decorative epithets, if developing extraordinarily little of meaning in an amazing mass of gaudy
figure and verbiage, can be made to run into intelligible sentences; but when we come to read the hymns as a whole we
seem to be in the presence of men who, unlike the early writers
of other races, were incapable of coherent and natural expression
or of connected thought. Except in the briefer and simpler
hymns, the language tends to be either obscure or artificial;
the thoughts are either unconnected or have to be forced and
beaten by the interpreter into a whole. The scholar in dealing
with his text is obliged to substitute for interpretation a process
almost of fabrication. We feel that he is not so much revealing
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the sense as hammering and forging rebellious material into some
sort of shape and consistency.
Yet these obscure and barbarous compositions have had
the most splendid good fortune in all literary history. They have
been the reputed source not only of some of the world's richest
and profoundest religions, but of some of its subtlest metaphysical philosophies. In the fixed tradition of thousands of years
they have been revered as the origin and standard of all that
can be held as authoritative and true in Brahmana and Upanishad, in Tantra and Purana, in the doctrines of great philosophical schools and in the teachings of famous saints and sages.
The name borne by them was Veda, the knowledge, — the
received name for the highest spiritual truth of which the human
mind is capable. But if we accept the current interpretations,
whether Sayana's or the modern theory, the whole of this sublime
and sacred reputation is a colossal fiction. The hymns are, on
the contrary, nothing more than the naive superstitious fancies
of untaught and materialistic barbarians concerned only with
the most external gains and enjoyments and ignorant of all but
the most elementary moral notions or religious aspirations. Nor
do occasional passages, quite out of harmony with their general
spirit, destroy this total impression. The true foundation or
starting-point of the later religions and philosophies is the
Upanishads, which have then to be conceived as a revolt of philosophical and speculative minds against the ritualistic materialism
of the Vedas.
But this conception, supported by misleading European
parallels, really explains nothing. Such profound and ultimate
thoughts, such systems of subtle and elaborate psychology as
are found in the substance of the Upanishads, do not spring
out of a previous void. The human mind in its progress marches
from knowledge to knowledge, or it renews and enlarges previous
knowledge that has been obscured and overlaid, or it seizes on
old imperfect clues and is led by them to new discoveries. The
thought of the Upanishads supposes great origins anterior to itself, and these in the ordinary theories are lacking. The hypothesis, invented to fill the gap, that these ideas were borrowed by
barbarous Aryan invaders from the civilised Dravidians, is a
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conjecture supported only by other conjectures. It is indeed
coming to be doubted whether the whole story of an Aryan invasion through the Punjab is not a myth of the philologists.
Now, in ancient Europe the schools of intellectual philosophy were preceded by the secret doctrines of the mystics;
Orphic and Eleusinian mysteries prepared the rich soil of mentality out of which sprang Pythagoras and Plato. A similar
starting-point is at least probable for the later march of thought
in India. Much indeed of the forms and symbols of thought
which we find in the Upanishads, much of the substance of the
Brahmanas supposes a period in India in which thought took the
form or the veil of secret teachings such as those of the Greek
mysteries.
Another hiatus left by the received theories is the gulf that
divides the material worship of external Nature-Powers in the
Veda from the developed religion of the Greeks and from the psychological and spiritual ideas we find attached to the functions
of the Gods in the Upanishads and Puranas. We may accept for
the present the theory that the earliest fully intelligent form of
human religion is necessarily, — since man on earth begins from
the external and proceeds to the internal, — a worship of outward Nature-Powers invested with the consciousness and the
personality that he finds in his own being.
Agni in the Veda is avowedly Fire; Surya is the Sun,
Parjanya the Rain-cloud, Usha the Dawn; and if the material
origin or function of some other Gods is less trenchantly clear,
it is easy to render the obscure precise by philological inferences
or ingenious speculation. But when we come to the worship of
the Greeks not much later in date than the Veda, according to
modern ideas of chronology, we find a significant change. The
material attributes of the Gods are effaced or have become
subordinate to psychological conceptions. The impetuous God
of Fire has been converted into a lame God of Labour; Apollo,
the Sun, presides over poetical and prophetic inspiration;
Athene, who may plausibly be identified as in origin a Dawn-Goddess, has lost all memory of her material functions and is
the wise, strong and pure Goddess of Knowledge; and there are
other deities also. Gods of War, Love, Beauty, whose material
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functions have disappeared if they ever existed. It is not enough
to say that this change was inevitable with the progress of human
civilisation: the process also of the change demands inquiry
and elucidation. We see the same revolution effected in the
Puranas partly by the substitution of other divine names and
figures, but also in part by the same obscure process that we
observe in the evolution of Greek mythology. The river Saraswati has become the Muse and Goddess of Learning; Vishnu and
Rudra of the Vedas are now the supreme Godhead, members of
a divine Triad and expressive separately of the conservative and
destructive process in the cosmos. In the Isha Upanishad we
find an appeal to Surya as a God of revelatory knowledge by
whose action we can arrive at the highest truth. This, too, is his
function in the sacred Vedic formula of the Gayatri which was
for thousands of years repeated by every Brahmin in his daily
meditation; and we may note that this formula is a verse from
the Rig-veda, from a hymn of the Rishi Vishwamitra. In the
same Upanishad, Agni is invoked for purely moral functions
as the purifier from sin, the leader of the soul by the good path
to the divine Bliss, and he seems to be identified with the power
of the will and responsible for human actions. In other Upanishads the Gods are clearly the symbols of sense-functions in
man. Soma, the plant which yielded the mystic wine for the
Vedic sacrifice, has become not only the God of the moon, but
manifests himself as mind in the human being. These evolutions
suppose .some period, posterior to the early material worship
or superior Pantheistic Animism attributed to the Vedas and
prior to the developed Puranic mythology, in which the Gods
became invested with deeper psychological functions, a period
which may well have been the Age of the Mysteries. As things
stand, a gap is left or else has been created by our exclusive
preoccupation with the naturalistic element in the religion of
the Vedic Rishis.
I suggest that the gulf is of our own creation and does not
really exist in the ancient sacred writings. The hypothesis I
propose is that the Rig-veda is itself the one considerable document that remains to us from the early period of human thought
of which the historic Eleusinian and Orphic mysteries were the
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failing remnants, when the spiritual and psychological knowledge
of the race was concealed, for reasons now difficult to determine, in a veil of
concrete and material figures and symbols which protected the sense from the profane and revealed it to the initiated. One of the leading principles of the mystics was the sacredness
and secrecy of self-knowledge and the true knowledge of the
Gods. This wisdom was, they thought, unfit, perhaps even
dangerous to the ordinary human mind or in any case liable to
perversion and misuse and loss of virtue if revealed to vulgar
and unpurified spirits. Hence they favoured the existence of an
outer worship, effective but imperfect, for the profane, an inner
discipline for the initiate, and clothed their language in words
and images which had, equally, a spiritual sense for the elect, a
concrete sense for the mass of ordinary worshippers. The Vedic
hymns were conceived and constructed on this principle. Their
formulas and ceremonies are, overtly, the details of an outward
ritual devised for the Pantheistic Nature-Worship which was
then the common religion, covertly the sacred words, the effective
symbols of a spiritual experience and knowledge and a psychological discipline of self-culture which were then the highest
achievement of the human race. The ritual system recognised by
Sayana may, in its externalities, stand; the naturalistic sense
discovered by European scholarship may, in its general conceptions, be accepted; but behind them there is always the true and
still hidden secret of the Veda, — the secret words, niṇyā vacāmsi,
which were spoken for the purified in soul and the awakened in
knowledge. To disengage this less obvious but more important
sense by fixing the import of Vedic terms, the sense of Vedic
symbols and the psychological functions of the Gods is thus a
difficult but necessary task, for which these chapters and the
translations that accompany them are only a preparation.
The hypothesis, if it proves to be valid, will have three
advantages. It will elucidate simply and effectively the parts
of the Upanishads that remain yet unintelligible or ill-understood
as well as much of the origins of the Puranas. It will explain
and justify rationally the whole ancient tradition of India; for
it will be found that, in sober truth, the Vedanta, Purana, Tantra,
the philosophical schools and the great Indian religions do go back
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in their source to Vedic origins. We can see there in their original
seed or in their early or even primitive forms the fundamental
conceptions of later Indian thought. Thus a natural starting-
point will be provided for a sounder study of Comparative Religion in the Indian field. Instead of wandering amid insecure
speculations or having to account for impossible conversions
and unexplained transitions we shall have a clue to a natural
and progressive development satisfying to the reason. Incidentally, some light may be thrown on the obscurities of early cult and
myth in other ancient nations. Finally, the incoherencies of the
Vedic texts will at once be explained and disappear. They exist
in appearance only, because the real thread of the sense is to be
found in an inner meaning. That thread found, the hymns appear
as logical and organic wholes and the expression, though alien
in type to our modern ways of thinking and speaking, becomes,
in its own style, just and precise and sins rather by economy
of phrase than by excess, by over-pregnancy rather than by
poverty of sense. The Veda ceases to be merely an interesting
remnant of barbarism and takes rank among the most important
of the world's early Scriptures.
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