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IV
AGNI, THE ILLUMINED WILL
Rig-veda 1.77
1. How shall we give to Agni? For him what Word accepted
by the Gods is spoken, for the lord of the brilliant flame ?
for him who in mortals, immortal, possessed of the Truth,
priest of the oblation strongest for sacrifice, creates the
gods?
2. He who in the sacrifices is the priest of the offering, full of
peace, full of the Truth, him verily form in you by your
surrenderings; when Agni manifests¹ for the mortals the
gods, he also has perception of them and by the mind offers to them the sacrifice.
3. For he is the will, he is the strength, he is the effector
of perfection, even as Mitra he becomes the charioteer of the
Supreme. To him, the first, in the rich-offerings the people
seeking the godhead utter the word, the Aryan people to
the fulfiller.
¹Or, "enters into the gods".
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4. May this strongest of the Powers and devourer of the
destroyers manifest¹ by his presence the words and their
understanding, and may they who in their extension are lords
of plenitude, brightest in energy, pour forth their plenty
and give their impulsion to the thought.
5. Thus has Agni, possessed of the Truth, been affirmed by the
masters of light,² the knower of the worlds by clarified
minds. He shall foster in them the force of illumination,
he too the plenty; he shall attain to increase and to harmony
by his perceptions.
¹Or, "enter into the words and the thinking".
²Gotamebhiḥ̣. In its external sense "by the Gotamas" the family of the Rishi, Gotama
Rahugana, the seer of the hymn. But the names of the Rishis are constantly used with a covert
reference to their meaning. In this passage there is an unmistakable significance in the grouping
of th¹e words, gotamebhir ṛtāvā, viprebhir jātavedāḥ), as in verse 3 in dasmam ārih.
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COMMENTARY
Gotama Rahugana is the seer of this Hymn, which is a stoma in
praise of Agni, the divine Will at work in the universe.
Agni is the most important, the most universal of the Vedic
gods. In the physical world he is the general devourer and
enjoyer. He is also the purifier; when he devours and enjoys,
then also he purifies. He is the fire that prepares and perfects; he
is also the fire that assimilates and the heat of energy that forms.
He is the heat of life and creates the sap, the rasa in things, the
essence of their substantial being and the essence of their delight.
He is equally the Will in Prana, the dynamic Life-energy,
and in that energy performs the same functions. Devouring
and enjoying, purifying, preparing, assimilating, forming, he
rises upwards always and transfigures his powers into the Maruts,
the energies of Mind. Our passions and obscure emotions are
the smoke of Agni's burning. All our nervous forces are assured
of their action only by his support.
If he is the Will in our nervous being and
purifies it by action, he is also the Will in the mind and clarifies it by aspiration.
When he enters into the intellect, he is drawing near to his divine
birth-place and home. He leads the thoughts towards effective
power; he leads the active energies towards light.
His divine birth-place and home, — though he is born every-
where and dwells in all things, — is the Truth, the Infinity, the
vast cosmic Intelligence in which Knowledge and Force are unified. For there all Will is in harmony with the truth of things and
therefore effective; all thought part of Wisdom, which is the
divine Law, and therefore perfectly regulative of a divine action.
Agni fulfilled becomes mighty in his own home — in the Truth,
the Right, the Vast. It is thither that he is leading upward the
aspiration in humanity, the soul of the Aryan, the head of the
cosmic sacrifice.
It is at the point where there is the first possibility of the
great passage, the transition from mind to supermind, the trans-
figuration of the intelligence, till now the crowned leader of the
mental being, into a divine Light, — it is at this supreme and crucial
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point in the Vedic Yoga that the Rishi, Gotama Rahugana,
seeks in himself for the inspired Word. The Word shall help him
to realise for himself and others the Power that must effect the
transition and the state of luminous plenitude from which the
transfiguration must commence.
The Vedic sacrifice is, psychologically, a symbol of cosmic
and individual activity become self-conscious, enlightened and
aware of its goal. The whole process of the universe is in its very
nature a sacrifice, voluntary or involuntary. Self-fulfilment by
self-immolation, to grow by giving is the universal law. That
which refuses to give itself, is still the food of the cosmic Powers.
"The eater eating is eaten" is the formula, pregnant and terrible,
in which the Upanishad sums up this aspect of the universe, and
in another passage men are described as the cattle of the gods.
It is only when the law is recognised and voluntarily accepted
that this kingdom of death can be overpassed and by the works of
sacrifice Immortality made possible and attained. All the powers
and potentialities of the human life are offered up, in the symbol
of a sacrifice, to the divine Life in the Cosmos.
Knowledge, Force and Delight are the three powers of the
divine Life; thought and its formations, will and its works, love
and its harmonisings are the corresponding human activities
which have to be exalted to the divine level. The dualities of truth
and falsehood, light and darkness, conceptional right and wrong
are the confusions of knowledge born of egoistic division; the
dualities of egoistic love and hatred, joy and grief, pleasure and
pain are the confusions of Love, perversities of Ananda; the dualities of strength and weakness, sin and virtue, action and inaction
are the confusions of will, dissipators of the divine Force. And
all these confusions arise and even become necessary modes of
our action because the triune powers of the divine Life are
divorced from each other. Knowledge from Strength, Love
from both, by the Ignorance which divides. It is the Ignorance,
the dominant cosmic Falsehood that has to be removed. Through
the Truth, then, lies the road to the true harmony, the consummated felicity, the ultimate fulfilment
of love in the divine Delight. Therefore, only when the Will in man becomes divine
and possessed of the Truth, amṛtaḥ ṛtāva, can the perfection
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towards which we move be realised in humanity.
Agni, then, is the god who has to become conscient in the
mortal. Him the inspired Word has to express, to confirm, in
this gated mansion and on the altar-seat of this sacrifice.
"How must we give to Agni?" asks the Rishi. The word
for the sacrificial giving, dāśema, means literally distribution;
it has a covert connection with the root daś
in the sense of discernment. The sacrifice is essentially an arrangement, a distribution of
the human activities and enjoyments among the different cosmic
Powers to whose province they by right belong. Therefore the hymns repeatedly
speak of the portions of the gods. It is the problem of the right arrangement and distribution of his works that
presents itself to the sacrificer; for the sacrifice must be always
according to the Law and the divine ordainment (ṛtu, the later
vidhi). The will to right arrangement is an all-important preparation for the reign of the supreme Law and Truth in the mortal.
The solution of the problem depends on right realisation,
and right realisation starts from the right illuminative Word,
expression of the inspired Thought which is sent to the seer out
of the Vast. Therefore the Rishi asks farther, "What word is
uttered to Agni ?" What word of affirmation, what word of realisation? Two conditions have to be satisfied. The Word must
be accepted by other divine Powers, that is, it must bring out
some potentiality in the nature or bring into it some light of realisation by which the divine Workers may be induced to manifest in the superficial consciousness of humanity and embrace
openly their respective functions. And it must be illuminative
of the double nature of Agni, this Lord of the lustrous flame.
Bhāma means both a light of knowledge and a flame of action.
Agni is a Light as well as a Force.
The Word arrives. Yo martyeṣu amrtaḥ ṛtāvā. Agni is,
pre-eminently; the Immortal in mortals. It is this Agni by whom
the other bright sons of Infinity are able to work out the manifestation and self-extension of the Divine (devavīti, devatāti)
which is at once aim and process of the cosmic and of the human
sacrifice. For he is the divine Will which in all things is always
present, is always destroying and constructing, always building
and perfecting, supporting always the complex progression of the
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universe. It is this which persists through all death and change.
It is eternally and inalienably possessed of the Truth. In the
last obscuration of Nature, in the lowest unintelligence of Matter,
it is this Will that is a concealed knowledge and compels all these
darkened movements to obey, as if mechanically, the divine Law
and adhere to the truth of their Nature. It is this which makes
the tree grow according to its seed and each action bear its appropriate fruit. In the obscurity of man's ignorance, — less than
material Nature's, yet greater, — it is this divine Will that
governs and guides, knows the sense of his blindness and the goal
of his aberration and out of the crooked workings of the cosmic
Falsehood in him evolves the progressive manifestation of the
cosmic Truth. Alone of the brilliant Gods, he burns bright and
has full vision in the darkness of Night no less than in the splendours of day. The other gods are uṣarbudhaḥ, wakers with the
Dawn.
Therefore is he the priest of the offering, strongest or most
apt for sacrifice, he who, all-powerful, follows always the law of
the Truth. We must remember that the oblation (havya) signifies
always action (karma) and each action of mind or body is regarded as a giving of our plenty into the cosmic being and the cosmic
intention. Agni, the divine Will, is that which stands behind the
human will in its works. In the conscient offering, he comes in
front; he is the priest set in front (puraḥ-hita), guides the oblation
and determines its effectiveness.
By this self-guided Truth, by this knowledge that works out
as an unerring Will in the Cosmos, he fashions the gods in
mortals. Agni manifests divine potentialities in a death-besieged
body; Agni brings them to effective actuality and perfection.
He creates in us the luminous forms of the Immortals.
This work he does as a cosmic Power labouring upon the
rebellious human material even when in our ignorance we resist
the heavenward impulse and, accustomed to offer our actions to
the egoistic life, cannot yet or as yet will not make the divine surrender. But it is in proportion as we learn to subjugate the ego
and compel it to bow down in every act to the universal Being
and to serve consciously in its least movements the supreme Will,
that Agni himself takes form in us. The Divine Will becomes
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present and conscient in a human mind and enlightens it with the
divine Knowledge. Thus it is that man can be said to form by his
toil the great Gods.
The Sanskrit expression is here ā kṛṇudhvam. The preposition gives the idea of a drawing upon oneself of something outside
and the working or shaping it out in our own consciousness. Ā kṛ corresponds to the converse expression,
ā bhū, used of the
gods when they approach the mortal with the contact of Immortality and, divine form of godhead falling on form of humanity, "become", take shape, as it were, in him. The cosmic
Powers act and exist in the universe; man takes them upon himself, makes an image of them in his own consciousness and endows that image with the life and power that the Supreme Being
has breathed into His own divine forms and world-energies.¹
It is when thus present and conscient in the mortal, like a
"house-lord"², master in his mansion, that Agni appears in the
true nature of his divinity. When we are obscure and revolt
against the Truth and the Law, our progress seems to be a stumbling from ignorance to ignorance and is full of pain and disturbance. By constant submission to the Truth, surrenderings,
namobhiḥ, we create in ourselves that image of the divine Will
which is on the contrary full of peace, because it is assured of the Truth and
the Law. Equality of soul³ created by the surrender
to the universal Wisdom gives us a supreme peace and calm.
And since that Wisdom guides all our steps in the straight paths
of the Truth we are carried by it beyond all stumblings (duritāni).
Moreover, with Agni conscious in our humanity, the creation of the gods in us becomes a veritable manifestation and no
longer a veiled growth. The will within grows conscious of the
increasing godhead, awakens to the process, perceives the lines
of the growth. Human action intelligently directed and devoted
to the universal Powers, ceases to be a mechanical, involuntary
or imperfect offering; the thinking and observing mind participates and becomes the instrument of the sacrificial will.
Agni is the power of conscious Being, called by us will,
¹This is the true sense and theory of Hindu image-worship, which is thus a material
rendering of the great Vedic symbols.
²Gṛhapati; also viśpati,
lord or king in the creature. ³Samatā of the Gita.
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effective behind the workings of mind and body. Agni is the
strong God within (maryaḥ, the strong, the masculine) who puts
out his strength against all assailing powers, who forbids inertia,
who repels every failing of heart and of force, who spurns out all
lack of manhood. Agni actualises what might otherwise remain
as an ineffectual thought or aspiration. He is the doer of the
Yoga (sādhu); divine smith labouring at his forge, he hammers
out our perfection. Here he is said to become the charioteer of
the Supreme. The Supreme and Wonderful that moves and
fulfils Itself "in the consciousness of another"¹, (we have the
same word, adbhuta, as in the colloquy of Indra and Agastya),
effects that motion with this Power as charioteer holding the
reins of the activity. Mitra also, the lord of Love and Light is
even such a charioteer. Love illuminated fulfils the harmony
which is the goal of the divine movement. But the power of this
lord of Will and Light is also needed. Force and Love united
and both illumined by Knowledge fulfil God in the world.
Will is the first necessity, the chief actualising force. When
therefore the race of mortals turn consciously towards the great
aim and, offering their enriched capacities to the Sons of Heaven,
seek to form the divine in themselves, it is to Agni, first and chief,
that they lift the realising thought, frame the creative Word.
For they are the Aryans who do the work and accept the effort,
— the vastest of all works, the most grandiose of all efforts, —
and he is the power that embraces Action and by Action fulfils
the work. What is the Aryan without the divine Will that accepts
the labour and the battle, works and wins, suffers and triumphs ?
Therefore it is this Will which annihilates
all forces commissioned to destroy the effort, this strongest of all the divine
Puissances in which the supreme Purusha has imaged Himself,
that must bestow its presence on these human vessels. There it
will use the mind as instrument of the sacrifice and by its very
presence manifest those inspired and realising Words which are
as a chariot framed for the movement of the gods, giving to the
Thought that meditates the illuminative comprehension which
allows the forms of the divine Powers to outline themselves in
our waking consciousness.
¹Rv. 1.170.
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Then may those other mighty Ones who bring with them the
plenitudes of the higher life, Indra and the Ashwins, Usha and
Surya, Varuna and Mitra and Aryaman, assume with that
formative extension of themselves in the human being their most
brilliant energies. Let them create their plenty in us, pouring it
forth from the secret places of our being so as to be utilisable in
its daylight tracts and let their impulsions urge upward the divinising thought in Mind, till it transfigures itself in the supreme
lustres.
The hymn closes. Thus, in inspired words, has the divine
Will, Agni, been affirmed by the sacred chant of the Gotamas.
The Rishi uses his name and that of his house as a symbol-word;
we have in it the Vedic go in the sense "luminous", and Gotama
means "entirely possessed of light". For it is only those that
have the plenitude of the luminous intelligence by whom the
master of divine Truth can be wholly received and affirmed in this
world of an inferior Ray, — gotamebhir ṛtāvā. And it is upon
those whose minds are pure, clear and open, vipra, that there can
dawn the right knowledge of the great Births which are behind
the physical world and from which it derives and supports its
energies, — viprebhir jātavedāḥ.
Agni is Jatavedas, knower of the births, the worlds. He
knows entirely the five worlds¹ and is not confined in his consciousness to this limited and dependent physical harmony. He
has access even to the three highest states² of all, to the udder of
the mystic Cow,³ the abundance of the Bull4 with the four horns.
From that abundance he will foster the illumination in these
Aryan seekers, swell the plenty of their divine faculties. By that
fullness and plenty of his illumined perceptions he will unite
thought with thought, word with word, till the human Intelligence is rich and harmonious enough to support and become the
divine Idea.
¹The worlds in which, respectively. Matter, Life-Energy, Mind, Truth and Beatitude are
the essential energies. They are called respectively Bhur, Bhuvar, Swar, Mahas and Jana or
Mayas.
²Divine Being, Consciousness, Bliss, — Sachchidananda.
³Aditi, the infinite Consciousness, Mother of the worlds.
4The divine Purusha, Sachchidananda; the three highest states and Truth are his four
horns.
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