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VII
TO BHAGA SAVITRI, THE ENJOYER
Rig-veda V.82
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Of Savitri divine we embrace that enjoying, that which is the
best, rightly disposes all, reaches the goal, even Bhaga's, we
hold by the thought.
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For of him no pleasure in things can they diminish, for too
self-victorious is it, nor the self-empire of this Enjoyer.
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'Tis he that sends forth the delights on the giver, the god
who is the bringer forth of things; that varied richness of his
enjoyment we seek.
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Today, O divine Producer, send forth on us fruitful felicity,
dismiss what belongs to the evil dream.
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All evils, O divine Producer, dismiss; what is good, that send
forth on us.
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Blameless for infinite being in the outpouring of the divine
Producer, we hold by the thought all things of delight.
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The universal godhead and master of being we accept into
ourselves by perfect words today, the Producer whose
production is of the truth —
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He who goes in front of both this day
and night never faltering, placing rightly his thought, the divine Producer—
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He who by the rhythm makes heard of the knowledge all
births and produces them, the divine Producer.
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COMMENTARY
Four great deities constantly appear in the Veda as closely allied
in their nature and in their action, Varuna, Mitra, Bhaga,
Aryaman. Varuna and Mitra are continually coupled together
in the thoughts' of the Rishis; sometimes a trio appears together, Varuna, Mitra and Bhaga or Varuna, Mitra and Aryaman. Separate Suktas addressed to any of these godheads are
comparatively rare, although there are some important hymns
of which Varuna is the deity. But the Riks in which their names
occur, whether in hymns to other gods or in invocations to the
All-gods, the viśve devāḥ, are by no means inconsiderable in
number.
These four deities are, according to Sayana, solar powers,
Varuna negatively as lord of the night, Mitra positively as lord
of the day, Bhaga and Aryaman as names of the Sun. We need
not attach much importance to these particular identifications,
but it is certain that a solar character attaches to all the four.
In them that peculiar feature of the Vedic gods, their essential
oneness even in the play of their different personalities and functions, comes prominently to light. Not only are the four closely
associated among themselves, but they seem to partake of each
other's nature and attributes, and all are evidently emanations
of Surya Savitri, the divine being in his creative and illuminative
solar form.
Surya Savitri is the Creator. According to the Truth of
things, in the terms of the ṛtam, the worlds are brought forth from
the divine consciousness, from Aditi, goddess of infinite being,
mother of the gods, the indivisible consciousness, the Light that
cannot be impaired imaged by the mystic Cow that cannot be
slain. In that creation, Varuna and Mitra, Aryaman and Bhaga
are four effective Puissances. Varuna represents the principle
of pure and wide being, Sat in Sachchidananda; Aryaman represents the light of the divine consciousness working as Force;
Mitra representing light and knowledge, using the principle of
Ananda for creation, is Love maintaining the law of harmony;
Bhaga represents Ananda as the creative enjoyment; he takes
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the delight of the creation, takes the delight of all that is created.
It is the Maya, the formative wisdom of Varuna, of Mitra that
disposes multitudinously the light of Aditi brought by the Dawn
to manifest the worlds.
In their psychological function these four gods represent the
same principles working in the human mind, in the human temperament. They build up in man the different planes of his being
and mould them ultimately into the terms and the forms of the
divine Truth. Especially Mitra and Varuna are continually described as holding firm the law of their action, increasing the
Truth, touching the Truth and by the Truth enjoying its vastness
of divine will or its great and uncontracted sacrificial action.
Varuna represents largeness, right and purity; everything that
deviates from the right, from the purity recoils from his being
and strikes the offender as the punishment of sin. So long as
man does not attain to the largeness of Varuna's Truth, he is
bound to the posts of the world-sacrifice by the triple bonds of
mind, life and body as a victim and is not free as a possessor and
enjoyer. Therefore we have frequently the prayer to be delivered
from the noose of Varuna, from the wrath of his offended purity.
Mitra is on the other hand the most beloved of the gods; he binds
all together by the fixities of his harmony, by the successive
lustrous seats of Love fulfilling itself in the order of things,
mitrasya dhāmabhiḥ. His name, mitra, which means also friend,
is constantly used with a play upon the double sense; it is as
Mitra, because Mitra dwells in all, that the other gods become
the friends of man. Aryaman appears in the Veda with but little
distinctness of personality, for the references to him are brief.
The functions of Bhaga are outlined more clearly and are the
same in the cosmos and in man.
In this hymn of Shyavashwa to Savitri we see both the functions of Bhaga and his oneness with Surya Savitri; for it is to the
creative Lord of Truth that the hymn is addressed, to Surya,
but to Surya specifically in his form as Bhaga, as the Lord of
Enjoyment. The word bhaga means enjoyment or the enjoyer
and that this sense is the one held especially appropriate to the
divine name, Bhaga, is emphasised by the use of bhojanam,
bhāga, saubhagam in the verses of the hymn. Savitri, we have
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seen, means Creator, but especially in the sense of producing,
emitting from the unmanifest and bringing out into the manifest.
Throughout the hymn there is a constant dwelling upon this root-
sense of the word which it is impossible to render adequately in
a translation. In the very first verse there is a covert play of the
kind; for bhojanam means both enjoyment and food and it is
intended to be conveyed that the "enjoyment of Savitri" is Soma,
from the same root su, to produce, press out, distil, Soma, the
food of divine beings, the supreme distilling, highest production
of the great Producer. What the Rishi seeks is the enjoyment in
all created things of the immortal and immortalising Ananda.
It is this Ananda which is that enjoyment of the divine
Producer, of Surya Savitri, the supreme result of the Truth;
for Truth is followed as the path to the divine beatitude. This
Ananda is the highest, the best enjoyment. It disposes all aright;
for once the Ananda, the divine delight in all things is attained,
it sets right all the distortions, all the evil of the world. It carries
man through to the goal. If by the truth and right of things we
arrive at the Ananda, by the Ananda also we can arrive at the
right and truth of things. It is to the divine Creator in the name
and form of Bhaga that this human capacity for the divine and
right enjoyment of all things belongs. When he is embraced by
the human mind and heart and vital forces and physical being,
when this divine form is received into himself by man, then the
Ananda of the world manifests itself.
Nothing can limit, nothing can diminish, neither god nor
demon, friend nor enemy, event nor sensation, whatever pleasure
this divine Enjoyer takes in things, in whatever vessel or object
of his enjoyment. For nothing can diminish or hedge in or hurt
his luminous self-empire, svarājyam, his perfect possession of
himself in infinite being, infinite delight and the vastnesses of the
order of the Truth.
Therefore it is he that brings the seven delights, sapta
ratnā,
to the giver of the sacrifice. He looses them forth on us; for
they are all there in the world as in the divine being, in ourselves
also, and have only to be loosed forth on our outer consciousness.
The rich and varied amplitude of this sevenfold delight, perfect
on all the planes of our being, is the bhāga, enjoyment or portion
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of Bhaga Savitri in the completed sacrifice, and it is that varied
wealth which the Rishi seeks for himself and his fellows in the
sacrifice by the acceptance of the divine Enjoyer.
Shyavashwa then calls on Bhaga Savitri to vouchsafe to him
even today a felicity not barren, but full of the fruits of activity,
rich in the offspring of the soul, prajāvat saubhagam. Ananda
is creative, it is jana, the delight that gives birth to life and world;
only let the things loosed forth on us be of the creation conceived
in the terms of the truth and let all that belongs to the falsehood,
to the evil dream created by the ignorance of the divine Truth,
duḥṣvapnyam, be dismissed, dispelled away from our conscious
being.
In the next verse he makes clearer the sense of duḥṣvapnyam.
What he desires to be dispelled is all evil, viśvāni duritāni. Suvitam
and duritam in the Veda mean literally right going and wrong
going. Suvitam is truth of thought and action, duritam error or
stumbling, sin and perversion. Suvitam is happy going, felicity,
the path of Ananda; duritam is calamity, suffering, all ill result
of error and ill doing. All that is evil, viśvāni duritāni, belongs to
the evil dream that has to be turned away from us. Bhaga sends
to us instead all that is good, — bhadram, good in the sense
of felicity, the auspicious things of the divine enjoying, the
happiness of the right activity, the right creation.
For, in the creation of Bhaga Savitri, in his perfect and fault-
less sacrifice, — there is a double sense in the word sava, "loosing
forth", used of the creation, and the sacrifice, the libation of the
Soma, — men stand absolved from sin and blame by the Ananda,
anāgasaḥ, blameless in the sight of Aditi, fit for the undivided and
infinite consciousness of the liberated soul. The Ananda owing to
that freedom is capable of being in them universal. They are able
to hold by their thought all things of the delight, viśvā vāmāni;
for in the dhī, the understanding that holds and arranges, there
is right arrangement of the world, perception of right relation,
right purpose, right use, right fulfilment, the divine and blissful
intention in all things.
It is the universal Divine, the master of the Sat, from whom
all things are created in the terms of the truth, satyam, that the
sacrificers today by means of the sacred mantras seek to accept
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into themselves under the name of Bhaga Savitri. It is the creator
whose creation is the Truth, whose sacrifice is the outpouring of
the truth through the outpouring of his own Ananda, his divine
and unerring joy of being, into the human soul. He as Surya
Savitri, master of the Truth, goes in front of both this Night and
this Dawn, of the manifest consciousness and the unmanifest,
the waking being and the subconscient and superconscient whose
interaction creates all our experiences; and in his motion he
neglects nothing, is never unheeding, never falters. He goes in
front of both bringing out of the night of the subconscient the
divine Light, turning into the beams of that Light the uncertain
or distorted reflections of the conscient, and always the thought is
rightly placed. The source of all error is misapplication, wrong
placing of truth, wrong arrangement, wrong relation, wrong
positing in time and place, object and order. But in the Master
of Truth there is no such error, no such stumbling, no such wrong
placing.
Surya Savitri, who is Bhaga, stands between the Infinite
and the created worlds within us and without. All things that
have to be born in the creative consciousness he receives into the
Vijnana; there he puts it into its right place in the divine rhythm
by the knowledge that listens and receives the Word as it descends
and so he looses it forth into the movement of things, āśrāvayati ślokena pra ca
suvāti. When in us each creation of the active
Ananda, the prajāvat saubhagam, comes thus out of the unmanifest, received and heard rightly of the knowledge in the faultless
rhythm of things, then is our creation that of Bhaga Savitri, and
all the births of that creation, our children, our offspring, prajā,
apatyam, are things of the delight, viśvā vāmāni. This is the
accomplishment of Bhaga in man, his full portion of the world-sacrifice.
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