FIVE
Kurukshetra
BEFORE
we can proceed, following in the large steps of the Teacher of the Gita, to
watch his tracing of the triune path of man, – the path which is that of his
will, heart, thought raising themselves to the Highest and into the being of
that which is the supreme object of all action, love and knowledge, we must
consider once more the situation from which the Gita arises, but now in its
largest bearings as a type of human life and even of all world-existence. For
although Arjuna is himself concerned only with his own situation, his inner
struggle and the law of action he must follow, yet, as we have seen, the particular
question he raises, in the manner in which he raises it, does really bring up
the whole question of human life and action, what the world is and why it is
and how possibly, it being what it is, life here in the world can be reconciled
with life in the Spirit. And all this deep and difficult matter the Teacher
insists on resolving as the very foundation of his command to an action which
must proceed from a new poise of being and by the light of a liberating
knowledge.
But what, then,
is it that makes the difficulty for the man who has to take the world as it is
and act in it and yet would live, within, the spiritual life? What is this
aspect of existence which appals his awakened mind and brings about what the title
of the first chapter of the Gita calls significantly the Yoga of the dejection
of Arjuna, the dejection and discouragement felt by the human being when he is
forced to face the spectacle of the universe as it really is with the veil of
the ethical illusion, the illusion of self-righteousness torn from his eyes,
before a higher reconciliation with himself is effected? It is that aspect
which is figured outwardly in the carnage and massacre of Kurukshetra and
spiritually by the vision of the Lord of all things as Time arising to devour
and destroy the creatures whom it has made.
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This is the vision of the Lord of
all existence as the universal Creator but also the universal Destroyer, of
whom the ancient Scripture can say in a ruthless image, “The sages and the
heroes are his food and death is the spice of his banquet.” It is one and the
same truth seen first indirectly and obscurely in the facts of life and then
directly and clearly in the soul's vision of that which manifests itself in
life. The outward aspect is that of world-existence and human existence
proceeding by struggle and slaughter; the inward aspect is that of the
universal Being fulfilling himself in a vast creation and a vast destruction.
Life a battle and a field of death, this is Kurukshetra; God the Terrible, this
is the vision that Arjuna sees on that field of massacre.
War, said
Heraclitus, is the father of all things, War is the king of all; and the
saying, like most of the apophthegms of the Greek thinker, suggests a profound
truth. From a clash of material or other forces everything in this world, if
not the world itself, seems to be born; by a struggle of forces, tendencies,
principles, beings it seems to proceed, ever creating new things, ever
destroying the old, marching one knows not very well whither, – to a final
self-destruction, say some; in an unending series of vain cycles, say others;
in progressive cycles, is the most optimistic conclusion, leading through
whatever trouble and apparent confusion towards a higher and higher
approximation to some divine apocalypse. However that may be, this is certain
that there is not only no construction here without destruction, no harmony
except by a poise of contending forces won out of many actual and potential
discords, but also no continued existence of life except by a constant self-feeding
and devouring of other life. Our very bodily life is a constant dying and being
reborn, the body itself a beleaguered city attacked by assailing, protected by
defending forces whose business is to devour each other: and this is only a
type of all our existence. The command seems to have gone out from the
beginning, “Thou shalt not conquer except by battle with thy fellows and thy
surroundings; thou shalt not even live except by battle and struggle and by
absorbing into thyself other life. The first law of this world that I have made
is creation and preservation by destruction.”
Ancient thought accepted this
starting-point so far as it
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could see it by scrutiny of the
universe. The old Upanishads saw it very clearly and phrased it with an
uncompromising thoroughness which will have nothing to do with any honeyed
glosses or optimistic scuttlings of the truth. Hunger that is Death, they said,
is the creator and master of this world, and they figured vital existence in
the image of the Horse of the sacrifice. Matter they described by a name which
means ordinarily food and they said, we call it food because it is devoured and
devours creatures. The eater eating is eaten, this is the formula of the material
world, as the Darwinians rediscovered when they laid it down that the struggle
for life is the law of evolutionary existence. Modern science has only
rephrased the old truths that had already been expressed in much more forcible,
wide and accurate formulas by the apophthegm of Heraclitus and the figures
employed by the Upanishads.
Nietzsche's
insistence upon war as an aspect of life and the ideal man as a warrior, – the
camel-man he may be to begin with and the child-man hereafter, but the lion-man
he must become in the middle, if he is to attain his perfection, – these now
much-decried theories of Nietzsche have, however much we may differ from many
of the moral and practical conclusions he drew from them, their undeniable
justification and recall us to a truth we like to hide out of sight. It is good
that we should be reminded of it; first, because to see it has for every strong
soul a tonic effect which saves us from the flabbiness and relaxation
encouraged by a too mellifluous philosophic, religious or ethical
sentimentalism, that which loves to look upon Nature as love and life and
beauty and good, but turns away from her grim mask of death, adoring God as
Shiva but refusing to adore him as Rudra; secondly, because unless we have the
honesty and courage to look
existence straight in the face,
we shall never arrive at any effective solution of its discords and
oppositions. We must see first what life and the world are; afterwards, we can
all the better set about finding the right way to transform them into what they
should be. If this repellent aspect of existence holds in itself some secret of
the final harmony, we shall by ignoring or belittling it miss that secret and
all our efforts at a solution will fail by fault of our self-indulgent ignoring
of the true elements of the problem.
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If, on the other hand, it is an
enemy to be beaten down, trampled on, excised, eliminated, still we gain
nothing by underrating its power and hold upon life or refusing to see how
firmly it is rooted in the effective past and the actually operative principles
of existence.
War and
destruction are not only a universal principle of our life here in its purely
material aspects, but also of our mental and moral existence. It is
self-evident that in the actual life of man intellectual, social, political,
moral we can make no real step forward without a struggle, a battle between
what exists and lives and what seeks to exist and live and between all that
stands behind either. It is impossible, at least as men and things are, to
advance, to grow, to fulfil and still to observe really and utterly that
principle of harmlessness which is yet placed before us as the highest and best
law of conduct. We will use only soul-force and never destroy by war or any
even defensive employment of physical violence? Good, though until soul-force
is effective, the Asuric force in men and nations tramples down, breaks,
slaughters, burns, pollutes, as we see it doing today, but then at its ease and
unhindered, and you have perhaps caused as much destruction of life by your abstinence
as others by resort to violence; still you have set up an ideal which may some
day and at any rate ought to lead up to better things. But even soul-force,
when it is effective, destroys. Only those who have used it with eyes open,
know how much more terrible and destructive it is than the sword and the
cannon; and only those who do not limit their view to the act and its immediate
results, can see how tremendous are its after-effects, how much is eventually
destroyed and with that much all the life that depended on it and fed upon it.
Evil cannot perish without the destruction of much that lives by the evil, and
it is no less destruction even if we personally are saved the pain of a
sensational act of violence.
Moreover, every
time we use soul-force we raise a great force of Karma against our adversary,
the after-movements of which we have no power to control. Vasishtha uses
soul-force against the military violence of Vishwamitra and armies of Huns and
Shakas and Pallavas hurl themselves on the aggressor. The very quiescence and
passivity of the spiritual man under violence and aggression awakens the
tremendous forces of the world to a retributive
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action; and it may even be more
merciful to stay in their path, though by force, those who represent evil than
to allow them to trample on until they call down on themselves a worse destruction
than we would ever think of inflicting. It is not enough that our own hands
should remain clean and our souls unstained for the law of strife and destruction
to die out of the world; that which is its root must first disappear out of
humanity. Much less will mere immobility and inertia unwilling to use or
incapable of using any kind of resistance to evil, abrogate the law; inertia,
tamas, indeed, injures much more than can the rajasic principle of strife which
at least creates more than it destroys. Therefore, so far as the problem of the
individual's action goes, his abstention from strife and its inevitable
concomitant destruction in their more gross and physical form may help his own
moral being, but it leaves the Slayer of creatures unabolished.
For the rest the
whole of human history bears witness to the inexorable vitality and persistent
prevalence of this principle in the world. It is natural that we should attempt
to palliate, to lay stress on other aspects. Strife and destruction are not
all; there is the saving principle of association and mutual help as well as
the force of dissociation and mutual strife; a power of love no less than a
power of egoistic self-assertion; an impulse to sacrifice ourselves for others
as well as the impulse to sacrifice others to ourselves. But when we see how
these have actually worked, we shall not be tempted to gloss over or ignore the
power of their opposites. Association has been worked not only for mutual help,
but at the same time for defence and aggression, to strengthen us against all
that attacks or resists in the struggle for life. Association itself has been a
servant of war, egoism and the self-assertion of life against life. Love itself
has been constantly a power of death. Especially the love of good and the love
of God, as embraced by the human ego, have been responsible for much strife,
slaughter and destruction. Self-sacrifice is great and noble, but at its
highest it is an acknowledgment of the law of Life by death and becomes an
offering on the altar of some Power that demands a victim in order that the
work desired may be done. The mother bird facing the animal of prey in defence
of its young, the patriot dying for his country's freedom, the religious martyr
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or the martyr of an idea, these
in the lower and the superior scale of animal life are highest examples of self-sacrifice,
and it is evident to what they bear witness.
But if we look
at after results, an easy optimism becomes even less possible. See the patriot
dying in order that his country may be free, and mark that country a few
decades after the Lord of Karma has paid the price of the blood and the suffering
that was given; you shall see it in its turn an oppressor, an exploiter and
conqueror of colonies and dependencies devouring others that it may live and
succeed aggressively in life. The Christian martyrs perish in their thousands,
setting soul-force against empire-force that Christ may conquer, Christianity
prevail. Soul-force does triumph, Christianity does prevail, – but not Christ;
the victorious religion becomes a militant and dominant Church and a more
fanatically persecuting power than the creed and the empire which it replaced.
The very religions organise themselves into powers of mutual strife and battle
together fiercely to live, to grow, to possess the world.
All which seems
to show that here is an element in existence, perhaps the initial element,
which we do not know how to conquer either because it cannot be conquered or
because we have not looked at it with a strong and impartial gaze so as to recognise
it calmly and fairly and know what it is. We must look existence in the face if
our aim is to arrive at a right solution, whatever that solution may be. And to
look existence in the face is to look God in the face; for the two cannot be separated,
nor the responsibility for the laws of world-existence be shifted away from Him
who created them or from That which constituted it. Yet here too we love to
palliate and equivocate. We erect a God of Love and Mercy, a God of good, a God
just, righteous and virtuous according to our own moral conceptions of justice,
virtue and righteousness, and all the rest, we say, is not He or is not His,
but was made by some diabolical Power which He suffered for some reason to work
out its wicked will or by some dark Ahriman counterbalancing our gracious
Ormuzd, or was even the fault of selfish and sinful man who has spoiled what
was made originally perfect by God. As if man had created the law of death and
devouring in the animal world or that tremendous process by which
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Nature creates indeed and
preserves but in the same step and by the same inextricable action slays and
destroys. It is only a few religions which have had the courage to say without
any reserve, like the Indian, that this enigmatic World-Power is one Deity, one
Trinity, to lift up the image of the Force that acts in the world in the figure
not only of the beneficent Durga, but of the terrible Kali in her blood-stained
dance of destruction and to say, “This too is the Mother; this also know to be
God; this too, if thou hast the strength, adore.” And it is significant that
the religion which has had this unflinching honesty and tremendous courage, has
succeeded in creating a profound and wide-spread spirituality such as no other
can parallel. For truth is the foundation of real spirituality and courage is
its soul. Tasyai satyam āyatanam.
All this is not
to say that strife and destruction are the alpha and omega of existence, that
harmony is not greater than war, love more the manifest divine than death or
that we must not move towards the replacement of physical force by soul-force,
of war by peace, of strife by union, of devouring by love, of egoism by
universality, of death by immortal life. God is not only the Destroyer, but the
Friend of creatures; not only the cosmic Trinity, but the Transcendent; the
terrible Kali is also the loving and beneficent Mother; the lord of Kurukshetra
is the divine comrade and charioteer, the attracter of beings, incarnate Krishna.
And whithersoever he is driving through all the strife and clash and confusion,
to whatever goal or godhead he may be attracting us, it is – no doubt of that –
to some transcendence of all these aspects upon which we have been so firmly
insisting. But where, how, with what kind of transcendence, under what
conditions, this we have to discover; and to discover it, the first necessity
is to see the world as it is, to observe and value rightly his action as it
reveals itself at the start and now; afterwards the way and the goal will
better reveal themselves. We must acknowledge Kurukshetra; we must submit to
the law of Life by Death before we can find our way to the life immortal; we
must open our eyes, with a less appalled gaze than Arjuna's, to the vision of
our Lord of Time and Death and cease to deny, hate or recoil from the universal
Destroyer.
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