NINETEEN
Equality
SINCE
knowledge, desirelessness, impersonality, equality, the inner self-existent
peace and bliss, freedom from or at least superiority to the tangled
interlocking of the three modes of Nature are the signs of the liberated soul,
they must accompany it in all its activities. They are the condition of that
unalterable calm which this soul preserves in all the movement, all the shock,
all the clash of forces which surround it in the world. That calm reflects the
equable immutability of the Brahman in the midst of all mutations, and it
belongs to the indivisible and impartial Oneness which is for ever immanent in
all the multiplicities of the universe. For an equal and all-equalising spirit
is that Oneness in the midst of the million differences and inequalities of the
world; and equality of the spirit is the sole real equality. For in all else in
existence there can only be similarity, adjustment and balance; but even in the
greatest similarities of the world we find difference of inequality and difference
of unlikeness and the adjusted balancings of the world can only come about by a
poising of combined unequal weights.
Hence the
immense importance attached by the Gita in its elements of Karmayoga to
equality; it is the nodus of the free spirit's free relations with the world.
Self-knowledge, desirelessness, impersonality, bliss, freedom from the modes of
Nature, when withdrawn into themselves, self-absorbed, inactive, have no need
of equality; for they take no cognisance of the things in which the opposition
of equality and inequality arises. But the moment the spirit takes cognisance
of and deals with the multiplicities, personalities, differences, inequalities
of the action of Nature, it has to effectuate these other signs of its free
status by this one manifesting sign of equality. Knowledge is the consciousness
of unity with the One; and in relation with the many different beings and
existences of the universe it must show itself
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by an equal oneness with all. Impersonality
is the one immutable spirit's superiority to the variations of its multiple personality
in the world; in its dealings with the personalities of the universe it must
show itself in the equal and impartial spirit of its action with regard to all,
however various that action may be made by the variety of relations into which
it is moulded or of the conditions under which it has to take place. So Krishna
in the Gita says that none is dear to him, none hated, to all he is equal in
spirit; yet is the God-lover the special receiver of his grace, because the
relation he has created is different and the one impartial Lord of all yet
meets each soul according to its way of approach to him. Desirelessness is the illimitable
Spirit's superiority to the limiting attraction of the separate objects of
desire in the world; when it has to enter into relations with those objects, it
must show it either by an equal and impartial indifference in their possession
or by an equal and impartial unattached delight in all and love for all which,
because it is self-existent, does not depend upon possession or non-possession,
but is in its essence unperturbed and immutable. For the spirit's bliss is in
itself, and if this bliss is to enter into relations with things and creatures,
it is only in this way that it can manifest its free spirituality. Traigunātītya, transcendence
of the Gunas, is the unperturbed spirit's superiority to that flux of action of
the modes of Nature which is in its constant character perturbed and unequal;
if it has to enter into relations with the conflicting and unequal activities
of Nature, if the free soul is to allow its nature any action at all, it must
show its superiority by an impartial equality towards all activities, results
or happenings.
Equality is the
sign and also for the aspirant the test. Where there is inequality in the soul,
there there is in evidence some unequal play of the modes of Nature, motion of
desire, play of personal will, feeling and action, activity of joy and grief or
that disturbed and disturbing delight which is not true spiritual bliss but a
mental satisfaction bringing in its train inevitably a counterpart or recoil of
mental dissatisfaction. Where there is inequality of soul, there there is
deviation from knowledge, loss of steadfast abiding in the all-embracing and
all-reconciling oneness of the Brahman and unity of things. By his equality the
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Karmayogin knows in the midst of
his action that he is free.
It is the
spiritual nature of the equality enjoined, high and universal in its character
and comprehension, which gives its distinctive note to the teaching of the Gita
in this matter. For otherwise the mere teaching of equality in itself as the
most desirable status of the mind, feelings and temperament in which we rise
superior to human weakness, is by no means peculiar to the Gita. Equality has
always been held up to admiration as the philosophic ideal and the
characteristic temperament of the sages. The Gita takes up indeed this
philosophic ideal, but carries it far beyond into a higher region where we find
ourselves breathing a larger and purer air. The Stoic poise, the philosophic
poise of the soul are only its first and second steps of ascension out of the
whirl of the passions and the tossings of desire to a serenity and bliss, not
of the Gods, but of the Divine himself in his supreme self-mastery. The Stoic
equality, making character its pivot, founds itself upon self-mastery by
austere endurance; the happier and serener philosophic equality prefers
self-mastery by knowledge, by detachment, by a high intellectual indifference seated
above the disturbances to which our nature is prone, udāsīnavad āsīnah, as the Gita
expresses it; there is also the religious or Christian equality which is a
perpetual kneeling or a prostrate resignation and submission to the will of
God. These are the three steps and means towards divine peace, heroic
endurance, sage indifference, pious resignation, titiksā, udāsīnatā, namas or nati. The Gita takes them all in its
large synthetic manner and weaves them into its upward soul-movement, but it
gives to each a profounder root, a larger outlook, a more universal and
transcendent significance. For to each it gives the values of the spirit, its
power of spiritual being beyond the strain of character, beyond the difficult
poise of the understanding, beyond the stress of the emotions.
The ordinary
human soul takes a pleasure in the customary disturbances of its nature-life;
it is because it has this pleasure and because, having it, it gives a sanction
to the troubled play of the lower nature that the play continues perpetually;
for the Prakriti does nothing except for the pleasure and with the sanction of
its lover and enjoyer, the Purusha. We do not recognise
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this truth because under the
actual stroke of the adverse disturbance, smitten by grief, pain, discomfort, misfortune,
failure, defeat, blame, dishonour, the mind shrinks back from the blow, while
it leaps eagerly to the embrace of the opposite and pleasurable disturbances,
joy, pleasure, satisfactions of all kinds, prosperity, success, victory, glory,
praise; but this does not alter the truth of the soul's pleasure in life which
remains constant behind the dualities of the mind. The warrior does not feel
physical pleasure in his wounds or find mental satisfaction in his defeats; but
he has a complete delight in the godhead of battle which brings to him defeat
and wounds as well as the joy of victory, and he accepts the chances of the
former and the hope of the latter as part of the mingled weft of war, the thing
which the delight in him pursues. Even, wounds bring him a joy and pride in
memory, complete when the pain of them has passed, but often enough present
even while it is there and actually fed by the pain. Defeat keeps for him the
joy and pride of indomitable resistance to a superior adversary, or, if he is
of a baser kind, the passions of hatred and revenge which also have their
darker and crueler pleasures. So it is with the pleasure of the soul in the
normal play of our life.
The mind recoils
by pain and dislike from the adverse strokes of life; that is Nature's device
for enforcing a principle of self-protection, jugupsā, so that the vulnerable nervous and bodily parts of us
may not unduly rush upon self-destruction to embrace it: it takes joy in the
favourable touches of life; that is Nature's lure of rajasic pleasure, so that
the force in the creature may overcome the tamasic tendencies of inertia and
inactivity and be impelled fully towards action, desire, struggle, success, and
by its attachment to these things her ends may be worked out. Our secret soul
takes a pleasure in this strife and effort, and even a pleasure in adversity
and suffering, which can be complete enough in memory and retrospect, but is present
too behind at the time and often even rises to the surface of the afflicted
mind to support it in its passion; but what really attracts the soul is the
whole mingled weft of the thing we call life with all its disturbance of
struggle and seeking, its attractions and repulsions, its offer and its menace,
its varieties of every kind. To the rajasic
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desire-soul in us a monotonous pleasure,
success without struggle, joy without a shadow must after a time become
fatiguing, insipid, cloying; it needs a background of darkness to give full
value to its enjoyment of light: for the happiness it seeks and enjoys is of
that very nature, it is in its very essence relative and dependent on the
perception and experience of its opposite. The joy of the soul in the dualities
is the secret of the mind's pleasure in living.
Ask it to rise
out of all this disturbance to the unmingled joy of the pure bliss-soul which
all the time secretly supports its strength in the struggle and makes its own
continued existence possible, – it will draw back at once from the call. It
does not believe in such an existence; or it believes that it would not be
life, that it would not be at all the varied existence in the world around it
in which it is accustomed to take pleasure; it would be something tasteless and
without savour. Or it feels that the effort would be too difficult for it; it
recoils from the struggle of the ascent, although in reality the spiritual
change is not at all more difficult than the realisation of the dreams the
desire-soul pursues, nor entails more struggle and labour in the attainment
than the tremendous effort which the desire-soul expends in its passionate
chase after its own transient objects of pleasure and desire. The true cause of
its unwillingness is that it is asked to rise above its own atmosphere and
breathe a rarer and purer air of life, whose bliss and power it cannot realise
and hardly even conceives as real, while the joy of this lower turbid nature is
to it the one thing familiar and palpable. Nor is this lower satisfaction in
itself a thing evil and unprofitable; it is rather the condition for the upward
evolution of our human nature out of the tamasic ignorance and inertia to which
its material being is most subject; it is the rajasic stage of the graded
ascent of man towards the supreme self-knowledge, power and bliss. But if we
rest eternally on this plane, the madhyamā
gatih of the Gita, our ascent remains unfinished, the evolution of
the soul incomplete. Through the sattwic being and nature to that which is
beyond the three Gunas lies the way of the soul to its perfection.
The movement
which will lead us out of the disturbances of the lower nature must be
necessarily a movement towards equality
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in the mind, in the emotional
temperament, in the soul. But it is to be noted that, although in the end we
must arrive at a superiority to all the three gunas of the lower nature, it is
yet in its incipience by a resort to one or other of the three that the
movement must begin. The beginning of equality may be sattwic, rajasic or
tamasic; for there is a possibility in the human nature of a tamasic equality.
It may be purely tamasic, the heavy equability of a vital temperament rendered
inertly irresponsive to the shocks of existence by a sort of dull insensibility
undesirous of the joy of life. Or it may result from a weariness of the
emotions and desires accumulated by a surfeit and satiety of the pleasure or
else, on the contrary, a disappointment and a disgust and shrinking from the
pain of life, a lassitude, a fear and horror and dislike of the world: it is then
in its nature a mixed movement, rajaso-tamasic, but the lower quality
predominates. Or, approaching the sattwic principle, it may aid itself by the
intellectual perception that the desires of life cannot be satisfied, that the
soul is too weak to master life, that the whole thing is nothing but sorrow and
transient effort and nowhere in it is there any real truth or sanity or light
or happiness; this is the sattwo-tamasic principle of equality and is not so
much equality, though it may lead to that, as indifference or equal refusal.
Essentially, the movement of tamasic equality is a generalisation of Nature's
principle of jugupsā or
self-protecting recoil extended from the shunning of particular painful effects
to a shunning of the whole life of Nature itself as in sum leading to pain and
self-tormenting and not to the delight which the soul demands.
In tamasic
equality by itself there is no real liberation; but it can be made a powerful
starting-point, if, as in Indian asceticism, it is turned into the sattwic by
the perception of the greater existence, the truer power, the higher delight of
the immutable Self above Nature. The natural turn of such a movement, however,
is towards Sannyasa, the renunciation of life and works, rather than to that
union of inner renunciation of desire with continued activity in the world of
Nature which the Gita advocates. The Gita, however, admits and makes room for
this movement; it allows as a recoiling starting-point the perception of the
defects of the world-existence, birth and disease and death and old age
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and sorrow, the historic
starting-point of the Buddha, janma-mrtyu-jarā-vyādhi-duhkha-dosānudarśanam,
and it accepts the effort of those whose self-discipline is motived by a desire
for release, even in this spirit, from the curse of age and death, jarā-marana-moksāya
mām āśritya yatanti ye. But that, to be of any profit, must
be accompanied by the sattwic perception of a higher state and the taking
delight and refuge in the existence of the Divine, mām āśritya. Then the soul by its recoil comes to a
greater condition of being, lifted beyond the three gunas and free from birth
and death and age and grief, and enjoys the immortality of its self-existence, janma-mrtyu-jarā-duhkhair
vimukto 'mrtam aśnute. The tamasic unwillingness to accept the
pain and effort of life is indeed by itself a weakening and degrading thing,
and in this lies the danger of preaching to all alike the gospel of asceticism and
world-disgust, that it puts the stamp of a tamasic weakness and shrinking on
unfit souls, confuses their understanding,
buddhibhedam janayet, diminishes the sustained aspiration, the confidence
in living, the power of effort which the soul of man needs for its salutary,
its necessary rajasic struggle to master its environment, without really
opening to it – for it is yet incapable of that – a higher goal, a greater endeavour,
a mightier victory. But in souls that are fit this tamasic recoil may serve a
useful spiritual purpose by slaying their rajasic attraction, their eager
preoccupation with the lower life which prevents the sattwic awakening to a
higher possibility. Seeking then for a refuge in the void they have created,
they are able to hear the divine call, “O soul that findest thyself in this
transient and unhappy world, turn and put thy delight in Me,” anityam asukham lokamimam prāpya bhajasva mām.
Still, in this
movement, the equality consists only in an equal recoil from all that
constitutes the world; and it arrives at indifference and aloofness, but does
not include that power to accept equally all the touches of the world pleasurable
or painful without attachment or disturbance which is a necessary element in
the discipline of the Gita. Therefore, even if we begin with the tamasic
recoil, – which is not at all necessary, – it can only be as a first incitement
to a greater endeavour, not as a permanent pessimism. The real discipline
begins with the movement to mastery
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over these things from which we
were first inclined merely to flee. It is here that the possibility of a kind
of rajasic equality comes in, which is at its lowest the strong nature's pride
in self-mastery, self-control, superiority to passion and weakness; but the
Stoic ideal seizes upon this point of departure and makes it the key to an
entire liberation of the soul from subjection to all weakness of its lower
nature. As the tamasic inward recoil is a generalisation of Nature's principle
of jugupsā or self-protection
from suffering, so the rajasic upward movement is a generalisation of Nature's
other principle of the acceptance of struggle and effort and the innate impulse
of life towards mastery and victory; but it transfers the battle to the field
where alone complete victory is possible. Instead of a struggle for scattered
outward aims and transient successes, it proposes nothing less than the
conquest of Nature and the world itself by a spiritual struggle and an inner
victory. The tamasic recoil turns from both the pains and pleasures of the
world to flee from them; the rajasic movement turns upon them to bear, master
and rise superior to them. The Stoic self-discipline calls desire and passion
into its embrace of the wrestler and crushes them between its arms, as did old
Dhritarashtra in the epic the iron image of Bhima. It endures the shock of
things painful and pleasurable, the causes of the physical and mental
affections of the nature, and breaks their effects to pieces; it is complete
when the soul can bear all touches without being pained or attracted, excited
or troubled. It seeks to make man the conqueror and king of his nature.
The Gita, making
its call on the warrior nature of Arjuna, starts with this heroic movement. It
calls on him to turn on the great enemy desire and slay it. Its first
description of equality is that of the Stoic philosopher. “He whose mind is
undisturbed in the midst of sorrows and amid pleasures is free from desire,
from whom liking and fear and wrath have passed away, is the sage of settled
understanding. Who in all things is without affection though visited by this
good or that evil and neither hates nor rejoices, his intelligence sits firmly
founded in wisdom.” If one abstains from food, it says, giving a physical
example, the object of sense ceases to affect, but the affection itself of the
sense, the rasa, remains; it is only when, even in the exercise of the
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sense, it can keep back from
seeking its sensuous aim in the object, artha,
and abandon the affection, the desire for the pleasure of taste, that the
highest level of the soul is reached. It is by using the mental organs on the
objects, “ranging over them with the senses,” visayān indriyaiś caran, but with senses subject
to the self, freed from liking and disliking, that one gets into a large and
sweet clearness of soul and temperament in which passion and grief find no
place. All desires have to enter into the soul, as waters into the sea, and yet
it has to remain immovable, filled but not disturbed: so in the end all desires
can be abandoned. To be freed from wrath and passion and fear and attraction is
repeatedly stressed as a necessary condition of the liberated status, and for
this we must learn to bear their shocks, which cannot be done without exposing
ourselves to their causes. “He who can bear here in the body the velocity of
wrath and desire, is the Yogin, the happy man.” Titiksā, the will and power to endure, is the means.
“The material touches which cause heat and cold, happiness and pain, things
transient which come and go, these learn to endure. For the man whom these do
not trouble nor pain, the firm and wise who is equal in pleasure and suffering,
makes himself apt for immortality.” The equal-souled has to bear suffering and
not hate, to receive pleasure and not rejoice. Even the physical affections are
to be mastered by endurance and this too is part of the Stoic discipline. Age,
death, suffering, pain are not fled from, but accepted and vanquished by a high
indifference.¹ lower masks,
but to meet and conquer her is the true instinct of the strong nature, purusarsabha, the
leonine soul among men. Thus compelled, she throws aside her mask and reveals
to him his true nature as the free soul, not her subject but her king and lord,
svarāt, samrāt.
But the Gita
accepts this Stoic discipline, this heroic philosophy, on the same condition
that it accepts the tamasic recoil, – it must have above it the sattwic vision
of knowledge, at its root the aim at self-realisation and in its steps the
ascent to the
¹Dhīras tatra na muhyati, says the Gita; the strong and wise soul
is not perplexed, troubled or moved by them. But still they are accepted only
to be conquered, jarā-marana-moksāya
yatanti. Not to flee appalled from
Nature in her
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divine Nature. A Stoic discipline
which merely crushed down the common affections of our human nature, – although
less dangerous than a tamasic weariness of life, unfruitful pessimism and
sterile inertia, because it would at least increase the power and self-mastery
of the soul, – would still be no unmixed good, since it might lead to
insensibility and an inhuman isolation without giving the true spiritual
release. The Stoic equality is justified as an element in the discipline of the
Gita because it can be associated with and can help to the realisation of the
free immutable Self in the mobile human being, param drstvā,
and to status in that new self-consciousness, eśā brāhmī sthitih. “Awakening by the
understanding to the Highest which is beyond even the discerning mind, put
force on the self by the self to make it firm and still, and slay this enemy
who is so hard to assail, Desire.” Both the tamasic recoil of escape and the
rajasic movement of struggle and victory are only justified when they look
beyond themselves through the sattwic principle to the self-knowledge which legitimizes
both the recoil and the struggle.
The pure
philosopher, the thinker, the born sage not only relies upon the sattwic
principle in him as his ultimate justification, but uses it from the beginning
as his instrument of self-mastery. He starts from the sattwic equality. He too observes
the transitoriness of the material and external world and its failure to
satisfy the desires or to give the true delight, but this causes in him no
grief, fear or disappointment. He observes all with an eye of tranquil
discernment and makes his choice without repulsion or perplexity. “The
enjoyments born of the touches of things are causes of sorrow, they have a
beginning and an end; therefore the sage, the man of awakened understanding, budhah, does not place his
delight in these.” “The self in him is unattached to the touches of external
things; he finds his happiness in himself.” He sees, as the Gita puts it, that
he is himself his own enemy and his own friend, and therefore he takes care not
to dethrone himself by casting his being into the hands of desire and passion, nātmānam avasādayet, but
delivers himself out of that imprisonment by his own inner power, uddhared ātmanātmānam; for whoever has conquered his lower
self, finds in his higher self his best friend and ally. He becomes satisfied
with
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knowledge, master of his senses,
a Yogin by sattwic equality, – for equality is Yoga, samatvam yoga ucyate, – regarding alike clod and stone and gold,
tranquil and self-poised in heat and cold, suffering and happiness, honour and
disgrace. He is equal in soul to friend and enemy and to neutral and
indifferent, because he sees that these are transitory relations born of the
changing conditions of life. Even by the pretensions of learning and purity and
virtue and the claims to superiority which men base upon these things, he is
not led away. He is equal-souled to all men, to the sinner and the saint, to
the virtuous, learned and cultured Brahmin and the fallen outcaste. All these
are the Gita's descriptions of the sattwic equality, and they sum up well
enough what is familiar to the world as the calm philosophic equality of the
sage.
Where then is
the difference between this and the larger equality taught by the Gita? It lies
in the difference between the intellectual and philosophic discernment and the
spiritual, the Vedantic knowledge of unity on which the Gita founds its teaching.
The philosopher maintains his equality by the power of the buddhi, the
discerning mind; but even that by itself is a doubtful foundation. For, though
master of himself on the whole by a constant attention or an acquired habit of
mind, in reality he is not free from his lower nature, and it does actually
assert itself in many ways and may at any moment take a violent revenge for its
rejection and suppression. For, always, the play of the lower nature is a
triple play, and the rajasic and tamasic qualities are ever lying in wait for
the sattwic man. “Even the mind of the wise man who labours for perfection is
carried away by the vehement insistence of the senses.” Perfect security can
only be had by resorting to something higher than the sattwic quality,
something higher than the discerning mind, to the Self, – not the philosopher's
intelligent self, but the divine sage's spiritual self which is beyond the
three Gunas. All must be consummated by a divine birth into the higher
spiritual nature.
And the
philosopher's equality is like the Stoic's, like the world-fleeing ascetic's,
inwardly a lonely freedom, remote and aloof from men; but the man born to the
divine birth has found the Divine not only in himself, but in all beings. He
has realised
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his unity with all and his
equality is therefore full of sympathy and oneness. He sees all as himself and
is not intent on his lonely salvation; he even takes upon himself the burden of
their happiness and sorrow by which he is not himself affected or subjected.
The perfect sage, the Gita more than once repeats, is ever engaged with a large
equality in doing good to all creatures and makes that his occupation and
delight, sarvabhūtahite ratah.
The perfect Yogin is no solitary musing on the Self in his ivory tower of
spiritual isolation, but yuktah
krtsnakarmakrt, a
many-sided universal worker for the good of the world, for God in the world.
For he is a bhakta, a lover and devotee of the Divine, as well as a sage and a Yogin,
a lover who loves God wherever he finds Him and who finds Him everywhere; and
what he loves, he does not disdain to serve, nor does action carry him away
from the bliss of union, since all his acts proceed from the One in him and to
the One in all they are directed. The equality of the Gita is a large synthetic
equality in which all is lifted up into the integrality of the divine being and
the divine nature.
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