TWENTY FOUR
The Gist of the Karmayoga
THE first six chapters of the Gita form a sort of
preliminary block of the teaching; all the rest, all the other twelve chapters
are the working out of certain unfinished figures in this block which here are
seen only as hints behind the large-size execution of the main motives, yet are
in themselves of capital importance and are therefore reserved for a yet larger
treatment on the other two faces of the work. If the Gita were not a great
written Scripture which must be carried to its end, if it were actually a
discourse by a living teacher to a disciple which could be resumed in good
time, when the disciple was ready for farther truth, one could conceive of his
stopping here at the end of the sixth chapter and saying, “Work this out first,
there is plenty for you to do to realise it and you have the largest possible
basis; as difficulties arise, they will solve themselves or I will solve them
for you. But at present live out what I have told you; work in this spirit.”
True, there are many things here which cannot be properly understood except in
the light thrown on them by what is to come after. In order to clear up
immediate difficulties and obviate possible misunderstandings, I have had
myself to anticipate a good deal, to bring in repeatedly, for example, the idea
of the Purushottama, for without that it would have been impossible to clear up
certain obscurities about the Self and action and the Lord of action, which the
Gita deliberately accepts so that it may not disturb the firmness of the first
steps by reaching out prematurely to things too great as yet for the mind of
the human disciple.
Arjuna, himself,
if the Teacher were to break off his discourse here, might well object: “You
have spoken much of the destruction of desire and attachment, of equality, of
the conquest of the senses and the stilling of the mind, of passionless and
impersonal action, of the sacrifice of works, of the inner as
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preferable to the outer
renunciation, and these things I understand intellectually, however difficult
they may appear to me in practice. But
you have also spoken of rising above the gunas, while yet one remains in
action, and you have not told me how the gunas work, and unless I know that, it
will be difficult for me to detect and rise above them. Besides, you have
spoken of bhakti as the greatest element in Yoga, yet you have talked much of
works and knowledge, but very little or nothing of bhakti. And to whom is
bhakti, this greatest thing, to be offered? Not to the still impersonal Self,
certainly, but to you, the Lord. Tell me, then, what you are, who, as bhakti is
greater even than this self-knowledge, are greater than the immutable Self,
which is yet itself greater than mutable Nature and the world of action, even
as knowledge is greater than works. What is the relation between these three
things? between works and knowledge and divine love? between the soul in Nature
and the immutable Self and that which is at once the changeless Self of all and
the Master of knowledge and love and works, the supreme Divinity who is here
with me in this great battle and massacre, my charioteer in the chariot of this
fierce and terrible action?” It is to answer these questions that the rest of
the Gita is written, and in a complete intellectual solution they have indeed
to be taken up without delay and resolved. But in actual sādhanā one has to advance from stage to stage, leaving
many things, indeed the greatest things to arise subsequently and solve
themselves fully by the light of the advance we have made in spiritual
experience. The Gita follows to a certain extent this curve of experience and
puts first a sort of large preliminary basis of works and knowledge which
contains an element leading up to bhakti and to a greater knowledge, but not
yet fully arriving. The six chapters present us with that basis.
We may then
pause to consider how far they have carried the solution of the original
problem with which the Gita started. The problem in itself, it may be useful
again to remark, need not necessarily have led up to the whole question of the nature
of existence and of the replacement of the normal by the spiritual life. It
might have been dealt with on a pragmatical or an ethical basis or from an
intellectual or an ideal standpoint or by
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a consideration of all of these
together; that in fact would have been our modern method of solving the
difficulty. By itself it raises in the first instance just this question,
whether Arjuna should be governed by the ethical sense of personal sin in
slaughter or by the consideration equally ethical of his public and social duty,
the defence of the Right, the opposition demanded by conscience from all noble
natures to the armed forces of injustice and oppression? That question has been
raised in our own time and the present hour, and it can be solved, as we solve
it now, by one or other of very various solutions, but all from the standpoint
of our normal life and our normal human mind. It may be answered as a question
between the personal conscience and our duty to the society and the State, between
an ideal and a practical morality, between “soul-force” and the recognition of
the troublesome fact that life is not yet at least all soul and that to take up
arms for the right in a physical struggle is sometimes inevitable. All these
solutions are, however, intellectual, temperamental, emotional; they depend
upon the individual standpoint and are at the best our own proper way of
meeting the difficulty offered to us, proper because suitable to our nature and
the stage of our ethical and intellectual evolution, the best we can, with the light
we have, see and do; it leads to no final solution. And this is so because it
proceeds from the normal mind which is always a tangle of various tendencies of
our being and can only arrive at a choice or an accommodation between them,
between our reason, our ethical being, our dynamic needs, our life-instincts,
our emotional being and those rarer movements which we may perhaps call
soul-instincts or psychical preferences. The Gita recognises that from this
standpoint there can be no absolute, only an immediate practical solution and,
after offering to Arjuna from the highest ideals of his age just such a
practical solution, which he is in no mood to accept and indeed is evidently
not intended to accept, it proceeds to quite a different standpoint and to
quite another answer.
The Gita's
solution is to rise above our natural being and normal mind, above our
intellectual and ethical perplexities into another consciousness with another
law of being and therefore another standpoint for our action; where personal
desire and
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personal emotions no longer
govern it; where the dualities fall away; where the action is no longer our own
and where therefore the sense of
personal virtue and personal sin is exceeded; where the universal, the
impersonal, the divine spirit works out through us its purpose in the world;
where we are ourselves by a new and divine birth changed into being of that Being,
consciousness of that Consciousness, power of that Power, bliss of that Bliss,
and, living no longer in our lower nature, have no works to do of our own, no
personal aim to pursue of our own, but if we do works at all, – and that is the
one real problem and difficulty left, – do only the divine works, those of
which our outward nature is only a passive instrument and no longer the cause,
no longer provides the motive; for the motive-power is above us in the will of
the Master of our works. And this is presented to us as the true solution,
because it goes back to the real truth of our being and to live according to
the real truth of our being is evidently the highest solution and the sole
entirely true solution of the problems of our existence. Our mental and vital
personality is a truth of our natural existence, but a truth of the ignorance, and
all that attaches itself to it is also truth of that order, practically valid
for the works of the ignorance, but no longer valid when we get back to the
real truth of our being. But how can we actually be sure that this is the
truth? We cannot so long as we remain satisfied with our ordinary mental
experience; for our normal mental experience is wholly that of this lower nature
full of the ignorance. We can only know this greater truth by living it, that
is to say, by passing beyond the mental into the spiritual experience, by Yoga.
For the living out of spiritual experience until we cease to be mind and become
spirit, until, liberated from the imperfections of our present nature, we are
able to live entirely in our true and divine being is what in the end we mean
by Yoga.
This upward
transference of our centre of being and the consequent transformation of our
whole existence and consciousness, with a resultant change in the whole spirit
and motive of our action, the action often remaining precisely the same in all
its outward appearances, makes the gist of the Gita's Karmayoga. Change your
being, be reborn into the spirit and by that
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new birth proceed with the action
to which the Spirit within has appointed you, may be said to be the heart of
its message. Or again, put otherwise, with a deeper and more spiritual import,
– make the work you have to do here your means of inner spiritual rebirth, the
divine birth, and, having become divine,
do still divine works as an instrument of the Divine for the leading of the
peoples. Therefore there are here two things which have to be clearly laid down
and clearly grasped, the way to the change, to this upward transference, this new
divine birth, and the nature of the work or rather the spirit in which it has
to be done, since the outward form of it need not at all change, although
really its scope and aim become quite different. But these two things are
practically the same, for the elucidation of one elucidates the other. The
spirit of our action arises from the nature of our being and the inner foundation
it has taken, but also this nature is itself affected by the trend and
spiritual effect of our action; a very great change in the spirit of our works
changes the nature of our being and alters the foundation it has taken; it
shifts the centre of conscious force from which we act. If life and action were
entirely illusory, as some would have it, if the Spirit had nothing to do with
works or life, this would not be so; but the soul in us develops itself by life
and works and, not indeed so much the action itself, but the way of our soul's
inner force of working determines its relations to the Spirit. This is, indeed,
the justification of Karmayoga as a practical means of the higher
self-realisation.
We start from
this foundation that the present inner life of man, almost entirely dependent
as it is upon his vital and physical nature, only lifted beyond it by a limited
play of mental energy, is not the whole of his possible existence, not even the
whole of his present real existence. There is within him a hidden Self, of
which his present nature is either only an outer appearance or is a partial
dynamic result. The Gita seems throughout to admit its dynamic reality and not
to adopt the severer view of the extreme Vedantists that it is only an
appearance, a view which strikes at the very roots of all works and action. Its
way of formulating this element of its philosophical thought, – it might be
done in a different way, – is to admit the Sankhya distinction
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between the Soul and Nature, the
power that knows, supports and informs and the power that works, acts, provides
all the variations of instrument, medium and process. Only it takes the free
and immutable Soul of the Sankhyas, calls it in Vedantic language the one immutable
omnipresent Self or Brahman, and distinguishes it from this other soul involved
in Nature, which is our mutable and dynamic being, the multiple soul of things,
the basis of variation and personality. But in what then consists this action
of Nature?
It consists in a power of
process, Prakriti, which is the interplay of three fundamental modes of its
working, three qualities, gunas. And what is the medium? It is the complex
system of existence created by a graded evolution of the instruments of Prakriti,
which, as they are reflected here in the soul's experience of her workings, we
may call successively the reason and the ego, the mind, the senses and the
elements of material energy which are the basis of its forms. These are all
mechanical, a complex engine of Nature, yantra;
and from our modern point of view we may say that they are all involved in
material energy and manifest themselves in it as the soul in Nature becomes
aware of itself by an upward evolution of each instrument, but in the inverse
order to that which we have stated, matter first, then sensation, then mind, next
reason, last spiritual consciousness. Reason, which is at first only
preoccupied with the workings of Nature, may then detect their ultimate
character, may see them only as a play of the three gunas in which the soul is
entangled, may distinguish between the soul and these workings; then the soul
gets a chance of disentangling itself and of going back to its original freedom
and immutable existence. In Vedantic language, it sees the spirit, the being;
it ceases to identify itself with the instruments and workings of Nature, with
its becoming; it identifies itself with its true Self and being and recovers
its immutable spiritual self-existence. It is then from this spiritual self-existence,
according to the Gita, that it can freely and as the master of its being, the
Ishwara, support the action of its becoming.
Looking only at
the psychological facts on which these philosophical distinctions are founded,
– philosophy is only a way of formulating to ourselves intellectually in their
essential
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significance the psychological
and physical facts of existence and their relation to any ultimate reality that
may exist, – we may say that there are two lives we can lead, the life of the
soul engrossed in the workings of its active nature, identified with its
psychological and physical instruments, limited by them, bound by its
personality, subject to Nature, and the life of the Spirit, superior to these
things, large, impersonal, universal, free, unlimited, transcendent, supporting
with an infinite equality its natural being and action, but exceeding them by
its freedom and infinity. We may live in what is now our natural being or we
may live in our greater and spiritual being. This is the first great
distinction on which the Karmayoga of the Gita is founded.
The whole
question and the whole method lie then in the liberation of the soul from the
limitations of our present natural being. In our natural life the first
dominating fact is our subjection to the forms of material Nature, the outward
touches of things. These present themselves to our life through the senses, and
the life through the senses immediately returns upon these objects to seize
upon them and deal with them, desires, attaches itself, seeks for results. The
mind in all its inner sensations, reactions, emotions, habitual ways of
perceiving, thinking and feeling obeys this action of the senses; the reason too
carried away by the mind gives itself up to this life of the senses, this life
in which the inner being is subject to the externality of things and cannot for
a moment really get above it or outside the circle of its action upon us and
its psychological results and reactions within us. It cannot get beyond them
because there is the principle of ego by which the reason differentiates the
sum of the action of Nature upon our mind, will, sense, body from her action in
other minds, wills, nervous organisms,
bodies; and life to us means only the way she affects our ego and the way our
ego replies to her touches. We know nothing else, we seem to be nothing else;
the soul itself seems then only a separate mass of mind, will, emotional and
nervous reception and reaction. We may enlarge our ego, identify ourselves with
the family, clan, class, country, nation, humanity even, but still the ego
remains in all these disguises the root of our actions, only it finds a larger
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satisfaction of its separate
being by these wider dealings with external things.
What acts in us
is still the will of the natural being seizing upon the touches of the external
world to satisfy the different phases of its personality, and the will in this
seizing is always a will of desire and passion and attachment to our works and their
results, the will of Nature in us; our personal will, we say, but our ego
personality is a creation of Nature, it is not and cannot be our free self, our
independent being. The whole is the action of the modes of Nature. It may be a
tamasic action, and then we have an inert personality subject to and satisfied
with the mechanical round of things, incapable of any strong effort at a freer
action and mastery. Or it may be the rajasic action, and then we have the
restless active personality which throws itself upon Nature and tries to make
her serve its needs and desires, but does not see that its apparent mastery is
a servitude, since its needs and desires are those of Nature, and while we are
subject to them, there can be for us no freedom. Or it may be a sattwic action,
and then we have the enlightened personality which tries to live by reason or
to realise some preferred ideal of good, truth or beauty; but this reason is
still subject to the appearances of Nature and these ideals are only changing
phases of our personality in which we find in the end no sure rule or permanent
satisfaction. We are still carried on a wheel of mutation, obeying in our
circlings through the ego some Power within us and within all this, but not
ourselves that Power or in union and communion with it. Still there is no
freedom, no real mastery.
Yet freedom is
possible. For that we have to get first away into ourselves from the action of
the external world upon our senses; that is to say, we have to live inwardly
and be able to hold back the natural running of the senses after their external
objects. A mastery of the senses, an ability to do without all that they hanker
after, is the first condition of the true soul-life; only so can we begin to
feel that there is a soul within us which is other than the mutations of mind
in its reception of the touches of outward things, a soul which in its depths
goes back to something self-existent, immutable, tranquil, self-possessed,
grandiose, serene and august, master of itself and unaffected by the eager
runnings
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of our external nature. But this
cannot be done so long as we are subject to desire. For it is desire, the
principle of all our superficial life, which satisfies itself with the life of
the senses and finds its whole account in the play of the passions. We must get
rid then of desire and, that propensity of our natural being destroyed, the
passions which are its emotional results will fall into quietude; for the joy
and grief of possession and of loss, success and failure, pleasant and
unpleasant touches, which entertain them, will pass out of our souls. A calm
equality will then be gained. And since we have still to live and act in the
world and our nature in works is to seek for the fruits of our works, we must
change that nature and do works without attachment to their fruits, otherwise
desire and all its results remain. But how can we ange this nature of the doer
of works in us? By dissociating works from ego and personality, by seeing
through the reason that all this is only the play of the gunas of Nature, and
by dissociating our soul from the play, by making it first of all the observer
of the workings of Nature and leaving those works to the Power that is really
behind them, the something in Nature which is greater than ourselves, not our
personality, but the Master of the universe. But the mind will not permit all this;
its nature is to run out after the senses and carry the reason and will with
it. Then we must learn to still the mind. We must attain that absolute peace
and stillness in which we become aware of the calm, motionless, blissful Self
within us which is eternally untroubled and unaffected by the touches of
things, is sufficient to itself and finds there alone its eternal satisfaction.
This Self is our
self-existent being. It is not limited by our personal existence. It is the
same in all existences, pervasive, equal to all things, supporting the whole
universal action with its infinity, but unlimited by all that is finite,
unmodified by the changings of Nature and personality. When this Self is
revealed within us, when we feel its peace and stillness, we can grow into
that; we can transfer the poise of our soul from its lower immergence in Nature
and draw it back into the Self. We can do this by the force of the things we
have attained, calm, equality, passionless impersonality. For as we grow in
these things, carry them to their fullness, subject all our nature to them, we
are growing into this
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calm, equal, passionless,
impersonal, all-pervading Self. Our senses fall into that stillness and receive
the touches of the world on us with a supreme tranquillity; our mind falls into
stillness and becomes the calm, universal witness; our ego dissolves itself
into this impersonal existence. All things we see in this self which we have become
in ourself; and we see this self in all; we become one being with all beings in
the spiritual basis of their existence. By doing works in this selfless
tranquillity and impersonality, our works cease to be ours, cease to bind or
trouble us with their reactions. Nature and her gunas weave the web of her
works, but without affecting our griefless self-existent tranquillity. All is
given up into that one equal and universal Brahman.
But here there
are two difficulties. First, there seems to be an antinomy between this
tranquil and immutable Self and the action of Nature. How then does the action
at all exist or how can it continue once we have entered into the immutable Self-existence?
Where in that is the will to works which would make the action of our nature
possible? If we say with the Sankhya that the will is in Nature and not in the
Self, still there must be a motive in Nature and the power in her to draw the soul
into its workings by interest, ego and attachment, and when these things cease
to reflect themselves in the soul-consciousness, her power ceases and the
motive of works ceases with it. But the Gita does not accept this view, which seems
indeed to necessitate the existence of many Purushas and not one universal
Purusha, otherwise the separate experience of the soul and its separate
liberation while millions of others are still involved, would not be
intelligible. Nature is not a separate principle, but the power of the Supreme
going forth in cosmic creation. But if the Supreme is only this immutable Self
and the individual is only something that has gone forth from him in the Power,
then the moment it returns and takes its poise in the self, everything must
cease except the supreme unity and the supreme calm. Secondly, even if in some
mysterious way action still continues, yet since the Self is equal to all
things, it cannot matter whether works are done or, if they are done, it cannot
matter what work is done. Why then this insistence on the most violent and disastrous
form of action, this chariot, this battle, this warrior, this divine
charioteer?
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The Gita answers by presenting
the Supreme as something greater even than the immutable Self, more
comprehensive, one who is at once this Self and the Master of works in Nature.
But he directs the works of Nature with the eternal calm, the equality, the
superiority to works and personality which belong to the immutable. This, we
may say, is the poise of being from which he directs works, and by growing into
this we are growing into his being and into the poise of divine works. From
this he goes forth as the Will and Power of his being in Nature, manifests
himself in all existences, is born as Man in the world, is there in the heart
of all men, reveals himself as the Avatar, the divine birth in man; and as man
grows into his being, it is into the divine birth that he grows. Works must be
done as a sacrifice to this Lord of our works, and we must by growing into the
Self realise our oneness with him in our being and see our personality as a
partial manifestation of him in Nature. One with him in being, we grow one with
all beings in the universe and do divine works, not as ours, but as his workings
through us for the maintenance and leading of the peoples.
This is the
essential thing to be done, and once this is done, the difficulties which
present themselves to Arjuna will disappear. The problem is no longer one of
our personal action, for that which makes our personality becomes a thing temporal
and subordinate, the question is then only one of the workings of the divine
Will through us in the universe. To understand that we must know what this
supreme Being is in himself and in Nature, what the workings of Nature are and
what they lead to, and the intimate relation between the soul in Nature and
this supreme Soul, of which bhakti with knowledge is the foundation. The
elucidation of these questions is the subject of the rest of the Gita.
END OF THE FIRST
SERIES
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