ELEVEN
The Vision of the World-Spirit*
The Double Aspect
EVEN while the effects of the terrible aspect of this vision
are still upon him, the first words uttered by Arjuna after the Godhead has
spoken are eloquent of a greater uplifting and reassuring reality behind this
face of death and this destruction. “Rightly and in good place,” he cries, “O
Krishna, does the world rejoice and take pleasure in thy name, the Rakshasas
are fleeing from thee in terror to all the quarters and the companies of the
Siddhas bow down before thee in adoration. How should they not do thee homage,
O great Spirit? For thou art the original Creator and Doer of works and greater
even than creative Brahma. O thou Infinite, O thou Lord of the gods, O thou abode
of the universe, thou art the Immutable and thou art what is and is not and
thou art that which is the Supreme. Thou art the ancient Soul and the first and
original Godhead and the supreme resting-place of this All; thou art the knower
and that which is to be known and the highest status; O infinite in form, by
thee was extended the universe. Thou art Yama and Vayu and Agni and Soma and
Varuna and Prajapati, father of creatures, and the great-grandsire. Salutation
to thee a thousand times over and again and yet again salutation, in front and
behind and from every side, for thou art each and all that is. Infinite in
might and immeasurable in strength of action thou pervadest all and art every
one.”
But this supreme
universal Being has lived here before him with the human face, in the mortal
body, the divine Man, the embodied Godhead, the Avatar, and till now he has not
known him. He has seen the humanity only and has treated the Divine as a mere
human creature. He has not pierced through the
*Gita, XI. 35-55.
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earthly mask to the Godhead of
which the humanity was a vessel and a symbol, and he prays now for that
Godhead's forgiveness of his unseeing carelessness and his negligent ignorance.
“For whatsoever I have spoken to thee in rash vehemence, thinking of thee only
as my human friend and companion, `O Krishna, O Yadava, O comrade,' not knowing
this thy greatness, in negligent error or in love, and for whatsoever
disrespect was shown by me to thee in jest, on the couch and the seat and in the
banquet, alone or in thy presence, I pray forgiveness from thee the
immeasurable. Thou art the father of all this world of the moving and unmoving;
thou art one to be worshipped and the most solemn object of veneration. None is
equal to thee, how then another greater in all the three worlds, O incomparable
in might? Therefore I bow down before thee and prostrate my body and I demand
grace of thee the adorable Lord. As a father to his son, as a friend to his
friend and comrade, as one dear with him he loves, so shouldst thou, O Godhead,
bear with me. I have seen what never was seen before and I rejoice, but my mind
is troubled with fear. O Godhead, show me that other form of thine. I would see
thee even as before crowned and with thy mace and discus. Assume thy four-armed
shape, O thousand-armed, O Form universal.”
From the first
words there comes the suggestion that the hidden truth behind these terrifying
forms is a reassuring, a heartening and delightful truth. There is something
that makes the heart of the world to rejoice and take pleasure in the name and
nearness of the Divine. It is the profound sense of that which makes us see in
the dark face of Kali the face of the Mother and to perceive even in the midst
of destruction the protecting arms of the Friend of creatures, in the midst of evil
the presence of a pure unalterable Benignity and in the midst of death the
Master of Immortality. From the terror of the King of the divine action the
Rakshasas, the fierce giant powers of darkness, flee destroyed, defeated and
overpowered. But the Siddhas, but the complete and perfect who know and sing
the names of the Immortal and live in the truth of his being, bow down before
every form of Him and know what every form enshrines and signifies. Nothing has
real need to fear except that
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which is to be destroyed, the
evil, the ignorance, the veilers in Night, the Rakshasa powers. All the
movement and action of Rudra the Terrible is towards perfection and divine
light and completeness.
For this Spirit,
this Divine is only in outward form the Destroyer, Time who undoes all these
finite forms: but in himself he is the Infinite, the Master of the cosmic
Godheads, in whom the world and all its action are securely seated. He is the original
and ever originating Creator, one greater than that figure of creative Power
called Brahma which he shows to us in the form of things as one aspect of his
trinity, creation chequered by a balance of preservation and destruction. The
real divine creation is eternal; it is the Infinite manifested sempiternally in
finite things, the Spirit who conceals and reveals himself for ever in his
innumerable infinity of souls and in the wonder of their actions and in the
beauty of their forms. He is the eternal Immutable; he is the dual appearance
of the Is and Is-not, of the manifest and the never manifested, of things that
were and seem to be no more, are and appear doomed to perish, shall be and
shall pass. But what he is beyond all these is That, the Supreme, who holds all
things mutable in the single eternity of a Time to which all is ever present.
He possesses his immutable self in a timeless eternity of which Time and
creation are an ever extending figure.
This is the
Truth of him in which all is reconciled; a harmony of simultaneous and
interdependent truths start from and amount to the one that is real. It is the
truth of a supreme Soul of whose supreme nature the world is a derivation and
an inferior figure of that Infinite; of the Ancient of Days who for ever
presides over the long evolutions of Time; of the original Godhead of whom Gods
and men and all living creatures are the children, the powers, the souls,
spiritually justified in their being by his truth of existence; of the Knower
who develops in man the knowledge of himself and world and God; of the one
Object of all knowing who reveals himself to man's heart and mind and soul, so
that every new opening form of our knowledge is a partial unfolding of him, up
to the highest by which he is intimately, profoundly and integrally seen and
discovered. This is the
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high supreme Stability who
originates and supports and receives to himself all that are in the universe.
By him in his own existence the world is extended, by his omnipotent power, by
his miraculous self-conception and energy and Ananda of never-ending creation.
All is an infinity of his material and spiritual forms. He is all the many gods
from the least to the greatest; he is the father of creatures and all are his
children and his people. He is the origin of Brahma, the father to the first
father of the divine creators of these different races of living things. On
this truth there is a constant insistence. Again it is repeated that he is the
All, he is each and every one, sarvah.
He is the infinite Universal and he is each individual and everything that is,
the one Force and Being in every one of us, the infinite Energy that throws
itself out in these multitudes, the immeasurable Will and mighty Power of
motion and action that forms out of itself all the courses of Time and all the
happenings of the spirit in Nature.
And
from that insistence the thought naturally turns to the presence of this one
great Godhead in man. There the soul of the seer of the vision is impressed by
three successive suggestions. First, it is borne in upon him that in the body
of this son of Man who moved beside him as a transient creature upon earth and
sat by his side and lay with him on the same couch and ate with him in the
banquet and was the object of jest and careless word, actor in war and council
and common things, in this figure of mortal man was all the time something
great, concealed, of tremendous significance, a Godhead, an Avatar, a universal
Power, a One Reality, a supreme Transcendence. To this occult divinity in which
all the significance of man and his long race is wrapped and from which all
world-existence receives its inner meaning of ineffable greatness, he had been blind.
Now only he sees the universal Spirit in the individual frame, the Divine
embodied in humanity, the transcendent Inhabitant of this symbol of Nature. He
has seen now only this tremendous, infinite, immeasurable Reality of all these apparent
things, this boundless universal Form which so exceeds every individual form and
yet of whom each individual thing is a house for his dwelling. For that great
Reality is equal and infinite and the same in the individual and in
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the universe. And at first his
blindness, his treatment of this Divine as the mere outward man, his seeing of
only the mental and physical relation seems to him a sin against the Mightiness
that was there. For the being whom he called Krishna,
Yadava, comrade, was this immeasurable Greatness, this incomparable Might, this
Spirit one in all of whom all are the creations. That and not the veiling
outward humanity, avajānanti mānusīm
tanumāśritam, was what he should have seen with awe and with
submission and veneration.
But the second
suggestion is that what was figured in the human manifestation and the human
relation is also a reality which accompanies and mitigates for our mind the
tremendous character of the universal vision. The transcendence and cosmic
aspect have to be seen, for without that seeing the limitations of humanity
cannot be exceeded. In that unifying oneness all has to be included. But by
itself that would set too great a gulf between the transcendent spirit and this
soul bound and circumscribed in an inferior Nature. The infinite presence in
its unmitigated splendour would be too overwhelming for the separate littleness
of the limited, individual and natural man. A link is needed by which he can
see this universal Godhead in his own individual and natural being, close to
him, not only omnipotently there to govern all he is by universal and immeasurable
Power, but humanly figured to support and raise him to unity by an intimate
individual relation. The adoration by which the finite creature bows down
before the Infinite, receives all its sweetness and draws near to a closest
truth of companionship and oneness when it deepens into the more intimate
adoration which lives in the sense of the fatherhood of God, the friendhood of
God, the attracting love between the Divine Spirit and our human soul and
nature. For the Divine inhabits the human soul and body; he draws around him
and wears like a robe the human mind and figure. He assumes the human relations
which the soul affects in the mortal body and they find in God their own
fullest sense and greatest realisation. This is the Vaishnava bhakti of which
the seed is here in the Gita's words, but which received afterwards a more
deep, ecstatic and significant extension.
And from this
second suggestion a third immediately arises.
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The form of the transcendent and
universal Being is to the strength of the liberated spirit a thing mighty,
encouraging and fortifying, a source of power, an equalising, sublimating, all-justifying
vision; but to the normal man it is overwhelming, appalling, incommunicable.
The truth that reassures, even when known, is grasped with difficulty behind
the formidable and mighty aspect of all-destructive Time and an incalculable Will
and a vast immeasurable inextricable working. But there is too the gracious
mediating form of divine Narayana, the God who is so close to man and in man,
the Charioteer of the battle and the journey, with his four arms of helpful
power, a humanised symbol of Godhead, not this million-armed universality. It
is this mediating aspect which man must have for his support constantly before
him. For it is this figure of Narayana which symbolises the truth that
reassures. It makes close, visible, living, seizable the vast spiritual joy in
which for the inner spirit and life of man the universal workings behind all
their stupendous circling, retrogression, progression sovereignly culminate,
their marvellous and auspicious upshot. To this humanised embodied soul their
end becomes here a union, a closeness, a constant companionship of man and God,
man living in the world for God, God dwelling in man and turning to his own
divine ends in him the enigmatic world-process. And beyond the end is a yet
more wonderful oneness and inliving in the last transfigurations of the
Eternal.
The Godhead in
answer to Arjuna's prayer reassumes his own normal Narayana image, svakam rūpam, the desired form of
grace and love and sweetness and beauty. But first he declares the incalculable
significance of the other mighty Image which he is about to veil. “This that
thou now seest,” he tells him, “is My supreme shape, My form of luminous energy,
the universal, the original which none but thou amongst men has yet seen. I
have shown it by My self-Yoga. For it is an image of My very Self and Spirit,
it is the very Supreme self-figured in cosmic existence and the soul in perfect
Yoga with Me sees it without any trembling of the nervous parts or any
bewilderment and confusion of the mind, because he descries not only what is
terrible and overwhelming in its appearance, but also its high and reassuring
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significance. And thou also
shouldst so envisage it without fear, without confusion of mind, without any
sinking of the members; but since the lower nature in thee is not yet prepared to
look upon it with that high strength and tranquillity, I will reassume again
for thee My Narayana figure in which the human mind sees isolated and toned to
its humanity the calm, helpfulness and delight of a friendly Godhead. The
greater Form” – and this is repeated again after it has disappeared – “is only
for the rare highest souls. The gods themselves ever desire to look upon it. It
cannot be won by Veda or austerities or gifts or sacrifice; it can be seen,
known, entered into only by that bhakti which regards, adores and loves Me
alone in all things.”
But what then is
the uniqueness of this Form by which it is lifted so far beyond cognizance that
all the ordinary endeavour of human knowledge and even the inmost austerity of
its spiritual effort are insufficient, unaided, to reach the vision? It is this
that man can know by other means this or that exclusive aspect of the one
existence, its individual, cosmic or world-excluding figures, but not this
greatest reconciling Oneness of all the aspects of the Divinity in which at one
and the same time and in one and the same vision all is manifested, all is
exceeded and all is consummated. For here transcendent, universal and
individual Godhead, Spirit and Nature, Infinite and finite, space and time and
timelessness, Being and Becoming, all that we can strive to think and know of
the Godhead, whether of the absolute or the manifested existence, are wonderfully
revealed in an ineffable oneness. This vision can be reached only by the
absolute adoration, the love, the intimate unity that crowns at their summit
the fullness of works and knowledge. To know, to see, to enter into it, to be
one with this supreme form of the Supreme becomes then possible, and it is that
end which the Gita proposes for its Yoga. There is a supreme consciousness
through which it is possible to enter into the glory of the Transcendent and
contain in him the immutable Self and all mutable Becoming, – it is possible to
be one with all, yet above all, to exceed world and yet embrace the whole
nature at once of the cosmic and the supracosmic Godhead. This is difficult
indeed for limited man imprisoned in his mind and body: but, says the Godhead,
“be a
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doer of my works, accept me as
the supreme being and object, become my bhakta, be free from attachment and without
enmity to all existences; for such a man comes to me.” In other words
superiority to the lower nature, unity with all creatures, oneness with the
cosmic Godhead and the Transcendence, oneness of will with the Divine in works,
absolute love for the One and for God in all, – this is the way to that
absolute spiritual self-exceeding and that unimaginable transformation.
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