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SUPPLEMENT TO
VOLUME 10
THE SECRET OF THE VEDA
1. This
draft of "The Origins of Aryan Speech" seems to
be an earlier one. It
was found in this incomplete form in
Sri Aurobindo's manuscripts.
2. "A System of Vedic Psychology" is an incomplete study
written
probably in the early days at Pondicherry, 1910-14.
The Origins of Aryan Speech
IN
THAT pregnant
period of European knowledge when physical Science, turned suddenly
towards its full strength was preparing to open for itself the new views, new
paths and new instruments of discovery which have led to the astonishing results
of the nineteenth century, an opportunity was offered to the European mind for a
similar mastery of sciences other than physical. The Sanscrit language was
discovered. It was at first imagined and expected that this discovery would lead
to results as important as those which flowed from the discovery of Greek
literature by Western Europe after the fall of Constantinople. But these
expectations have remained unfulfilled. European knowledge has followed other
paths and the seed of the nineteenth century has been Newton's apple and not Sir
William Jones' Shakuntala or the first edition of the Vedas. The discovery of
Sanscrit has, it is true, had a considerable effect on the socalled sciences of
Comparative Philology, Comparative Mythology, Science of Religion, ethnology and
sociology; but these branches of knowledge are not sciences, they are
systematised speculations. Their particular conclusions often change from
generation to generation and none of them, not even the most certain, have the
same cast of certainty as a scientific generalisation in the domain of physical
enquiry. The law of gravitation is a permanent truth of science; the law that
all myths start from the sun, the law of Solarisation, if I may so call it, is
an ingenious error which survives at all because it pleases the poetic
imagination.
So great has been the failure that the possibility, even, of a Science of speech
has been too readily scouted. But this is an excessive deduction, the reaction
of disappointed expectation has exaggerated the meaning of the failure. To say
that there can be no science of speech is to say that the movements of the mind
are not governed by intelligible processes, but rather by an in- calculable
caprice - a supposition that cannot be admitted.
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towards
a science of languages. Even the classification of tongues as Aryan, Dravidian,
Semitic cannot be called scientific; it is empirical and depends upon identities
which my not be fundamental. We must go deeper. European philology has started
from word-identities and identities of final word -meaning. I propose to start
from root-identities and identities of original and derivative root -meaning and
even from sound-identities and identities of fundamental and applicatory sound
-meaning. It is, I believe, possible in this way to establish the unity of the
Aryan tongues and some at least of the laws governing the birth and development
of Aryan speech. My enquiry does not carry me farther. I do not pretend as yet
to make out the laws of speech - but only to establish from data, some facts of
Aryan speech which may eventually help in solving the wider problem.
In another respect also the philologists seem to me to have misunderstood
the conditions of their enquiry. They have been not rigid enough and yet too
rigid. They have been too rigid in not allowing for the flexibility of mind
movements. They have sought for the same invariable sequence which we observe in
the physical world and admitted a law only where such sequence seemed to occur.
The laws of physical formation follow a fixed line and their variations even
are...a fixed fashion. But with the growth of life in matter there comes a
growing element of freedom, of a more elusive principle and a more elastic
variation; for this reason science has found life more difficult to fathom and
analyse than matter and her triumphs here have been far less notable than in the
pure physical domain. Mind brings with it a still freer play, a still more
elusive principle and flexible application. A general law always obtains, but
the application, the particular processes…. .more subtly and are more
numerous. Science, not taking into account this law of increasing freedom, has
in the domain of mind accomplished little or nothing. When we deal with the laws
of speech, we must remember this flexibility of all mind processes. We must
ourselves keep a flexible mind to follow it and an open eye for all variations.
It is for regularity in irregularity that one must always be on the watch, not
for a fixed or a continuous regularity. On the other hand the few laws which
Philology has admitted have been, by a sort of false com-
Page-164
pensation for their original narrowness, used with too free and even lax a play
of fancy. Often indeed instead of working as a law, the philological principle
presents itself as an ingenious means for inventing word-identities.
I have disregarded as any other error of imperfect enquiry the rigid
philological divorce of the Dravidian and Aryan languages. Whether there be a
separate Dravidian stock or no, it is to me a certainty that Tamil owes not only
many of its most common terms but whole families of words to the original Aryan
speech. Its evidences cannot be neglected in such an enquiry as I have
undertaken, for they are of the greatest importance. Indeed the theory worked
out by us took its rise originally not from any analysis of the Sanscrit
word-system, but from an observation of the relations of Tamil in its non-concretised
element to the Greek, Latin and North Indian languages. At the same time it is
on an analysis of the Sanscrit word-system that I have chiefly relied. I have
omitted from that system most of its Vedic elements. The meanings of Vedic words
are often extremely disputable and it would be unsafe to rely whether on the
significances fixed by the European scholars or on those fixed centuries ago by
Sayana or even by Yaska. It is better, and quite sufficient for the immediate
purpose, to rely upon the classical tongue with its undoubted and
well-ascertained meanings.
These are the lines upon which I have conducted my enquiry. The full
proof of the results arrived at depends upon a larger labour of minute
classification both of root-families and word- families in all the greater Aryan
tongues, - a
labour which
is already
in process, but is not yet complete. What I have written in this book, will, I
hope, be judged sufficient for a secure foundation. If it does no more, it may
possibly lead to a deeper and freer approach to the problem of the origin of
speech, which, once undertaken in the right spirit and with an eye for the more
subtle clues, cannot fail to lead to a discovery of the first importance to
human thought and knowledge.
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