Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda - Vol-1
CHAPTER II
EACH IS GREAT IN HIS OWN PLACE
According to the Sânkhya philosophy, nature is composed of three
forces called, in Sanskrit, Sattva, Rajas, and Tamas. These as
manifested in the physical world are what we may call
equilibrium, activity, and inertness. Tamas is typified as
darkness or inactivity; Rajas is activity, expressed as
attraction or repulsion; and Sattva is the equilibrium of the
two.
In every man there are these three forces. Sometimes Tamas
prevails. We become lazy, we cannot move, we are inactive, bound
down by certain ideas or by mere dullness. At other times
activity prevails, and at still other times that calm balancing
of both. Again, in different men, one of these forces is
generally predominant. The characteristic of one man is
inactivity, dullness and laziness; that of another, activity,
power, manifestation of energy; and in still another we find the
sweetness, calmness, and gentleness, which are due to the
balancing of both action and inaction. So in all creation - in
animals, plants, and men - we find the more or less typical
manifestation of all these different forces.
Karma-Yoga has specially to deal with these three factors. By
teaching what they are and how to employ them, it helps us to do
our work better. Human society is a graded organization. We all
know about morality, and we all know about duty, but at the same
time we find that in different countries the significance of
morality varies greatly. What is regarded as moral in one
country may in another be considered perfectly immoral. For
instance, in one country cousins may marry; in another, it is
thought to be very immoral; in one, men may marry their
sisters-in-law; in another, it is regarded as immoral; in one
country people may marry only once; in another, many times; and
so forth. Similarly, in all other departments of morality, we
find the standard varies greatly - yet we have the idea that
there must be a universal standard of morality.
So it is with duty. The idea of duty varies much among different
nations. In one country, if a man does not do certain things,
people will say he has acted wrongly; while if he does those
very things in another country, people will say that he did not
act rightly - and yet we know that there must be some universal
idea of duty. In the same way, one class of society thinks that
certain things are among its duty, while another class thinks
quite the opposite and would be horrified if it had to do those
things. Two ways are left open to us - the way of the ignorant,
who think that there is only one way to truth and that all the
rest are wrong, and the way of the wise, who admit that,
according to our mental constitution or the different planes of
existence in which we are, duty and morality may vary. The
important thing is to know that there are gradations of duty and
of morality - that the duty of one state of life, in one set of
circumstances, will not and cannot be that of another.
To illustrate: All great teachers have taught, "Resist not
evil," that non-resistance is the highest moral ideal. We all
know that, if a certain number of us attempted to put that maxim
fully into practice, the whole social fabric would fall to
pieces, the wicked would take possession of our properties and
our lives, and would do whatever they liked with us. Even if
only one day of such non-resistance were practiced, it would
lead to disaster. Yet, intuitively, in our heart of hearts we
feel the truth of the teaching "Resist not evil." This seems to
us to be the highest ideal; yet to teach this doctrine only
would be equivalent to condemning a vast portion of mankind. Not
only so, it would be making men feel that they were always doing
wrong, and cause in them scruples of conscience in all their
actions; it would weaken them, and that constant
self-disapproval would breed more vice than any other weakness
would. To the man who has begun to hate himself the gate to
degeneration has already opened; and the same is true of a
nation.
Our first duty is not to hate ourselves, because to advance we
must have faith in ourselves first and then in God. He who has
no faith in himself can never have faith in God. Therefore, the
only alternative remaining to us is to recognise that duty and
morality vary under different circumstances; not that the man
who resists evil is doing what is always and in itself wrong,
but that in the different circumstances in which he is placed it
may become even his duty to resist evil.
In reading the Bhagavad-Gita, many of you in Western countries
may have felt astonished at the second chapter, wherein Shri
Krishna calls Arjuna a hypocrite and a coward because of his
refusal to fight, or offer resistance, on account of his
adversaries being his friends and relatives, making the plea
that non-resistance was the highest ideal of love. This is a
great lesson for us all to learn, that in all matters the two
extremes are alike. The extreme positive and the extreme
negative are always similar. When the vibrations of light are
too slow, we do not see them, nor do we see them when they are
too rapid. So with sound; when very low in pitch, we do not hear
it; when very high, we do not hear it either. Of like nature is
the difference between resistance and non-resistance. One man
does not resist because he is weak, lazy, and cannot, not
because he will not; the other man knows that he can strike an
irresistible blow if he likes; yet he not only does not strike,
but blesses his enemies. The one who from weakness resists not
commits a sin, and as such cannot receive any benefit from the
non-resistance; while the other would commit a sin by offering
resistance. Buddha gave up his throne and renounced his
position, that was true renunciation; but there cannot be any
question of renunciation in the case of a beggar who has nothing
to renounce. So we must always be careful about what we really
mean when we speak of this non-resistance and ideal love. We
must first take care to understand whether we have the power of
resistance or not. Then, having the power, if we renounce it and
do not resist, we are doing a grand act of love; but if we
cannot resist, and yet, at the same time, try to deceive
ourselves into the belief that we are actuated by motives of the
highest love, we are doing the exact opposite. Arjuna became a
coward at the sight of the mighty array against him; his "love"
made him forget his duty towards his country and king. That is
why Shri Krishna told him that he was a hypocrite: Thou talkest
like a wise man, but thy actions betray thee to be a coward;
therefore stand up and fight!
Such is the central idea of Karma-Yoga. The Karma-Yogi is the
man who understands that the highest ideal is non-resistance,
and who also knows that this non-resistance is the highest
manifestation of power in actual possession, and also what is
called the resisting of evil is but a step on the way towards
the manifestation of this highest power, namely, non-resistance.
Before reaching this highest ideal, man's duty is to resist
evil; let him work, let him fight, let him strike straight from
the shoulder. Then only, when he has gained the power to resist,
will non-resistance be a virtue.
I once met a man in my country whom I had known before as a very
stupid, dull person, who knew nothing and had not the desire to
know anything, and was living the life of a brute. He asked me
what he should do to know God, how he was to get free. "Can you
tell a lie?" I asked him. "No," he replied. "Then you must learn
to do so. It is better to tell a lie than to be a brute, or a
log of wood. You are inactive; you have not certainly reached
the highest state, which is beyond all actions, calm and serene;
you are too dull even to do something wicked." That was an
extreme case, of course, and I was joking with him; but what I
meant was that a man must be active in order to pass through
activity to perfect calmness.
Inactivity should be avoided by all means. Activity always means
resistance. Resist all evils, mental and physical; and when you
have succeeded in resisting, then will calmness come. It is very
easy to say, "Hate nobody, resist not evil," but we know what
that kind of thing generally means in practice. When the eyes of
society are turned towards us, we may make a show of
non-resistance, but in our hearts it is canker all the time. We
feel the utter want of the calm of non-resistance; we feel that
it would be better for us to resist. If you desire wealth, and
know at the same time that the whole world regards him who aims
at wealth as a very wicked man, you, perhaps, will not dare to
plunge into the struggle for wealth, yet your mind will be
running day and night after money. This is hypocrisy and will
serve no purpose. Plunge into the world, and then, after a time,
when you have suffered and enjoyed all that is in it, will
renunciation come; then will calmness come. So fulfil your
desire for power and everything else, and after you have
fulfilled the desire, will come the time when you will know that
they are all very little things; but until you have fulfilled
this desire, until you have passed through that activity, it is
impossible for you to come to the state of calmness, serenity,
and self-surrender. These ideas of serenity and renunciation
have been preached for thousands of years; everybody has heard
of them from childhood, and yet we see very few in the world who
have really reached that stage. I do not know if I have seen
twenty persons in my life who are really calm and non-resisting,
and I have travelled over half the world.
Every man should take up his own ideal and endeavour to
accomplish it. That is a surer way of progress than taking up
other men's ideals, which he can never hope to accomplish. For
instance, we take a child and at once give him the task of
walking twenty miles. Either the little one dies, or one in a
thousand crawls the twenty miles, to reach the end exhausted and
half-dead. That is like what we generally try to do with the
world. All the men and women, in any society, are not of the
same mind, capacity, or of the same power to do things; they
must have different ideals, and we have no right to sneer at any
ideal. Let every one do the best he can for realising his own
ideal. Nor is it right that I should be judged by your standard
or you by mine. The apple tree should not be judged by the
standard of the oak, nor the oak by that of the apple. To judge
the apple tree you must take the apple standard, and for the
oak, its own standard.
Unity in variety is the plan of creation. However men and women
may vary individually, there is unity in the background. The
different individual characters and classes of men and women are
natural variations in creation. Hence, we ought not to judge
them by the same standard or put the same ideal before them.
Such a course creates only an unnatural struggle, and the result
is that man begins to hate himself and is hindered from becoming
religious and good. Our duty is to encourage every one in his
struggle to live up to his own highest ideal, and strive at the
same time to make the ideal as near as possible to the truth.
In the Hindu system of morality we find that this fact has been
recognised from very ancient times; and in their scriptures and
books on ethics different rules are laid down for the different
classes of men - the householder, the Sannyâsin (the man who has
renounced the world), and the student.
The life of every individual, according to the Hindu scriptures,
has its peculiar duties apart from what belongs in common to
universal humanity. The Hindu begins life as a student; then he
marries and becomes a householder; in old age he retires; and
lastly he gives up the world and becomes a Sannyasin. To each of
these stages of life certain duties are attached. No one of
these stages is intrinsically superior to another. The life of
the married man is quite as great as that of the celibate who
has devoted himself to religious work. The scavenger in the
street is quite as great and glorious as the king on his throne.
Take him off his throne, make him do the work of the scavenger,
and see how he fares. Take up the scavenger and see how he will
rule. It is useless to say that the man who lives out of the
world is a greater man than he who lives in the world; it is
much more difficult to live in the world and worship God than to
give it up and live a free and easy life. The four stages of
life in India have in later times been reduced to two - that of
the householder and of the monk. The householder marries and
carries on his duties as a citizen, and the duty of the other is
to devote his energies wholly to religion, to preach and to
worship God. I shall read to you a few passages from the
Mahâ-Nirvâna-Tantra, which treats of this subject, and you will
see that it is a very difficult task for a man to be a
householder, and perform all his duties perfectly:
The householder should be devoted to God; the knowledge
of God should be his goal of life. Yet he must work constantly,
perform all his duties; he must give up the fruits of his
actions to God.
It is the most difficult thing in this world to work and not
care for the result, to help a man and never think that he ought
to be grateful, to do some good work and at the same time never
look to see whether it brings you name or fame, or nothing at
all. Even the most arrant coward becomes brave when the world
praises him. A fool can do heroic deeds when the approbation of
society is upon him, but for a man to constantly do good without
caring for the approbation of his fellow men is indeed the
highest sacrifice man can perform. The great duty of the
householder is to earn a living, but he must take care that he
does not do it by telling lies, or by cheating, or by robbing
others; and he must remember that his life is for the service of
God, and the poor.
Knowing that mother and father are the visible representatives
of God, the householder, always and by all means, must please
them. If the mother is pleased, and the father, God is pleased
with the man. That child is really a good child who never speaks
harsh words to his parents.
Before parents one must not utter jokes, must not show
restlessness, must not show anger or temper. Before mother or
father, a child must bow down low, and stand up in their
presence, and must not take a seat until they order him to sit.
If the householder has food and drink and clothes without first
seeing that his mother and his father, his children, his wife,
and the poor, are supplied, he is committing a sin. The mother
and the father are the causes of this body; so a man must
undergo a thousand troubles in order to do good to them.
Even so is his duty to his wife. No man should scold his wife,
and he must always maintain her as if she were his own mother.
And even when he is in the greatest difficulties and troubles,
he must not show anger to his wife.
He who thinks of another woman besides his wife, if he touches
her even with his mind - that man goes to dark hell.
Before women he must not talk improper language, and never brag
of his powers. He must not say, “I have done this, and I have
done that.”
The householder must always please his wife with money, clothes,
love, faith, and words like nectar, and never do anything to
disturb her. That man who has succeeded in getting the love of a
chaste wife has succeeded in his religion and has all the
virtues.
The following are duties towards children:
A son should be lovingly reared up to his fourth year; he should
be educated till he is sixteen. When he is twenty years of age
he should be employed in some work; he should then be treated
affectionately by his father as his equal. Exactly in the same
manner the daughter should be brought up, and should be educated
with the greatest care. And when she marries, the father ought
to give her jewels and wealth.
Then the duty of the man is towards his brothers and sisters,
and towards the children of his brothers and sisters, if they
are poor, and towards his other relatives, his friends and his
servants. Then his duties are towards the people of the same
village, and the poor, and any one that comes to him for help.
Having sufficient means, if the householder does not take care
to give to his relatives and to the poor, know him to be only a
brute; he is not a human being.
Excessive attachment to food, clothes, and the tending of
the body, and dressing of the hair should be avoided. The
householder must be pure in heart and clean in body, always
active and always ready for work.
To his enemies the householder must be a hero. Them he must
resist. That is the duty of the householder. He must not sit
down in a corner and weep, and talk nonsense about
non-resistance. If he does not show himself a hero to his
enemies he has not done his duty. And to his friends and
relatives he must be as gentle as a lamb.
It is the duty of the householder not to pay reverence to the
wicked; because, if he reverences the wicked people of the
world, he patronizes wickedness; and it will be a great mistake
if he disregards those who are worthy of respect, the good
people. He must not be gushing in his friendship; he must not go
out of the way making friends everywhere; he must watch the
actions of the men he wants to make friends with, and their
dealings with other men, reason upon them, and then make
friends.
These three things he must not talk of. He must not talk
in public of his own fame; he must not preach his own name or
his own powers; he must not talk of his wealth, or of anything
that has been told to him privately.
A man must not say he is poor, or that he is wealthy - he must
not brag of his wealth. Let him keep his own counsel; this is
his religious duty. This is not mere worldly wisdom; if a man
does not do so, he may be held to be immoral.
The householder is the basis, the prop, of the whole society. He
is the principal earner. The poor, the weak, the children and
the women who do not work - all live upon the householder; so
there must be certain duties that he has to perform, and these
duties must make him feel strong to perform them, and not make
him think that he is doing things beneath his ideal. Therefore,
if he has done something weak, or has made some mistake, he must
not say so in public; and if he is engaged in some enterprise
and knows he is sure to fail in it, he must not speak of it.
Such self-exposure is not only uncalled for, but also unnerves
the man and makes him unfit for the performance of his
legitimate duties in life. At the same time, he must struggle
hard to acquire these things - firstly, knowledge, and secondly,
wealth. It is his duty, and if he does not do his duty, he is
nobody. A householder who does not struggle to get wealth is
immoral. If he is lazy and content to lead an idle life, he is
immoral, because upon him depend hundreds. If he gets riches,
hundreds of others will be thereby supported.
If there were not in this city hundreds who had striven to
become rich, and who had acquired wealth, where would all this
civilization, and these alms-houses and great houses be?
Going after wealth in such a case is not bad, because that
wealth is for distribution. The householder is the centre of
life and society. It is a worship for him to acquire and spend
wealth nobly, for the householder who struggles to become rich
by good means and for good purposes is doing practically the
same thing for the attainment of salvation as the anchorite does
in his cell when he is praying; for in them we see only the
different aspects of the same virtue of self-surrender and
self-sacrifice prompted by the feeling of devotion to God and to
all that is His.
He must struggle to acquire a good name by all means. He must
not gamble, he must not move in the company of the wicked, he
must not tell lies, and must not be the cause of trouble to
others.
Often people enter into things they have not the means to
accomplish, with the result that they cheat others to attain
their own ends. Then there is in all things the time factor to
be taken into consideration; what at one time might be a
failure, would perhaps at another time be a very great success.
The householder must speak the truth, and speak gently, using
words which people like, which will do good to others; nor
should he talk of the business of other men.
The householder by digging tanks, by planting trees on the
roadsides, by establishing rest-houses for men and animals, by
making roads and building bridges, goes towards the same goal as
the greatest Yogi.
This is one part of the doctrine of Karma-Yoga - activity, the
duty of the householder. There is a passage later on, where it
says that "if the householder dies in battle, fighting for his
country or his religion, he comes to the same goal as the Yogi
by meditation," showing thereby that what is duty for one is not
duty for another. At the same time, it does not say that this
duty is lowering and the other elevating. Each duty has its own
place, and according to the circumstances in which we are
placed, we must perform our duties.
One idea comes out of all this - the condemnation of all
weakness. This is a particular idea in all our teachings which I
like, either in philosophy, or in religion, or in work. If you
read the Vedas, you will find this word always repeated -
fearlessness - fear nothing. Fear is a sign of weakness. A man
must go about his duties without taking notice of the sneers and
the ridicule of the world.
If a man retires from the world to worship God, he must not
think that those who live in the world and work for the good of
the world are not worshipping God: neither must those who live
in the world, for wife and children, think that those who give
up the world are low vagabonds. Each is great in his own place.
This thought I will illustrate by a story.
A certain king used to inquire of all the Sannyasins that came
to his country, "Which is the greater man - he who gives up the
world and becomes a Sannyasin, or he who lives in the world and
performs his duties as a house holder?" Many wise men sought to
solve the problem. Some asserted that the Sannyasin was the
greater, upon which the king demanded that they should prove
their assertion. When they could not, he ordered them to marry
and become householders. Then others came and said, "The
householder who performs his duties is the greater man." Of
them, too, the king demanded proofs. When they could not give
them, he made them also settle down as householders.
At last there came a young Sannyasin, and the king similarly
inquired of him also. He answered, "Each, O king, is equally
great in his place." "Prove this to me," asked the king. "I will
prove it to you," said the Sannyasin, "but you must first come
and live as I do for a few days, that I may be able to prove to
you what I say." The king consented and followed the Sannyasin
out of his own territory and passed through many other countries
until they came to a great kingdom. In the capital of that
kingdom a great ceremony was going on. The king and the
Sannyasin heard the noise of drums and music, and heard also the
criers; the people were assembled in the streets in gala dress,
and a great proclamation was being made. The king and the
Sannyasin stood there to see what was going on. The crier was
proclaiming loudly that the princess, daughter of the king of
that country, was about to choose a husband from among those
assembled before her.
It was an old custom in India for princesses to choose husbands
in this way. Each princess had certain ideas of the sort of man
she wanted for a husband. Some would have the handsomest man,
others would have only the most learned, others again the
richest, and so on. All the princes of the neighbourhood put on
their bravest attire and presented themselves before her.
Sometimes they too had their own criers to enumerate their
advantages and the reasons why they hoped the princess would
choose them. The princess was taken round on a throne, in the
most splendid array, and looked at and heard about them. If she
was not pleased with what she saw and heard, she said to her
bearers, "Move on," and no more notice was taken of the rejected
suitors. If, however, the princess was pleased with any one of
them, she threw a garland of flowers over him and he became her
husband.
The princess of the country to which our king and the Sannyasin
had come was having one of these interesting ceremonies. She was
the most beautiful princess in the world, and the husband of the
princess would be ruler of the kingdom after her father's death.
The idea of this princess was to marry the handsomest man, but
she could not find the right one to please her. Several times
these meetings had taken place, but the princess could not
select a husband. This meeting was the most splendid of all;
more people than ever had come to it. The princess came in on a
throne, and the bearers carried her from place to place. She did
not seem to care for any one, and every one became disappointed
that this meeting also was going to be a failure. Just then came
a young man, a Sannyasin, handsome as if the sun had come down
to the earth, and stood in one corner of the assembly, watching
what was going on. The throne with the princess came near him,
and as soon as she saw the beautiful Sannyasin, she stopped and
threw the garland over him. The young Sannyasin seized the
garland and threw it off, exclaiming, "What nonsense is this? I
am a Sannyasin. What is marriage to me?" The king of that
country thought that perhaps this man was poor and so dared not
marry the princess, and said to him, "With my daughter goes half
my kingdom now, and the whole kingdom after my death!" and put
the garland again on the Sannyasin. The young man threw it off
once more, saying, "Nonsense! I do not want to marry," and
walked quickly away from the assembly.
Now the princess had fallen so much in love with this young man
that she said, "I must marry this man or I shall die"; and she
went after him to bring him back. Then our other Sannyasin, who
had brought the king there, said to him, "King, let us follow
this pair"; so they walked after them, but at a good distance
behind. The young Sannyasin who had refused to marry the
princess walked out into the country for several miles. When he
came to a forest and entered into it, the princess followed him,
and the other two followed them. Now this young Sannyasin was
well acquainted with that forest and knew all the intricate
paths in it. He suddenly passed into one of these and
disappeared, and the princess could not discover him. After
trying for a long time to find him she sat down under a tree and
began to weep, for she did not know the way out. Then our king
and the other Sannyasin came up to her and said, "Do not weep;
we will show you the way out of this forest, but it is too dark
for us to find it now. Here is a big tree; let us rest under it,
and in the morning we will go early and show you the road."
Now a little bird and his wife and their three little ones lived
on that tree, in a nest. This little bird looked down and saw
the three people under the tree and said to his wife, "My dear,
what shall we do? Here are some guests in the house, and it is
winter, and we have no fire." So he flew away and got a bit of
burning firewood in his beak and dropped it before the guests,
to which they added fuel and made a blazing fire. But the little
bird was not satisfied. He said again to his wife, "My dear,
what shall we do? There is nothing to give these people to eat,
and they are hungry. We are householders; it is our duty to feed
any one who comes to the house. I must do what I can, I will
give them my body." So he plunged into the midst of the fire and
perished. The guests saw him falling and tried to save him, but
he was too quick for them.
The little bird's wife saw what her husband did, and she said,
"Here are three persons and only one little bird for them to
eat. It is not enough; it is my duty as a wife not to let my
husband's effort go in vain; let them have my body also." Then
she fell into the fire and was burned to death.
Then the three baby-birds, when they saw what was done and that
there was still not enough food for the three guests, said, "Our
parents have done what they could and still it is not enough. It
is our duty to carry on the work of our parents; let our bodies
go too." And they all dashed down into the fire also.
Amazed at what they saw, the three people could not of course
eat these birds. They passed the night without food, and in the
morning the king and the Sannyasin showed the princess the way,
and she went back to her father.
Then the Sannyasin said to the king, "King, you have seen that
each is great in his own place. If you want to live in the
world, live like those birds, ready at any moment to sacrifice
yourself for others. If you want to renounce the world, be like
that young man to whom the most beautiful woman and a kingdom
were as nothing. If you want to be a householder, hold your life
a sacrifice for the welfare of others; and if you choose the
life of renunciation, do not even look at beauty and money and
power. Each is great in his own place, but the duty of the one
is not the duty of the other.
CHAPTER III
THE SECRET OF WORK
Helping others physically, by removing their physical needs, is
indeed great, but the help is great according as the need is
greater and according as the help is far reaching. If a man's
wants can be removed for an hour, it is helping him indeed; if
his wants can be removed for a year, it will be more help to
him; but if his wants can be removed for ever, it is surely the
greatest help that can be given him. Spiritual knowledge is the
only thing that can destroy our miseries for ever; any other
knowledge satisfies wants only for a time. It is only with the
knowledge of the spirit that the faculty of want is annihilated
for ever; so helping man spiritually is the highest help that
can be given to him. He who gives man spiritual knowledge is the
greatest benefactor of mankind and as such we always find that
those were the most powerful of men who helped man in his
spiritual needs, because spirituality is the true basis of all
our activities in life. A spiritually strong and sound man will
be strong in every other respect, if he so wishes. Until there
is spiritual strength in man even physical needs cannot be well
satisfied. Next to spiritual comes intellectual help. The gift
of knowledge is a far higher gift than that of food and clothes;
it is even higher than giving life to a man, because the real
life of man consists of knowledge. Ignorance is death, knowledge
is life. Life is of very little value, if it is a life in the
dark, groping through ignorance and misery. Next in order comes,
of course, helping a man physically. Therefore, in considering
the question of helping others, we must always strive not to
commit the mistake of thinking that physical help is the only
help that can be given. It is not only the last but the least,
because it cannot bring about permanent satisfaction. The misery
that I feel when I am hungry is satisfied by eating, but hunger
returns; my misery can cease only when I am satisfied beyond all
want. Then hunger will not make me miserable; no distress, no
sorrow will be able to move me. So, that help which tends to
make us strong spiritually is the highest, next to it comes
intellectual help, and after that physical help.
The miseries of the world cannot be cured by physical help only.
Until man's nature changes, these physical needs will always
arise, and miseries will always be felt, and no amount of
physical help will cure them completely. The only solution of
this problem is to make mankind pure. Ignorance is the mother of
all the evil and all the misery we see. Let men have light, let
them be pure and spiritually strong and educated, then alone
will misery cease in the world, not before. We may convert every
house in the country into a charity asylum, we may fill the land
with hospitals, but the misery of man will still continue to
exist until man's character changes.
We read in the Bhagavad-Gita again and again that we must all
work incessantly. All work is by nature composed of good and
evil. We cannot do any work which will not do some good
somewhere; there cannot be any work which will not cause some
harm somewhere. Every work must necessarily be a mixture of good
and evil; yet we are commanded to work incessantly. Good and
evil will both have their results, will produce their Karma.
Good action will entail upon us good effect; bad action, bad.
But good and bad are both bondages of the soul. The solution
reached in the Gita in regard to this bondage-producing nature
of work is that, if we do not attach ourselves to the work we
do, it will not have any binding effect on our soul. We shall
try to understand what is meant by this “non-attachment to” to
work.
This is the one central idea in the Gita: work incessantly, but
be not attached to it. Samskâra can be translated very nearly by
"inherent tendency". Using the simile of a lake for the mind,
every ripple, every wave that rises in the mind, when it
subsides, does not die out entirely, but leaves a mark and a
future possibility of that wave coming out again. This mark,
with the possibility of the wave reappearing, is what is called
Samskâra. Every work that we do, every movement of the body,
every thought that we think, leaves such an impression on the
mind-stuff, and even when such impressions are not obvious on
the surface, they are sufficiently strong to work beneath the
surface, subconsciously. What we are every moment is determined
by the sum total of these impressions on the mind. What I am
just at this moment is the effect of the sum total of all the
impressions of my past life. This is really what is meant by
character; each man's character is determined by the sum total
of these impressions. If good impressions prevail, the character
becomes good; if bad, it becomes bad. If a man continuously
hears bad words, thinks bad thoughts, does bad actions, his mind
will be full of bad impressions; and they will influence his
thought and work without his being conscious of the fact. In
fact, these bad impressions are always working, and their
resultant must be evil, and that man will be a bad man; he
cannot help it. The sum total of these impressions in him will
create the strong motive power for doing bad actions. He will be
like a machine in the hands of his impressions, and they will
force him to do evil. Similarly, if a man thinks good thoughts
and does good works, the sum total of these impressions will be
good; and they, in a similar manner, will force him to do good
even in spite of himself. When a man has done so much good work
and thought so many good thoughts that there is an irresistible
tendency in him to do good in spite of himself and even if he
wishes to do evil, his mind, as the sum total of his tendencies,
will not allow him to do so; the tendencies will turn him back;
he is completely under the influence of the good tendencies.
When such is the case, a man's good character is said to be
established.
As the tortoise tucks its feet and head inside the shell, and
you may kill it and break it in pieces, and yet it will not come
out, even so the character of that man who has control over his
motives and organs is unchangeably established. He controls his
own inner forces, and nothing can draw them out against his
will. By this continuous reflex of good thoughts, good
impressions moving over the surface of the mind, the tendency
for doing good becomes strong, and as the result we feel able to
control the Indriyas (the sense-organs, the nerve-centres). Thus
alone will character be established, then alone a man gets to
truth. Such a man is safe for ever; he cannot do any evil. You
may place him in any company, there will be no danger for him.
There is a still higher state than having this good tendency,
and that is the desire for liberation. You must remember that
freedom of the soul is the goal of all Yogas, and each one
equally leads to the same result. By work alone men may get to
where Buddha got largely by meditation or Christ by prayer.
Buddha was a working Jnâni, Christ was a Bhakta, but the same
goal was reached by both of them. The difficulty is here.
Liberation means entire freedom - freedom from the bondage of
good, as well as from the bondage of evil. A golden chain is as
much a chain as an iron one. There is a thorn in my finger, and
I use another to take the first one out; and when I have taken
it out, I throw both of them aside; I have no necessity for
keeping the second thorn, because both are thorns after all. So
the bad tendencies are to be counteracted by the good ones, and
the bad impressions on the mind should be removed by the fresh
waves of good ones, until all that is evil almost disappears, or
is subdued and held in control in a corner of the mind; but
after that, the good tendencies have also to be conquered. Thus
the "attached" becomes the "unattached". Work, but let not the
action or the thought produce a deep impression on the mind. Let
the ripples come and go, let huge actions proceed from the
muscles and the brain, but let them not make any deep impression
on the soul.
How can this be done? We see that the impression of any action,
to which we attach ourselves, remains. I may meet hundreds of
persons during the day, and among them meet also one whom I
love; and when I retire at night, I may try to think of all the
faces I saw, but only that face comes before the mind - the face
which I met perhaps only for one minute, and which I loved; all
the others have vanished. My attachment to this particular
person caused a deeper impression on my mind than all the other
faces. Physiologically the impressions have all been the same;
every one of the faces that I saw pictured itself on the retina,
and the brain took the pictures in, and yet there was no
similarity of effect upon the mind. Most of the faces, perhaps,
were entirely new faces, about which I had never thought before,
but that one face of which I got only a glimpse found
associations inside. Perhaps I had pictured him in my mind for
years, knew hundreds of things about him, and this one new
vision of him awakened hundreds of sleeping memories in my mind;
and this one impression having been repeated perhaps a hundred
times more than those of the different faces together, will
produce a great effect on the mind.
Therefore, be "unattached"; let things work; let brain centres
work; work incessantly, but let not a ripple conquer the mind.
Work as if you were a stranger in this land, a sojourner; work
incessantly, but do not bind yourselves; bondage is terrible.
This world is not our habitation, it is only one of the many
stages through which we are passing. Remember that great saying
of the Sânkhya, "The whole of nature is for the soul, not the
soul for nature." The very reason of nature's existence is for
the education of the soul; it has no other meaning; it is there
because the soul must have knowledge, and through knowledge free
itself. If we remember this always, we shall never be attached
to nature; we shall know that nature is a book in which we are
to read, and that when we have gained the required knowledge,
the book is of no more value to us. Instead of that, however, we
are identifying ourselves with nature; we are thinking that the
soul is for nature, that the spirit is for the flesh, and, as
the common saying has it, we think that man "lives to eat" and
not "eats to live". We are continually making this mistake; we
are regarding nature as ourselves and are becoming attached to
it; and as soon as this attachment comes, there is the deep
impression on the soul, which binds us down and makes us work
not from freedom but like slaves.
The whole gist of this teaching is that you should work like a
master and not as a slave; work incessantly, but do not do
slave's work. Do you not see how everybody works? Nobody can be
altogether at rest; ninety-nine per cent of mankind work like
slaves, and the result is misery; it is all selfish work. Work
through freedom! Work through love! The word "love" is very
difficult to understand; love never comes until there is
freedom. There is no true love possible in the slave. If you buy
a slave and tie him down in chains and make him work for you, he
will work like a drudge, but there will be no love in him. So
when we ourselves work for the things of the world as slaves,
there can be no love in us, and our work is not true work. This
is true of work done for relatives and friends, and is true of
work done for our own selves. Selfish work is slave's work; and
here is a test. Every act of love brings happiness; there is no
act of love which does not bring peace and blessedness as its
reaction. Real existence, real knowledge, and real love are
eternally connected with one another, the three in one: where
one of them is, the others also must be; they are the three
aspects of the One without a second - the Existence - Knowledge
- Bliss. When that existence becomes relative, we see it as the
world; that knowledge becomes in its turn modified into the
knowledge of the things of the world; and that bliss forms the
foundation of all true love known to the heart of man. Therefore
true love can never react so as to cause pain either to the
lover or to the beloved. Suppose a man loves a woman; he wishes
to have her all to himself and feels extremely jealous about her
every movement; he wants her to sit near him, to stand near him,
and to eat and move at his bidding. He is a slave to her and
wishes to have her as his slave. That is not love; it is a kind
of morbid affection of the slave, insinuating itself as love. It
cannot be love, because it is painful; if she does not do what
he wants, it brings him pain. With love there is no painful
reaction; love only brings a reaction of bliss; if it does not,
it is not love; it is mistaking something else for love. When
you have succeeded in loving your husband, your wife, your
children, the whole world, the universe, in such a manner that
there is no reaction of pain or jealousy, no selfish feeling,
then you are in a fit state to be unattached.
Krishna says, "Look at Me, Arjuna! If I stop from work for one
moment, the whole universe will die. I have nothing to gain from
work; I am the one Lord, but why do I work? Because I love the
world." God is unattached because He loves; that real love makes
us unattached. Wherever there is attachment, the clinging to the
things of the world, you must know that it is all physical
attraction between sets of particles of matter - something that
attracts two bodies nearer and nearer all the time and, if they
cannot get near enough, produces pain; but where there is real
love, it does not rest on physical attachment at all. Such
lovers may be a thousand miles away from one another, but their
love will be all the same; it does not die, and will never
produce any painful reaction.
To attain this unattachment is almost a life-work, but as soon
as we have reached this point, we have attained the goal of love
and become free; the bondage of nature falls from us, and we see
nature as she is; she forges no more chains for us; we stand
entirely free and take not the results of work into
consideration; who then cares for what the results may be?
Do you ask anything from your children in return for what you
have given them? It is your duty to work for them, and there the
matter ends. In whatever you do for a particular person, a city,
or a state, assume the same attitude towards it as you have
towards your children - expect nothing in return. If you can
invariably take the position of a giver, in which everything
given by you is a free offering to the world, without any
thought of return, then will your work bring you no attachment.
Attachment comes only where we expect a return.
If working like slaves results in selfishness and attachment,
working as master of our own mind gives rise to the bliss of
non-attachment. We often talk of right and justice, but we find
that in the world right and justice are mere baby's talk. There
are two things which guide the conduct of men: might and mercy.
The exercise of might is invariably the exercise of selfishness.
All men and women try to make the most of whatever power or
advantage they have. Mercy is heaven itself; to be good, we have
all to be merciful. Even justice and right should stand on
mercy. All thought of obtaining return for the work we do
hinders our spiritual progress; nay, in the end it brings
misery. There is another way in which this idea of mercy and
selfless charity can be put into practice; that is, by looking
upon work as "worship" in case we believe in a Personal God.
Here we give up all the fruits our work unto the Lord, and
worshipping Him thus, we have no right to expect anything from
man kind for the work we do. The Lord Himself works incessantly
and is ever without attachment. Just as water cannot wet the
lotus leaf, so work cannot bind the unselfish man by giving rise
to attachment to results. The selfless and unattached man may
live in the very heart of a crowded and sinful city; he will not
be touched by sin.
This idea of complete self-sacrifice is illustrated in the
following story: After the battle of Kurukshetra the five
Pândava brothers performed a great sacrifice and made very large
gifts to the poor. All people expressed amazement at the
greatness and richness of the sacrifice, and said that such a
sacrifice the world had never seen before. But, after the
ceremony, there came a little mongoose, half of whose body was
golden, and the other half brown; and he began to roll on the
floor of the sacrificial hall. He said to those around, "You are
all liars; this is no sacrifice." "What!" they exclaimed, "you
say this is no sacrifice; do you not know how money and jewels
were poured out to the poor and every one became rich and happy?
This was the most wonderful sacrifice any man ever performed."
But the mongoose said, "There was once a little village, and in
it there dwelt a poor Brahmin with his wife, his son, and his
son's wife. They were very poor and lived on small gifts made to
them for preaching and teaching. There came in that land a three
years' famine, and the poor Brahmin suffered more than ever. At
last when the family had starved for days, the father brought
home one morning a little barley flour, which he had been
fortunate enough to obtain, and he divided it into four parts,
one for each member of the family. They prepared it for their
meal, and just as they were about to eat, there was a knock at
the door. The father opened it, and there stood a guest. Now in
India a guest is a sacred person; he is as a god for the time
being, and must be treated as such. So the poor Brahmin said,
'Come in, sir; you are welcome,' He set before the guest his own
portion of the food, which the guest quickly ate and said, 'Oh,
sir, you have killed me; I have been starving for ten days, and
this little bit has but increased my hunger.' Then the wife said
to her husband, 'Give him my share,' but the husband said, 'Not
so.' The wife however insisted, saying, 'Here is a poor man, and
it is our duty as householders to see that he is fed, and it is
my duty as a wife to give him my portion, seeing that you have
no more to offer him.' Then she gave her share to the guest,
which he ate, and said he was still burning with hunger. So the
son said, 'Take my portion also; it is the duty of a son to help
his father to fulfil his obligations.' The guest ate that, but
remained still unsatisfied; so the son's wife gave him her
portion also. That was sufficient, and the guest departed,
blessing them. That night those four people died of starvation.
A few granules of that flour had fallen on the floor; and when I
rolled my body on them, half of it became golden, as you see.
Since then I have been travelling all over the world, hoping to
find another sacrifice like that, but nowhere have I found one;
nowhere else has the other half of my body been turned into
gold. That is why I say this is no sacrifice."
This idea of charity is going out of India; great men are
becoming fewer and fewer. When I was first learning English, I
read an English story book in which there was a story about a
dutiful boy who had gone out to work and had given some of his
money to his old mother, and this was praised in three or four
pages. What was that? No Hindu boy can ever understand the moral
of that story. Now I understand it when I hear the Western idea
- every man for himself. And some men take everything for
themselves, and fathers and mothers and wives and children go to
the wall. That should never and nowhere be the ideal of the
householder.
Now you see what Karma-Yoga means; even at the point of death to
help any one, without asking questions. Be cheated millions of
times and never ask a question, and never think of what you are
doing. Never vaunt of your gifts to the poor or expect their
gratitude, but rather be grateful to them for giving you the
occasion of practicing charity to them. Thus it is plain that to
be an ideal householder is a much more difficult task than to be
an ideal Sannyasin; the true life of work is indeed as hard as,
if not harder than, the equally true life of renunciation.
CHAPTER IV
WHAT IS DUTY?
It is necessary in the study of Karma-Yoga to know what duty is.
If I have to do something I must first know that it is my duty,
and then I can do it. The idea of duty again is different in
different nations. The Mohammedan says what is written in his
book, the Koran, is his duty; the Hindu says what is in the
Vedas is his duty; and the Christian says what is in the Bible
is his duty. We find that there are varied ideas of duty,
differing according to different states in life, different
historical periods and different nations. The term "duty", like
every other universal abstract term, is impossible clearly to
define; we can only get an idea of it by knowing its practical
operations and results. When certain things occur before us, we
have all a natural or trained impulse to act in a certain manner
towards them; when this impulse comes, the mind begins to think
about the situation. Sometimes it thinks that it is good to act
in a particular manner under the given conditions; at other
times it thinks that it is wrong to act in the same manner even
in the very same circumstances. The ordinary idea of duty
everywhere is that every good man follows the dictates of his
conscience. But what is it that makes an act a duty? If a
Christian finds a piece of beef before him and does not eat it
to save his own life, or will not give it to save the life of
another man, he is sure to feel that he has not done his duty.
But if a Hindu dares to eat that piece of beef or to give it to
another Hindu, he is equally sure to feel that he too has not
done his duty; the Hindu's training and education make him feel
that way. In the last century there were notorious bands of
robbers in India called thugs; they thought it their duty to
kill any man they could and take away his money; the larger the
number of men they killed, the better they thought they were.
Ordinarily if a man goes out into the street and shoots down
another man, he is apt to feel sorry for it, thinking that he
has done wrong. But if the very same man, as a soldier in his
regiment, kills not one but twenty, he is certain to feel glad
and think that he has done his duty remarkably well. Therefore
we see that it is not the thing done that defines a duty. To
give an objective definition of duty is thus entirely
impossible. Yet there is duty from the subjective side. Any
action that makes us go Godward is a good action, and is our
duty; any action that makes us go downward is evil, and is not
our duty. From the subjective standpoint we may see that certain
acts have a tendency to exalt and ennoble us, while certain
other acts have a tendency to degrade and to brutalise us. But
it is not possible to make out with certainty which acts have
which kind of tendency in relation to all persons, of all sorts
and conditions. There is, however, only one idea of duty which
has been universally accepted by all mankind, of all ages and
sects and countries, and that has been summed up in a Sanskrit
aphorism thus: “Do not injure any being; not injuring any being
is virtue, injuring any being is sin.”
The Bhagavad-Gita frequently alludes to duties dependent upon
birth and position in life. Birth and position in life and in
society largely determine the mental and moral attitude of
individuals towards the various activities of life. It is
therefore our duty to do that work which will exalt and ennoble
us in accordance with the ideals and activities of the society
in which we are born. But it must be particularly remembered
that the same ideals and activities do not prevail in all
societies and countries; our ignorance of this is the main cause
of much of the hatred of one nation towards another. An American
thinks that whatever an American does in accordance with the
custom of his country is the best thing to do, and that whoever
does not follow his custom must be a very wicked man. A Hindu
thinks that his customs are the only right ones and are the best
in the world, and that whosoever does not obey them must be the
most wicked man living. This is quite a natural mistake which
all of us are apt to make. But it is very harmful; it is the
cause of half the uncharitableness found in the world. When I
came to this country and was going through the Chicago Fair, a
man from behind pulled at my turban. I looked back and saw that
he was a very gentlemanly-looking man, neatly dressed. I spoke
to him; and when he found that I knew English, he became very
much abashed. On another occasion in the same Fair another man
gave me a push. When I asked him the reason, he also was ashamed
and stammered out an apology saying, "Why do you dress that
way?" The sympathies of these men were limited within the range
of their own language and their own fashion of dress. Much of
the oppression of powerful nations on weaker ones is caused by
this prejudice. It dries up their fellow feeling for fellow men.
That very man who asked me why I did not dress as he did and
wanted to ill-treat me because of my dress may have been a very
good man, a good father, and a good citizen; but the kindliness
of his nature died out as soon as he saw a man in a different
dress. Strangers are exploited in all countries, because they do
not know how to defend themselves; thus they carry home false
impressions of the peoples they have seen. Sailors, soldiers,
and traders behave in foreign lands in very queer ways, although
they would not dream of doing so in their own country; perhaps
this is why the Chinese call Europeans and Americans "foreign
devils". They could not have done this if they had met the good,
the kindly sides of Western life.
Therefore the one point we ought to remember is that we should
always try to see the duty of others through their own eyes, and
never judge the customs of other peoples by our own standard. I
am not the standard of the universe. I have to accommodate
myself to the world, and not the world to me. So we see that
environments change the nature of our duties, and doing the duty
which is ours at any particular time is the best thing we can do
in this world. Let us do that duty which is ours by birth; and
when we have done that, let us do the duty which is ours by our
position in life and in society. There is, however, one great
danger in human nature, viz that man never examines himself. He
thinks he is quite as fit to be on the throne as the king. Even
if he is, he must first show that he has done the duty of his
own position; and then higher duties will come to him. When we
begin to work earnestly in the world, nature gives us blows
right and left and soon enables us to find out our position. No
man can long occupy satisfactorily a position for which he is
not fit. There is no use in grumbling against nature's
adjustment. He who does the lower work is not therefore a lower
man. No man is to be judged by the mere nature of his duties,
but all should be judged by the manner and the spirit in which
they perform them.
Later on we shall find that even this idea of duty undergoes
change, and that the greatest work is done only when there is no
selfish motive to prompt it. Yet it is work through the sense of
duty that leads us to work without any idea of duty; when work
will become worship - nay, something higher - then will work be
done for its own sake. We shall find that the philosophy of
duty, whether it be in the form of ethics or of love, is the
same as in every other Yoga - the object being the attenuating
of the lower self, so that the real higher Self may shine forth
- the lessening of the frittering away of energies on the lower
plane of existence, so that the soul may manifest itself on the
higher ones. This is accomplished by the continuous denial of
low desires, which duty rigorously requires. The whole
organisation of society has thus been developed, consciously or
unconsciously, in the realms of action and experience, where, by
limiting selfishness, we open the way to an unlimited expansion
of the real nature of man.
Duty is seldom sweet. It is only when love greases its wheels
that it runs smoothly; it is a continuous friction otherwise.
How else could parents do their duties to their children,
husbands to their wives, and vice versa? Do we not meet with
cases of friction every day in our lives? Duty is sweet only
through love, and love shines in freedom alone. Yet is it
freedom to be a slave to the senses, to anger, to jealousies and
a hundred other petty things that must occur every day in human
life? In all these little roughnesses that we meet with in life,
the highest expression of freedom is to forbear. Women, slaves
to their own irritable, jealous tempers, are apt to blame their
husbands, and assert their own "freedom", as they think, not
knowing that thereby they only prove that they are slaves. So it
is with husbands who eternally find fault with their wives.
Chastity is the first virtue in man or woman, and the man who,
however he may have strayed away, cannot be brought to the right
path by a gentle and loving and chaste wife is indeed very rare.
The world is not yet as bad as that. We hear much about brutal
husbands all over the world and about the impurity of men, but
is it not true that there are quite as many brutal and impure
women as men? If all women were as good and pure as their own
constant assertions would lead one to believe, I am perfectly
satisfied that there would not be one impure man in the world.
What brutality is there which purity and chastity cannot
conquer? A good, chaste wife, who thinks of every other man
except her own husband as her child and has the attitude of a
mother towards all men, will grow so great in the power of her
purity that there cannot be a single man, however brutal, who
will not breathe an atmosphere of holiness in her presence.
Similarly, every husband must look upon all women, except his
own wife, in the light of his own mother or daughter or sister.
That man, again, who wants to be a teacher of religion must look
upon every woman as his mother, and always behave towards her as
such.
The position of the mother is the highest in the world, as it is
the one place in which to learn and exercise the greatest
unselfishness. The love of God is the only love that is higher
than a mother's love; all others are lower. It is the duty of
the mother to think of her children first and then of herself.
But, instead of that, if the parents are always thinking of
themselves first, the result is that the relation between
parents and children becomes the same as that between birds and
their offspring which, as soon as they are fledged, do not
recognise any parents. Blessed, indeed, is the man who is able
to look upon woman as the representative of the motherhood of
God. Blessed, indeed, is the woman to whom man represents the
fatherhood of God. Blessed are the children who look upon their
parents as Divinity manifested on earth.
The only way to rise is by doing the duty next to us, and thus
gathering strength go on until we reach the highest state. A
young Sannyâsin went to a forest; there he meditated,
worshipped, and practiced Yoga for a long time. After years of
hard work and practice, he was one day sitting under a tree,
when some dry leaves fell upon his head. He looked up and saw a
crow and a crane fighting on the top of the tree, which made him
very angry. He said, "What! Dare you throw these dry leaves upon
my head!" As with these words he angrily glanced at them, a
flash of fire went out of his head - such was the Yogi's power -
and burnt the birds to ashes. He was very glad, almost overjoyed
at this development of power - he could burn the crow and the
crane by a look. After a time he had to go to the town to beg
his bread. He went, stood at a door, and said, "Mother, give me
food." A voice came from inside the house, "Wait a little, my
son." The young man thought, "You wretched woman, how dare you
make me wait! You do not know my power yet." While he was
thinking thus the voice came again: "Boy, don't be thinking too
much of yourself. Here is neither crow nor crane." He was
astonished; still he had to wait. At last the woman came, and he
fell at her feet and said, "Mother, how did you know that?" She
said, "My boy, I do not know your Yoga or your practices. I am a
common everyday woman. I made you wait because my husband is
ill, and I was nursing him. All my life I have struggled to do
my duty. When I was unmarried, I did my duty to my parents; now
that I am married, I do my duty to my husband; that is all the
Yoga I practice. But by doing my duty I have become illumined;
thus I could read your thoughts and know what you had done in
the forest. If you want to know something higher than this, go
to the market of such and such a town where you will find a
Vyâdha (The lowest class of people in India who used to live as
hunters and butchers.) who will tell you something that you will
be very glad to learn." The Sannyasin thought, "Why should I go
to that town and to a Vyadha?" But after what he had seen, his
mind opened a little, so he went. When he came near the town, he
found the market and there saw, at a distance, a big fat Vyadha
cutting meat with big knives, talking and bargaining with
different people. The young man said, "Lord help me! Is this the
man from whom I am going to learn? He is the incarnation of a
demon, if he is anything." In the meantime this man looked up
and said, "O Swami, did that lady send you here? Take a seat
until I have done my business." The Sannyasin thought, "What
comes to me here?" He took his seat; the man went on with his
work, and after he had finished he took his money and said to
the Sannyasin, "Come sir, come to my home." On reaching home the
Vyadha gave him a seat, saying, "Wait here," and went into the
house. He then washed his old father and mother, fed them, and
did all he could to please them, after which he came to the
Sannyasin and said, "Now, sir, you have come here to see me;
what can I do for you?" The Sannyasin asked him a few questions
about soul and about God, and the Vyadha gave him a lecture
which forms a part of the Mahâbhârata, called the Vyâdha-Gitâ.
It contains one of the highest flights of the Vedanta. When the
Vyadha finished his teaching, the Sannyasin felt astonished. He
said, "Why are you in that body? With such knowledge as yours
why are you in a Vyadha's body, and doing such filthy, ugly
work?" "My son," replied the Vyadha, "no duty is ugly, no duty
is impure. My birth placed me in these circumstances and
environments. In my boyhood I learnt the trade; I am unattached,
and I try to do my duty well. I try to do my duty as a
householder, and I try to do all I can to make my father and
mother happy. I neither know your Yoga, nor have I become a
Sannyasin, nor did I go out of the world into a forest;
nevertheless, all that you have heard and seen has come to me
through the unattached doing of the duty which belongs to my
position."
There is a sage in India, a great Yogi, one of the most
wonderful men I have ever seen in my life. He is a peculiar man,
he will not teach any one; if you ask him a question he will not
answer. It is too much for him to take up the position of a
teacher, he will not do it. If you ask a question, and wait for
some days, in the course of conversation he will bring up the
subject, and wonderful light will he throw on it. He told me
once the secret of work, "Let the end and the means be joined
into one." When you are doing any work, do not think of anything
beyond. Do it as worship, as the highest worship, and devote
your whole life to it for the time being. Thus, in the story,
the Vyadha and the woman did their duty with cheerfulness and
whole-heartedness; and the result was that they became
illuminated, clearly showing that the right performance of the
duties of any station in life, without attachment to results,
leads us to the highest realisation of the perfection of the
soul.
It is the worker who is attached to results that grumbles about
the nature of the duty which has fallen to his lot; to the
unattached worker all duties are equally good, and form
efficient instruments with which selfishness and sensuality may
be killed, and the freedom of the soul secured. We are all apt
to think too highly of ourselves. Our duties are determined by
our deserts to a much larger extent than we are willing to
grant. Competition rouses envy, and it kills the kindliness of
the heart. To the grumbler all duties are distasteful; nothing
will ever satisfy him, and his whole life is doomed to prove a
failure. Let us work on, doing as we go whatever happens to be
our duty, and being ever ready to put our shoulders to the
wheel. Then surely shall we see the Light!
CHAPTER V
WE HELP OURSELVES, NOT THE WORLD
Before considering further how devotion to duty helps us in our
spiritual progress, let me place before you in a brief compass
another aspect of what we in India mean by Karma. In every
religion there are three parts: philosophy, mythology, and
ritual. Philosophy of course is the essence of every religion;
mythology explains and illustrates it by means of the more or
less legendary lives of great men, stories and fables of
wonderful things, and so on; ritual gives to that philosophy a
still more concrete form, so that every one may grasp it -
ritual is in fact concretised philosophy. This ritual is Karma;
it is necessary in every religion, because most of us cannot
understand abstract spiritual things until we grow much
spiritually. It is easy for men to think that they can
understand anything; but when it comes to practical experience,
they find that abstract ideas are often very hard to comprehend.
Therefore symbols are of great help, and we cannot dispense with
the symbolical method of putting things before us. From time
immemorial symbols have been used by all kinds of religions. In
one sense we cannot think but in symbols; words themselves are
symbols of thought. In another sense everything in the universe
may be looked upon as a symbol. The whole universe is a symbol,
and God is the essence behind. This kind of symbology is not
simply the creation of man; it is not that certain people
belonging to a religion sit down together and think out certain
symbols, and bring them into existence out of their own minds.
The symbols of religion have a natural growth. Otherwise, why is
it that certain symbols are associated with certain ideas in the
mind of almost every one? Certain symbols are universally
prevalent. Many of you may think that the cross first came into
existence as a symbol in connection with the Christian religion,
but as a matter of fact it existed before Christianity was,
before Moses was born, before the Vedas were given out, before
there was any human record of human things. The cross may be
found to have been in existence among the Aztecs and the
Phoenicians; every race seems to have had the cross. Again, the
symbol of the crucified Saviour, of a man crucified upon a
cross, appears to have been known to almost every nation. The
circle has been a great symbol throughout the world. Then there
is the most universal of all symbols, the Swastika. At one time
it was thought that the Buddhists carried it all over the world
with them, but it has been found out that ages before Buddhism
it was used among nations. In Old Babylon and in Egypt it was to
be found. What does this show? All these symbols could not have
been purely conventional. There must be some reason for them;
some natural association between them and the human mind.
Language is not the result of convention; it is not that people
ever agreed to represent certain ideas by certain words; there
never was an idea without a corresponding word or a word without
a corresponding idea; ideas and words are in their nature
inseparable. The symbols to represent ideas may be sound symbols
or colour symbols. Deaf and dumb people have to think with other
than sound symbols. Every thought in the mind has a form as its
counterpart. This is called in Sanskrit philosophy Nâma-Rupa -
name and form. It is as impossible to create by convention a
system of symbols as it is to create a language. In the world's
ritualistic symbols we have an expression of the religious
thought of humanity. It is easy to say that there is no use of
rituals and temples and all such paraphernalia; every baby says
that in modern times. But it must be easy for all to see that
those who worship inside a temple are in many respects different
from those who will not worship there. Therefore the association
of particular temples, rituals, and other concrete forms with
particular religions has a tendency to bring into the minds of
the followers of those religions the thoughts for which those
concrete things stand as symbols; and it is not wise to ignore
rituals and symbology altogether. The study and practice of
these things form naturally a part of Karma-Yoga.
There are many other aspects of this science of work. One among
them is to know the relation between thought and word and what
can be achieved by the power of the word. In every religion the
power of the word is recognised, so much so that in some of them
creation itself is said to have come out of the word. The
external aspect of the thought of God is the Word, and as God
thought and willed before He created, creation came out of the
Word. In this stress and hurry of our materialistic life, our
nerves lose sensibility and become hardened. The older we grow,
the longer we are knocked about in the world, the more callous
we become; and we are apt to neglect things that even happen
persistently and prominently around us. Human nature, however,
asserts itself sometimes, and we are led to inquire into and
wonder at some of these common occurrences; wondering thus is
the first step in the acquisition of light. Apart from the
higher philosophic and religious value of the Word, we may see
that sound symbols play a prominent part in the drama of human
life. I am talking to you. I am not touching you; the pulsations
of the air caused by my speaking go into your ear, they touch
your nerves and produce effects in your minds. You cannot resist
this. What can be more wonderful than this? One man calls
another a fool, and at this the other stands up and clenches his
fist and lands a blow on his nose. Look at the power of the
word! There is a woman weeping and miserable; another woman
comes along and speaks to her a few gentle words, the doubled up
frame of the weeping woman becomes straightened at once, her
sorrow is gone and she already begins to smile. Think of the
power of words! They are a great force in higher philosophy as
well as in common life. Day and night we manipulate this force
without thought and without inquiry. To know the nature of this
force and to use it well is also a part of Karma-Yoga.
Our duty to others means helping others; doing good to the
world. Why should we do good to the world? Apparently to help
the world, but really to help ourselves. We should always try to
help the world, that should be the highest motive in us; but if
we consider well, we find that the world does not require our
help at all. This world was not made that you or I should come
and help it. I once read a sermon in which it was said, "All
this beautiful world is very good, because it gives us time and
opportunity to help others." Apparently, this is a very
beautiful sentiment, but is it not a blasphemy to say that the
world needs our help? We cannot deny that there is much misery
in it; to go out and help others is, therefore, the best thing
we can do, although in the long run, we shall find that helping
others is only helping ourselves. As a boy I had some white
mice. They were kept in a little box in which there were little
wheels, and when the mice tried to cross the wheels, the wheels
turned and turned, and the mice never got anywhere. So it is
with the world and our helping it. The only help is that we get
moral exercise. This world is neither good nor evil; each man
manufactures a world for himself. If a blind man begins to think
of the world, it is either as soft or hard, or as cold or hot.
We are a mass of happiness or misery; we have seen that hundreds
of times in our lives. As a rule, the young are optimistic and
the old pessimistic. The young have life before them; the old
complain their day is gone; hundreds of desires, which they
cannot fulfil struggle in their hearts. Both are foolish
nevertheless. Life is good or evil according to the state of
mind in which we look at it, it is neither by itself. Fire, by
itself, is neither good nor evil. When it keeps us warm we say,
"How beautiful is fire!" When it burns our fingers, we blame it.
Still, in itself it is neither good nor bad. According as we use
it, it produces in us the feeling of good or bad; so also is
this world. It is perfect. By perfection is meant that it is
perfectly fitted to meet its ends. We may all be perfectly sure
that it will go on beautifully well without us, and we need not
bother our heads wishing to help it.
Yet we must do good; the desire to do good is the highest motive
power we have, if we know all the time that it is a privilege to
help others. Do not stand on a high pedestal and take five cents
in your hand and say, "Here, my poor man," but be grateful that
the poor man is there, so that by making a gift to him you are
able to help yourself. It is not the receiver that is blessed,
but it is the giver. Be thankful that you are allowed to
exercise your power of benevolence and mercy in the world, and
thus become pure and perfect. All good acts tend to make us pure
and perfect. What can we do at best? Build a hospital, make
roads, or erect charity asylums. We may organise a charity and
collect two or three millions of dollars, build a hospital with
one million, with the second give balls and drink champagne, and
of the third let the officers steal half, and leave the rest
finally to reach the poor; but what are all these? One mighty
wind in five minutes can break all your buildings up. What shall
we do then? One volcanic eruption may sweep away all our roads
and hospitals and cities and buildings. Let us give up all this
foolish talk of doing good to the world. It is not waiting for
your or my help; yet we must work and constantly do good,
because it is a blessing to ourselves. That is the only way we
can become perfect. No beggar whom we have helped has ever owed
a single cent to us; we owe everything to him, because he has
allowed us to exercise our charity on him. It is entirely wrong
to think that we have done, or can do, good to the world, or to
think that we have helped such and such people. It is a foolish
thought, and all foolish thoughts bring misery. We think that we
have helped some man and expect him to thank us, and because he
does not, unhappiness comes to us. Why should we expect anything
in return for what we do? Be grateful to the man you help, think
of him as God. Is it not a great privilege to be allowed to
worship God by helping our fellow men? If we were really
unattached, we should escape all this pain of vain expectation,
and could cheerfully do good work in the world. Never will
unhappiness or misery come through work done without attachment.
The world will go on with its happiness and misery through
eternity.
There was a poor man who wanted some money; and somehow he had
heard that if he could get hold of a ghost, he might command him
to bring money or anything else he liked; so he was very anxious
to get hold of a ghost. He went about searching for a man who
would give him a ghost, and at last he found a sage with great
powers, and besought his help. The sage asked him what he would
do with a ghost. I want a ghost to work for me; teach me how to
get hold of one, sir; I desire it very much," replied the man.
But the sage said, "Don't disturb yourself, go home." The next
day the man went again to the sage and began to weep and pray,
"Give me a ghost; I must have a ghost, sir, to help me." At last
the sage was disgusted, and said, "Take this charm, repeat this
magic word, and a ghost will come, and whatever you say to him
he will do. But beware; they are terrible beings, and must be
kept continually busy. If you fail to give him work, he will
take your life." The man replied, "That is easy; I can give him
work for all his life." Then he went to a forest, and after long
repetition of the magic word, a huge ghost appeared before him,
and said, "I am a ghost. I have been conquered by your magic;
but you must keep me constantly employed. The moment you fail to
give me work I will kill you." The man said, "Build me a
palace," and the ghost said, "It is done; the palace is built."
"Bring me money," said the man. "Here is your money," said the
ghost. "Cut this forest down, and build a city in its place."
"That is done," said the ghost, "anything more?" Now the man
began to be frightened and thought he could give him nothing
more to do; he did everything in a trice. The ghost said, "Give
me something to do or I will eat you up." The poor man could
find no further occupation for him, and was frightened. So he
ran and ran and at last reached the sage, and said, "Oh, sir,
protect my life!" The sage asked him what the matter was, and
the man replied, "I have nothing to give the ghost to do.
Everything I tell him to do he does in a moment, and he
threatens to eat me up if I do not give him work." Just then the
ghost arrived, saying, "I'll eat you up," and he would have
swallowed the man. The man began to shake, and begged the sage
to save his life. The sage said, "I will find you a way out.
Look at that dog with a curly tail. Draw your sword quickly and
cut the tail off and give it to the ghost to straighten out."
The man cut off the dog's tail and gave it to the ghost, saying,
"Straighten that out for me." The ghost took it and slowly and
carefully straightened it out, but as soon as he let it go, it
instantly curled up again. Once more he laboriously straightened
it out, only to find it again curled up as soon as he attempted
to let go of it. Again he patiently straightened it out, but as
soon as he let it go, it curled up again. So he went on for days
and days, until he was exhausted and said, "I was never in such
trouble before in my life. I am an old veteran ghost, but never
before was I in such trouble." "I will make a compromise with
you ;" he said to the man, "you let me off and I will let you
keep all I have given you and will promise not to harm you." The
man was much pleased, and accepted the offer gladly.
This world is like a dog's curly tail, and people have been
striving to straighten it out for hundreds of years; but when
they let it go, it has curled up again. How could it be
otherwise? One must first know how to work without attachment,
then one will not be a fanatic. When we know that this world is
like a dog's curly tail and will never get straightened, we
shall not become fanatics. If there were no fanaticism in the
world, it would make much more progress than it does now. It is
a mistake to think that fanaticism can make for the progress of
mankind. On the contrary, it is a retarding element creating
hatred and anger, and causing people to fight each other, and
making them unsympathetic. We think that whatever we do or
possess is the best in the world, and what we do not do or
possess is of no value. So, always remember the instance of the
curly tail of the dog whenever you have a tendency to become a
fanatic. You need not worry or make yourself sleepless about the
world; it will go on without you. When you have avoided
fanaticism, then alone will you work well. It is the
level-headed man, the calm man, of good judgment and cool
nerves, of great sympathy and love, who does good work and so
does good to himself. The fanatic is foolish and has no
sympathy; he can never straighten the world, nor himself become
pure and perfect.
To recapitulate the chief points in today's lecture: First, we
have to bear in mind that we are all debtors to the world and
the world does not owe us anything. It is a great privilege for
all of us to be allowed to do anything for the world. In helping
the world we really help ourselves. The second point is that
there is a God in this universe. It is not true that this
universe is drifting and stands in need of help from you and me.
God is ever present therein, He is undying and eternally active
and infinitely watchful. When the whole universe sleeps, He
sleeps not; He is working incessantly; all the changes and
manifestations of the world are His. Thirdly, we ought not to
hate anyone. This world will always continue to be a mixture of
good and evil. Our duty is to sympathise with the weak and to
love even the wrongdoer. The world is a grand moral gymnasium
wherein we have all to take exercise so as to become stronger
and stronger spiritually. Fourthly, we ought not to be fanatics
of any kind, because fanaticism is opposed to love. You hear
fanatics glibly saying, "I do not hate the sinner. I hate the
sin," but I am prepared to go any distance to see the face of
that man who can really make a distinction between the sin and
the sinner. It is easy to say so. If we can distinguish well
between quality and substance, we may become perfect men. It is
not easy to do this. And further, the calmer we are and the less
disturbed our nerves, the more shall we love and the better will
our work be.