FROM THE CAVES AND JUNGLES OF HINDOSTAN
By Helena Petrovna
Blavatsky
Translator's Preface
"You must remember,"
said Mme. Blavatsky, "that I never meant this for a scientific work. My
letters to the Russian Messenger, under the general title: 'From the Caves
and Jungles of Hindostan,' were written in leisure moments, more for
amusement than with any serious design.
"Broadly speaking, the facts and
incidents are true; but I have freely availed myself of an author's privilege
to group, colour, and dramatize them, whenever this seemed necessary to the
full artistic effect; though, as I say, much of the book is exactly true, l
would rather claim kindly judgment for it, as a romance of travel, than incur
the critical risks that haunt an avowedly serious work."
To this
caution of the author's, the translator must add another; these letters, as
Mme Blavatsky says, were written in leisure moments, during 1879 and 1880,
for the pages of the Russki Vyestnik, then edited by M. Katkoff. Mme.
Blavatsky's manuscript was often incorrect; often obscure. The Russian
compositors, though they did their best to render faithfully the Indian names
and places, often produced, through their ignorance of Oriental tongues,
forms which are strange, and sometimes unrecognizable. The proof-sheets were
never corrected by the author, who was then in India; and, in consequence, it
has been impossible to restore all the local and personal names to their
proper form.
A similar difficulty has arisen with reference to quotations
and cited authorities, all of which have gone through a double process
of refraction: first into Russian, then into English. The translator,
also a Russian, and far from perfectly acquainted with English,
cannot claim to possess the erudition necessary to verify and restore the
many quotations to verbal accuracy; all that is hoped is that, by a
careful rendering, the correct sense has been preserved.
The
translator begs the indulgence of English readers for all imperfections of
style and language; in the words of the Sanskrit proverb: "Who is to be
blamed, if success be not reached after due effort?"
The translator's
best thanks are due to Mr. John C. Staples, for valuable help in the early
chapters.--London, July, 1892
Contents
In
Bombay On the Way to Karli In the Karli Caves Vanished
Glories A City of the Dead Brahmanic Hospitalities A
Witch's Den God's Warrior The Banns of Marriage The
Caves of Bagh An Isle of Mystery
Jubblepore
FROM THE CAVES AND JUNGLES OF
HINDOSTAN
In Bombay
Late in the evening of the
sixteenth of February, 1879, after a rough voyage which lasted thirty-two
days, joyful exclamations were heard everywhere on deck. "Have you seen the
lighthouse?" "There it is at last, the Bombay lighthouse."
Cards,
books, music, everything was forgotten. Everyone rushed on deck. The moon had
not risen as yet, and, in spite of the starry tropical sky, it was quite
dark. The stars were so bright that, at first, it seemed hardly possible to
distinguish, far away amongst them, a small fiery point lit by earthly hands.
The stars winked at us like so many huge eyes in the black sky, on one side
of which shone the Southern Cross. At last we distinguished the lighthouse on
the distant horizon. It was nothing but a tiny fiery point diving in the
phosphorescent waves. The tired travellers greeted it warmly. The rejoicing
was general.
What a glorious daybreak followed this dark night! The sea
no longer tossed our ship. Under the skilled guidance of the pilot, who had
just arrived, and whose bronze form was so sharply defined against the
pale sky, our steamer, breathing heavily with its broken machinery,
slipped over the quiet, transparent waters of the Indian Ocean straight
to the harbour. We were only four miles from Bombay, and, to us, who
had trembled with cold only a few weeks ago in the Bay of Biscay, which
has been so glorified by many poets and so heartily cursed by all
sailors, our surroundings simply seemed a magical dream.
After the
tropical nights of the Red Sea and the scorching hot days that had tortured
us since Aden, we, people of the distant North, now experienced something
strange and unwonted, as if the very fresh soft air had cast its spell over
us. There was not a cloud in the sky, thickly strewn with dying stars. Even
the moonlight, which till then had covered the sky with its silvery garb, was
gradually vanishing; and the brighter grew the rosiness of dawn over the
small island that lay before us in the East, the paler in the West grew the
scattered rays of the moon that sprinkled with bright flakes of light the
dark wake our ship left behind her, as if the glory of the West was bidding
good-bye to us, while the light of the East welcomed the newcomers from
far-off lands. Brighter and bluer grew the sky, swiftly absorbing the
remaining pale stars one after the other, and we felt something touching in
the sweet dignity with which the Queen of Night resigned her rights to
the powerful usurper. At last, descending lower and lower, she
disappeared completely.
And suddenly, almost without interval between
darkness and light, the red-hot globe, emerging on the opposite side from
under the cape, leant his golden chin on the lower rocks of the island and
seemed to stop for a while, as if examining us. Then, with one powerful
effort, the torch of day rose high over the sea and gloriously proceeded on
its path, including in one mighty fiery embrace the blue waters of the bay,
the shore and the islands with their rocks and cocoanut forests. His
golden rays fell upon a crowd of Parsees, his rightful worshippers, who
stood on shore raising their arms towards the mighty "Eye of Ormuzd."
The sight was so impressive that everyone on deck became silent for
a moment, even a red-nosed old sailor, who was busy quite close to us
over the cable, stopped working, and, clearing his throat, nodded at the
sun.
Moving slowly and cautiously along the charming but treacherous bay,
we had plenty of time to admire the picture around us. On the right was
a group of islands with Gharipuri or Elephanta, with its ancient
temple, at their head. Gharipuri translated means "the town of caves"
according to the Orientalists, and "the town of purification" according to
the native Sanskrit scholars. This temple, cut out by an unknown hand
in the very heart of a rock resembling porphyry, is a true apple
of discord amongst the archaeologists, of whom none can as yet fix,
even approximately, its antiquity. Elephanta raises high its rocky brow,
all overgrown with secular cactus, and right under it, at the foot of
the rock, are hollowed out the chief temple and the two lateral ones.
Like the serpent of our Russian fairy tales, it seems to be opening
its fierce black mouth to swallow the daring mortal who comes to
take possession of the secret mystery of Titan. Its two remaining teeth,
dark with time, are formed by two huge pillars t the entrance, sustaining
the palate of the monster.
How many generations of Hindus, how many
races, have knelt in the dust before the Trimurti, your threefold deity, O
Elephanta? How many centuries were spent by weak man in digging out in your
stone bosom this town of temples and carving your gigantic idols? Who can
say? Many years have elapsed since I saw you last, ancient, mysterious
temple, and still the same restless thoughts, the same recurrent questions
vex me snow as they did then, and still remain unanswered. In a few days we
shall see each other again. Once more I shall gaze upon your stern image,
upon your three huge granite faces, and shall feel as hopeless as ever
of piercing the mystery of your being. This secret fell into safe
hands three centuries before ours. It is not in vain that the old
Portuguese historian Don Diego de Cuta boasts that "the big square stone
fastened over the arch of the pagoda with a distinct inscription, having
been torn out and sent as a present to the King Dom Juan III,
disappeared mysteriously in the course of time....," and adds, further,
"Close to this big pagoda there stood another, and farther on even a third
one, the most wonderful of all in beauty, incredible size, and richness
of material. All those pagodas and caves have been built by the Kings
of Kanada, (?) the most important of whom was Bonazur, and these
buildings of Satan our (Portuguese) soldiers attacked with such vehemence
that in a few years one stone was not left upon another...." And, worst
of all, they left no inscriptions that might have given a clue to so
much. Thanks to the fanaticism of Portuguese soldiers, the chronology of
the Indian cave temples must remain for ever an enigma to the
archaeological world, beginning with the Brah-mans, who say Elephanta is
374,000 years old, and ending with Fergusson, who tries to prove that it was
carved only in the twelfth century of our era. Whenever one turns one's eyes
to history, there is nothing to be found but hypotheses and darkness.
And yet Gharipuri is mentioned in the epic Mahabharata, which was
written, according to Colebrooke and Wilson, a good while before the reign
of Cyrus. In another ancient legend it is said that the temple of
Trimurti was built on Elephanta by the sons of Pandu, who took part in the
war between the dynasties of the Sun and the Moon, and, belonging to
the latter, were expelled at the end of the war. The Rajputs, who are
the descendants of the first, still sing of this victory; but even in
their popular songs there is nothing positive. Centuries have passed and
will pass, and the ancient secret will die in the rocky bosom of the
cave still unrecorded.
On the left side of the bay, exactly opposite
Elephanta, and as if in contrast with all its antiquity and greatness,
spreads the Malabar Hill, the residence of the modern Europeans and rich
natives. Their brightly painted bungalows are bathed in the greenery of
banyan, Indian fig, and various other trees, and the tall and straight trunks
of cocoanut palms cover with the fringe of their leaves the whole ridge of
the hilly headland. There, on the south-western end of the rock, you see
the almost transparent, lace-like Government House surrounded on
three sides by the ocean. This is the coolest and the most comfortable part
of Bombay, fanned by three different sea breezes.
The island of
Bombay, designated by the natives "Mambai," received its name from the
goddess Mamba, in Mahrati Mahima, or Amba, Mama, and Amma, according to the
dialect, a word meaning, literally, the Great Mother. Hardly one hundred
years ago, on the site of the modern esplanade, there stood a temple
consecrated to Mamba-Devi. With great difficulty and expense they carried it
nearer to the shore, close to the fort, and erected it in front of Baleshwara
the "Lord of the Innocent"--one of the names of the god Shiva. Bombay is part
of a considerable group of islands, the most remarkable of which are
Salsetta, joined to Bombay by a mole, Elephanta, so named by the Portuguese
because of a huge rock cut in the shape of an elephant thirty-five feet long,
and Trombay, whose lovely rock rises nine hundred feet above the surface of
the sea. Bombay looks, on the maps, like an enormous crayfish, and is at the
head of the rest of the islands. Spreading far out into the sea its two
claws, Bombay island stands like a sleepless guardian watching over his
younger brothers. Between it and the Continent there is a narrow arm of a
river, which gets gradually broader and then again narrower, deeply
indenting the sides of both shores, and so forming a haven that has no equal
in the world. It was not without reason that the Portuguese, expelled
in the course of time by the English, used to call it "Buona
Bahia."
In a fit of tourist exaltation some travellers have compared it
to the Bay of Naples; but, as a matter of fact, the one is as much like
the other as a lazzaroni is like a Kuli. The whole resemblance between
the former consists in the fact that there is water in both. In Bombay,
as well as in its harbour, everything is original and does not in the
least remind one of Southern Europe. Look at those coasting vessels and
native boats; both are built in the likeness of the sea bird "sat," a
kind of kingfisher. When in motion these boats are the personi-fication
of grace, with their long prows and rounded poops. They look as if
they were gliding backwards, and one might mistake for wings the
strangely shaped, long lateen sails, their narrow angles fastened upwards to
a yard. Filling these two wings with the wind, and careening, so as
almost to touch the surface of the water, these boats will fly along
with astonishing swiftness. Unlike our European boats, they do not cut
the waves, but glide over them like a sea-gull.
The surroundings of
the bay transported us to some fairy land of the Arabian Nights. The ridge of
the Western Ghats, cut through here and there by some separate hills almost
as high as themselves, stretched all along the Eastern shore. From the base
to their fantastic, rocky tops, they are all overgrown with impenetrable
forests and jungles inhabited by wild animals. Every rock has been enriched
by the popular imagination with an independent legend. All over the slope of
the mountain are scattered the pagodas, mosques, and temples of numberless
sects. Here and there the hot rays of the sun strike upon an old fortress,
once dreadful and inaccessible, now half ruined and covered with
prickly cactus. At every step some memorial of sanctity. Here a deep
vihara, a cave cell of a Buddhist bhikshu saint, there a rock protected by
the symbol of Shiva, further on a Jaina temple, or a holy tank, all
covered with sedge and filled with water, once blessed by a Brahman and able
to purify every sin, all indispensable attribute of all pagodas. All
the surroundings are covered with symbols of gods and goddesses. Each of
the three hundred and thirty millions of deities of the Hindu Pantheon
has its representative in something consecrated to it, a stone, a flower,
a tree, or a bird. On the West side of the Malabar Hill peeps through
the trees Valakeshvara, the temple of the "Lord of Sand." A long stream
of Hindus moves towards this celebrated temple; men and women, shining
with rings on their fingers and toes, with bracelets from their wrists
up to their elbows, clad in bright turbans and snow white muslins,
with foreheads freshly painted with red, yellow, and white, holy
sectarian signs.
The legend says that Rama spent here a night on his
way from Ayodhya (Oudh) to Lanka (Ceylon) to fetch his wife Sita who had been
stolen by the wicked King Ravana. Rama's brother Lakshman, whose duty it
was to send him daily a new lingam from Benares, was late in doing so
one evening. Losing patience, Rama erected for himself a lingam of
sand. When, at last, the symbol arrived from Benares, it was put in a
temple, and the lingam erected by Rama was left on the shore. There it
stayed during long centuries, but, at the arrival of the Portuguese, the
"Lord of Sand" felt so disgusted with the feringhi (foreigners) that he
jumped into the sea never to return. A little farther on there is a
charming tank, called Vanattirtha, or the "point of the arrow." Here Rama,
the much worshipped hero of the Hindus, felt thirsty and, not finding
any water, shot an arrow and immediately there was created a pond.
Its crystal waters were surrounded by a high wall, steps were built
leading down to it, and a circle of white marble dwellings was filled with
dwija (twice born) Brahmans.
India is the land of legends and of
mysterious nooks and corners. There is not a ruin, not a monument, not a
thicket, that has no story attached to it. Yet, however they may be entangled
in the cobweb of popular imagination, which becomes thicker with every
generation, it is difficult to point out a single one that is not founded on
fact. With patience and, still more, with the help of the learned Brahmans
you can always get at the truth, when once you have secured their trust
and friendship.
The same road leads to the temple of the Parsee
fire-worshippers. At its altar burns an unquenchable fire, which daily
consumes hundredweights of sandal wood and aromatic herbs. Lit three hundred
years ago, the sacred fire has never been extinguished, notwithstanding many
disorders, sectarian discords, and even wars. The Parsees are very proud of
this temple of Zaratushta, as they call Zoroaster. Compared with it
the Hindu pagodas look like brightly painted Easter eggs. Generally they
are consecrated to Hanuman, the monkey-god and the faithful ally of Rama,
or to the elephant headed Ganesha, the god of the occult wisdom, or to
one of the Devis. You meet with these temples in every street. Before
each there is a row of pipals (Ficus religiosa) centuries old, which
no temple can dispense with, because these trees are the abode of
the elementals and the sinful souls.
All this is entangled, mixed, and
scattered, appearing to one's eyes like a picture in a dream. Thirty
centuries have left their traces here. The innate laziness and the strong
conservative tendencies of the Hindus, even before the European invasion,
preserved all kinds of monuments from the ruinous vengeance of the fanatics,
whether those memorials were Buddhist, or belonged to some other unpopular
sect. The Hindus are not naturally given to senseless vandalism, and
a phrenologist would vainly look for a bump of destructiveness on
their skulls. If you meet with antiquities that, having been spared by
time, are, nowadays, either destroyed or disfigured, it is not they who
are to blame, but either Mussulmans, or the Portuguese under the guidance
of the Jesuits.
At last we were anchored and, in a moment, were
besieged, ourselves as well as our luggage, by numbers of naked skeleton-like
Hindus, Parsees, Moguls, and various other tribes. All this crowd emerged, as
if from the bottom of the sea, and began to shout, to chatter, and to yell,
as only the tribes of Asia can. To get rid of this Babel confusion of tongues
as soon as possible, we took refuge in the first bunder boat and made
for the shore.
Once settled in the bungalow awaiting us, the first
thing we were struck with in Bombay was the millions of crows and vultures.
The first are, so to speak, the County Council of the town, whose duty it is
to clean the streets, and to kill one of them is not only forbidden by the
police, but would be very dangerous. By killing one you would rouse
the vengeance of every Hindu, who is always ready to offer his own life
in exchange for a crow's. The souls of the sinful forefathers
transmigrate into crows and to kill one is to interfere with the law of Karma
and to expose the poor ancestor to something still worse. Such is the
firm belief, not only of Hindus, but of Parsees, even the most
enlightened amongst them. The strange behaviour of the Indian crows explains,
to a certain extent, this superstition. The vultures are, in a way,
the grave-diggers of the Parsees and are under the personal protection of
the Farvardania, the angel of death, who soars over the Tower of Silence,
watching the occupations of the feathered workmen.
The deafening caw of
the crows strikes every new comer as uncanny, but, after a while, is
explained very simply. Every tree of the numerous cocoa-nut forests round
Bombay is provided with a hollow pumpkin. The sap of the tree drops into it
and, after fermenting, becomes a most intoxicating beverage, known in Bombay
under the name of toddy. The naked toddy wallahs, generally half-caste
Portuguese, modestly adorned with a single coral necklace, fetch this
beverage twice a day, climbing the hundred and fifty feet high trunks like
squirrels. The crows mostly build their nests on the tops of the cocoa-nut
palms and drink incessantly out of the open pumpkins. The result of this is
the chronic intoxication of the birds. As soon as we went out in the garden
of our new habitation, flocks of crows came down heavily from every tree.
The noise they make whilst jumping about everywhere is indescribable.
There seemed to be something positively human in the positions of the
slyly bent heads of the drunken birds, and a fiendish light shone in
their eyes while they were examining us from foot to head.
We
occupied three small bungalows, lost, like nests, in the garden, their roofs
literally smothered in roses blossoming on bushes twenty feet high, and their
windows covered only with muslin, instead of the usual panes of glass. The
bungalows were situated in the native part of the town, so that we were
transported, all at once, into the real India. We were living in India,
unlike English people, who are only surrounded by India at a certain
distance. We were enabled to study her character and customs, her religion,
superstitions and rites, to learn her legends, in fact, to live among
Hindus.
Everything in India, this land of the elephant and the poisonous
cobra, of the tiger and the unsuccessful English missionary, is original
and strange. Everything seems unusual, unexpected, and striking, even to
one who has travelled in Turkey, Egypt, Damascus, and Palestine. In
these tropical regions the conditions of nature are so various that all
the forms of the animal and vegetable kingdoms must radically differ
from what we are used to in Europe. Look, for instance, at those women
on their way to a well through a garden, which is private and at the
same time open to anyone, because somebody's cows are grazing in it. To
whom does it not happen to meet with women, to see cows, and admire a
garden? Doubtless these are among the commonest of all things. But a
single attentive glance will suffice to show you the difference that
exists between the same objects in Europe and in India. Nowhere more
than in India does a human being feel his weakness and insignificance.
The majesty of the tropical growth is such that our highest trees would
look dwarfed compared with banyans and especially with palms. A European
cow, mistaking, at first sight, her Indian sister for a calf, would deny
the existence of any kinship between them, as neither the
mouse-coloured wool, nor the straight goat-like horns, nor the humped back of
the latter would permit her to make such an error. As to the women, each
of them would make any artist feel enthusiastic about the gracefulness of
her movements and drapery, but still, no pink and white, stout Anna Ivanovna
would condescend to greet her. "Such a shame, God forgive me, the woman is
entirely naked!"
This opinion of the modern Russian woman is nothing but
the echo of what was said in 1470 by a distinguished Russian traveler, "the
sinful slave of God, Athanasius son of Nikita from Tver," as he styles
himself. He describes India as follows: "This is the land of India. Its
people are naked, never cover their heads, and wear their hair braided. Women
have babies every year. Men and women are black. Their prince wears a
veil round his head and wraps another veil round his legs. The noblemen
wear a veil on one shoulder, and the noblewomen on the shoulders and
round the loins, but everyone is barefooted. The women walk about with
their hair spread and their breasts naked. The children, boys and girls,
never cover their shame until they are seven years old...." This
description is quite correct, but Athanasius Nikita's son is right only
concerning the lowest and poorest classes. These really do "walk about"
covered only with a veil, which often is so poor that, in fact, it is
nothing but a rag. But still, even the poorest woman is clad in a piece
of muslin at least ten yards long. One end serves as a sort of
short petticoat, and the other covers the head and shoulders when out in
the street, though the faces are always uncovered. The hair is erected
into a kind of Greek chignon. The legs up to the knees, the arms, and
the waist are never covered. There is not a single respectable woman
who would consent to put on a pair of shoes. Shoes are the attribute and
the prerogative of disreputable women. When, some time ago, the wife of
the Madras governor thought of passing a law that should induce
native women to cover their breasts, the place was actually threatened
with a revolution. A kind of jacket is worn only by dancing girls.
The Government recognized that it would be unreasonable to irritate
women, who, very often, are more dangerous than their husbands and
brothers, and the custom, based on the law of Manu, and sanctified by
three thousand years' observance, remained unchanged.
For more
than two years before we left America we were in constant correspondence with
a certain learned Brahman, whose glory is great at present (1879) all over
India. We came to India to study, under his guidance, the ancient country of
Aryas, the Vedas, and their difficult language. His name is Dayanand
Saraswati Swami. Swami is the name of the learned anchorites who are
initiated into many mysteries unattainable by common mortals. They are monks
who never marry, but are quite different from other mendicant brotherhoods,
the so-called Sannyasi and Hossein. This Pandit is considered the greatest
Sanskritist of modern India and is an absolute enigma to everyone. It is only
five years since he appeared on the arena of great reforms, but till then, he
lived, entirely secluded, in a jungle, like the ancient gymnosophists
mentioned by the Greek and Latin authors. At this time he was studying the
chief philosophical systems of the "Aryavartta" and the occult meaning of
the Vedas with the help of mystics and anchorites. All Hindus believe
that on the Bhadrinath Mountains (22,000 feet above the level of the
sea) there exist spacious caves, inhabited, now for many thousand years,
by these anchorites. Bhadrinath is situated in the north of Hindustan
on the river Bishegunj, and is celebrated for its temple of Vishnu right
in the heart of the town. Inside the temple there are hot mineral
springs, visited yearly by about fifty thousand pilgrims, who come to be
purified by them.
From the first day of his appearance Dayanand
Saraswati produced an immense impression and got the surname of the "Luther
of India." Wandering from one town to another, today in the South, tomorrow
in the North, and transporting himself from one end of the country to
another with incredible quickness, he has visited every part of India, from
Cape Comorin to the Himalayas, and from Calcutta to Bombay. He preaches
the One Deity and, "Vedas in hand," proves that in the ancient
writings there was not a word that could justify polytheism. Thundering
against idol worship, the great orator fights with all his might against
caste, infant marriages, and superstitions. Chastising all the evils grafted
on India by centuries of casuistry and false interpretation of the
Vedas, he blames for them the Brahmans, who, as he openly says before masses
of people, are alone guilty of the humiliation of their country, once
great and independent, now fallen and enslaved. And yet Great Britain has
in him not an enemy, but rather an ally. He says openly--"If you expel
the English, then, no later than tomorrow, you and I and everyone who
rises against idol worship will have our throats cut like mere sheep.
The Mussulmans are stronger than the idol worshippers; but these last are
stronger than we." The Pandit held many a warm dispute with the Brah-mans,
those treacherous enemies of the people, and has almost always been
victorious. In Benares secret assassins were hired to slay him, but the
attempt did not succeed. In a small town of Bengal, where he treated
fetishism with more than his usual severity, some fanatic threw on his naked
feet a huge cobra. There are two snakes deified by the Brahman mythology: the
one which surrounds the neck of Shiva on his idols is called Vasuki; the
other, Ananta, forms the couch of Vishnu. So the worshipper of Shiva, feeling
sure that his cobra, trained purposely for the mysteries of a Shivaite
pagoda, would at once make an end of the offender's life, triumphantly
exclaimed, "Let the god Vasuki himself show which of us is
right!"
Dayanand jerked off the cobra twirling round his leg, and with a
single vigorous movement, crushed the reptile's head. "Let him do so,"
he quietly assented. "Your god has been too slow. It is I who have
decided the dispute, Now go," added he, addressing the crowd, "and tell
everyone how easily perish the false gods."
Thanks to his excellent
knowledge of Sanskrit the Pandit does a great service, not only to the
masses, clearing their ignorance about the monotheism of the Vedas, but to
science too, showing who, exactly, are the Brahmans, the only caste in India
which, during centuries, had the right to study Sanskrit literature and
comment on the Vedas, and which used this right solely for its own
advantage.
Long before the time of such Orientalists as Burnouf,
Colebrooke and Max Muller, there have been in India many reformers who tried
to prove the pure monotheism of the Vedic doctrines. There have even been
founders of new religions who denied the revelations of these scriptures;
for instance, the Raja Ram Mohun Roy, and, after him, Babu Keshub
Chunder Sen, both Calcutta Bengalees. But neither of them had much success.
They did nothing but add new denominations to the numberless sects
existing in India. Ram Mohun Roy died in England, having done next to
nothing, and Keshub Chunder Sen, having founded the community of
"Brahmo-Samaj," which professes a religion extracted from the depths of the
Babu's own imagination, became a mystic of the most pronounced type, and
now is only "a berry from the same field," as we say in Russia, as
the Spiritualists, by whom he is considered to be a medium and a
Calcutta Swedenborg. He spends his time in a dirty tank, singing praises
to Chaitanya, Koran, Buddha, and his own person, proclaiming himself
their prophet, and performs a mystical dance, dressed in woman's
attire, which, on his part, is an attention to a "woman goddess" whom the
Babu calls his "mother, father and eldest brother."
In short, all the
attempts to re-establish the pure primitive monotheism of Aryan India have
been a failure. They always got wrecked upon the double rock of Brahmanism
and of prejudices centuries old. But lo! here appears unexpectedly the pandit
Dayanand. None, even of the most beloved of his disciples, knows who he is
and whence he comes. He openly confesses before the crowds that the name
under which he is known is not his, but was given to him at the Yogi
initiation.
The mystical school of Yogis was established by Patanjali,
the founder of one of the six philosophical systems of ancient India. It is
supposed that the Neo-platonists of the second and third Alexandrian Schools
were the followers of Indian Yogis, more especially was their theurgy
brought from India by Pythagoras, according to the tradition. There still
exist in India hundreds of Yogis who follow the system of Patanjali,
and assert that they are in communion with Brahma. Nevertheless, most
of them are do-nothings, mendicants by profession, and great frauds,
thanks to the insatiable longing of the natives for miracles. The real
Yogis avoid appearing in public, and spend their lives in secluded
retirement and studies, except when, as in Dayanand's case, they come forth
in time of need to aid their country. However, it is perfectly certain
that India never saw a more learned Sanskrit scholar, a deeper
metaphysician, a more wonderful orator, and a more fearless denunciator of
every evil, than Dayanand, since the time of Sankharacharya, the celebrated
founder of the Vedanta philosophy, the most metaphysical of Indian
systems, in fact, the crown of pantheistic teaching. Then, Dayanand's
personal appearance is striking. He is immensely tall, his complexion is
pale, rather European than Indian, his eyes are large and bright, and
his greyish hair is long. The Yogis and Dikshatas (initiated) never
cut either their hair or beard. His voice is clear and loud, well
calculated to give expression to every shade of deep feeling, ranging from a
sweet childish caressing whisper to thundering wrath against the evil
doings and falsehoods of the priests. All this taken together produces
an indescribable effect on the impressionable Hindu. Wherever
Dayanand appears crowds prostrate themselves in the dust over his
footprints; but, unlike Babu Keshub Chunder Sen, he does not teach a
new religion, does not invent new dogmas. He only asks them to renew
their half-forgotten Sanskrit studies, and, having compared the doctrines
of their forefathers with what they have become in the hands of
Brahmans, to return to the pure conceptions of Deity taught by the
primitive Rishis--Agni, Vayu, Aditya, and Anghira--the patriarchs who first
gave the Vedas to humanity. He does not even claim that the Vedas are
a heavenly revelation, but simply teaches that "every word in
these scriptures belongs to the highest inspiration possible to the
earthly man, an inspiration that is repeated in the history of humanity,
and, when necessary, may happen to any nation....."
During his five
years of work Swami Dayanand made about two million proselytes, chiefly
amongst the higher castes. Judging by appearances, they are all ready to
sacrifice to him their lives and souls and even their earthly possessions,
which are often more precious to them than their lives. But Dayanand is a
real Yogi, he never touches money, and despises pecuniary affairs. He
contents himself with a few handfuls of rice per day. One is inclined to
think that this wonderful Hindu bears a charmed life, so careless is he of
rousing the worst human passions, which are so dangerous in India. A marble
statue could not be less moved by the raging wrath of the crowd. We saw him
once at work. He sent away all his faithful followers and forbade them either
to watch over him or to defend him, and stood alone before the infuriated
crowd, facing calmly the monster ready to spring upon him and tear him to
pieces.
Here a short explanation is necessary. A few years ago a
society of well-informed, energetic people was formed in New York. A
certain sharp-witted savant surnamed them "La Societe des Malcontents
du Spiritisme." The founders of this club were people who, believing in
the phenomena of spiritualism as much as in the possibility of every
other phenomenon in Nature, still denied the theory of the "spirits."
They considered that the modern psychology was a science still in the
first stages of its development, in total ignorance of the nature of
the psychic man, and denying, as do many other sciences, all that cannot
be explained according to its own particular theories.
From the first
days of its existence some of the most learned Americans joined the Society,
which became known as the Theosophical Society. Its members differed on many
points, much as do the members of any other Society, Geographical or
Archeological, which fights for years over the sources of the Nile, or the
Hieroglyphs of Egypt. But everyone is unanimously agreed that, as long as
there is water in the Nile, its sources must exist somewhere. So much about
the phenomena of spiritualism and mesmerism. These phenomena were still
waiting their Champollion--but the Rosetta stone was to be searched for
neither in Europe nor in America, but in the far-away countries where they
still believe in magic, where wonders are performed daily by the
native priesthood, and where the cold materialism of science has never
yet reached--in one word, in the East.
The Council of the Society knew
that the Lama-Buddhists, for instance, though not believing in God, and
denying the personal immortality of the soul, are yet celebrated for their
"phenomena," and that mesmerism was known and daily practised in China from
time immemorial under the name of "gina." In India they fear and hate the
very name of the spirits whom the Spiritualists venerate so deeply, yet many
an ignorant fakir can perform "miracles" calculated to turn upside-down all
the notions of a scientist and to be the despair of the most celebrated of
European prestidigitateurs. Many members of the Society have visited
India--many were born there and have themselves witnessed the "sorceries" of
the Brahmans. The founders of the Club, well aware of the depth of
modern ignorance in regard to the spiritual man, were most anxious
that Cuvier's method of comparative anatomy should acquire rights
of citizenship among metaphysicians, and, so, progress from
regions physical to regions psychological on its own inductive and
deductive foundation. "Otherwise," they thought, "psychology will be unable
to move forward a single step, and may even obstruct every other branch
of Natural History." Instances have not been wanting of physiology
poaching on the preserves of purely metaphysical and abstract knowledge,
all the time feigning to ignore the latter absolutely, and seeking to
class psychology with the positive sciences, having first bound it to a
Bed of Procrustes, where it refuses to yield its secret to its
clumsy tormentors.
In a short time the Theosophical Society counted
its members, not by hundreds, but by thousands. All the "malcontents" of
American Spiritualism--and there were at that time twelve million
Spiritualists in America--joined the Society. Collateral branches were formed
in London, Corfu, Australia, Spain, Cuba, California, etc.
Everywhere experiments were being performed, and the conviction that it is
not spirits alone who are the causes of the phenomena was becoming
general.
In course of time branches of the Society were in India and in
Ceylon. The Buddhist and Brahmanical members became more numerous than
the Europeans. A league was formed, and to the name of the Society
was added the subtitle, "The Brotherhood of Humanity." After an
active correspondence between the Arya-Samaj, founded by Swami Dayanand,
and the Theosophical Society, an amalgamation was arranged between the two
bodies. Then the Chief Council of the New York branch decided upon sending a
special delegation to India, for the purpose of studying, on the spot, the
ancient language of the Vedas and the manuscripts and the wonders of Yogism.
On the 17th of December, 1878, the delegation, composed of two secretaries
and two members of the council of the Theosophical Society, started from New
York, to pause for a while in London, and then to proceed to Bombay, where it
landed in February, 1879.
It may easily be conceived that, under these
circumstances, the members of the delegation were better able to study the
country and to make fruitful researches than might, otherwise, have been the
case. Today they are looked upon as brothers and aided by the most
influential natives of India. They count among the members of their
society pandits of Benares and Calcutta, and Buddhist priests of the
Ceylon Viharas--amongst others the learned Sumangala, mentioned by
Minayeff in the description of his visit to Adam's Peak--and Lamas of
Thibet, Burmah, Travancore and elsewhere. The members of the delegation
are admitted to sanctuaries where, as yet, no European has set his
foot. Consequently they may hope to render many services to Humanity
and Science, in spite of the illwill which the representatives of
positive science bear to them.
As soon as the delegation landed, a
telegram was despatched to Dayanand, as everyone was anxious to make his
personal acquaintance. In reply, he said that he was obliged to go
immediately to Hardwar, where hundreds of thousands of pilgrims were expected
to assemble, but he insisted on our remaining behind, since cholera was
certain to break out among the devotees. He appointed a certain spot, at the
foot of the Himalayas, in the jab, where we were to meet in a month's
time.
Alas! all this was written some time ago. Since then Swami
Dayanand's countenance has changed completely toward us. He is, now, an enemy
of the Theosophical Society and its two founders--Colonel Olcott and
the author of these letters. It appeared that, on entering into an
offensive and defensive alliance with the Society, Dayanand nourished
the hope that all its members, Christians, Brahmans and Buddhists,
would acknowledge His supremacy, and become members of the Arya
Samaj.
Needless to say, this was impossible. The Theosophical Society
rests on the principle of complete non-interference with the religious
beliefs of its members. Toleration is its basis and its aims are
purely philosophical. This did not suit Dayanand. He wanted all the
members, either to become his disciples, or to be expelled from the Society.
It was quite clear that neither the President, nor the Council could
assent to such a claim. Englishmen and Americans, whether they were
Christians or Freethinkers, Buddhists, and especially Brahmans, revolted
against Dayanand, and unanimously demanded that the league should be
broken.
However, all this happened later. At the time of which I speak we
were friends and allies of the Swami, and we learned with deep interest
that the Hardwar "mela," which he was to visit, takes place every
twelve years, and is a kind of religious fair, which attracts
representatives from all the numerous sects of India.
Learned
dissertations are read by the disputants in defence of their peculiar
doctrines, and the debates are held in public. This year the Hardwar
gathering was exceptionally numerous. The Sannyasis--the mendicant monks of
India--alone numbered 35,000 and the cholera, foreseen by the Swami, actually
broke out.
As we were not yet to start for the appointed meeting,
we had plenty of spare time before us; so we proceeded to examine
Bombay.
The Tower of Silence, on the heights of the Malabar Hill, is the
last abode of all the sons of Zoroaster. It is, in fact, a Parsee
cemetery. Here their dead, rich and poor, men, women and children, are all
laid in a row, and in a few minutes nothing remains of them but bare
skeletons. A dismal impression is made upon a foreigner by these towers,
where absolute silence has reigned for centuries. This kind of building
is very common in every place were Parsees live and die. In Bombay, of
six towers, the largest was built 250 years ago, and the least but a
short time since. With few exceptions, they are round or square in shape,
from twenty to forty feet high, without roof, window, or door, but with
a single iron gate opening towards the East, and so small that it is quite
covered by a few bushes. The first corpse brought to a
new tower--"dakhma"--must be the body of the innocent child of a mobed or
priest. No one, not even the chief watcher, is allowed to approach within a
distance of thirty paces of these towers. Of all living human beings
"nassesalars"--corpse-carriers--alone enter and leave the "Tower of Silence."
The life these men lead is simply wretched. No European executioner's
position is worse. They live quite apart from the rest of the world, in whose
eyes they are the most abject of beings. Being forbidden to enter the
markets, they must get their food as they can. They are born, marry, and die,
perfect strangers to all except their own class, passing through the streets
only to fetch the dead and carry them to the tower. Even to be near one of
them is a degradation. Entering the tower with a corpse, covered, whatever
may have been its rank or position, with old white rags, they undress it and
place it, in silence, on one of the three rows presently to be described.
Then, still preserving the same silence, they come out, shut the gate, and
burn the rags.
Amongst the fire-worshippers, Death is divested of all
his majesty and is a mere object of disgust. As soon as the last hour of a
sick person seems to approach, everyone leaves the chamber of death, as much
to avoid impeding the departure of the soul from the body, as to shun
the risk of polluting the living by contact with the dead. The mobed
alone stays with the dying man for a while, and having whispered into his
ear the Zend-Avesta precepts, "ashem-vohu" and "Yato-Ahuvarie," leaves
the room while the patient is still alive. Then a dog is brought and
made to look straight into his face. This ceremony is called
"sas-did," the "dog's-stare." A dog is the only living creature that
the "Drux-nassu"--the evil one--fears, and that is able to prevent him
from taking possession of the body. It must be strictly observed that
no one's shadow lies between the dying man and the dog, otherwise the
whole strength of the dog's gaze will be lost, and the demon will profit
by the occasion. The body remains on the spot where life left it, until
the nassesalars appear, their arms hidden to the shoulders under old
bags, to take it away. Having deposited it in an iron coffin--the same
for everyone--they carry it to the dakhma. If any one, who has once
been carried thither, should happen to regain consciousness, the
nassesalars are bound to kill him; for such a person, who has been polluted
by one touch of the dead bodies in the dakhma, has thereby lost all
right to return to the living, by doing so he would contaminate the
whole community. As some such cases have occurred, the Parsees are trying
to get a new law passed, that would allow the miserable ex-corpses to
live again amongst their friends, and that would compel the nassesalars
to leave the only gate of the dakhma unlocked, so that they might find
a way of retreat open to them. It is very curious, but it is said that
the vultures, which devour without hesitation the corpses, will never
touch those who are only apparently dead, but fly away uttering loud
shrieks. After a last prayer at the gate of the dakhma, pronounced from afar
by the mobed, and re-peated in chorus by the nassesalars, the dog
ceremony is repeated. In Bombay there is a dog, trained for this purpose, at
the entrance to the tower. Finally, the body is taken inside and placed
on one or other of the rows, according to its sex and age.
We have
twice been present at the ceremonies of dying, and once of burial, if I may
be permitted to use such an incongruous term. In this respect the Parsees are
much more tolerant than the Hindus, who are offended by the mere presence at
their religious rites of an European. N. Bayranji, a chief official of the
tower, invited us to his house to be present at the burial of some rich
woman. So we witnessed all that was going on at a distance of about forty
paces, sitting quietly on our obliging host's verandah. While the dog was
staring into the dead woman's face, we were gazing, as intently, but with
much more disgust, at the huge flock of vultures above the dakhma, that kept
entering the tower, and flying out again with pieces of human flesh in their
beaks. These birds, that build their nests in thousands round the Tower
of Silence, have been purposely imported from Persia. Indian
vultures proved to be too weak, and not sufficiently bloodthirsty, to
perform the process of stripping the bones with the despatch prescribed
by Zoroaster. We were told that the entire operation of denuding the
bones occupies no more than a few minutes. As soon as the ceremony was
over, we were led into another building, where a model of the dakhma was to
be seen. We could now very easily imagine what was to take place
presently inside the tower. In the centre there is a deep waterless well,
covered with a grating like the opening into a drain. Around it are three
broad circles, gradually sloping downwards. In each of them are
coffin-like receptacles for the bodies. There are three hundred and
sixty-five such places. The first and smallest row is destined for children,
the second for women, and the third for men. This threefold circle is
symbolical of three cardinal Zoroastrian virtues--pure thoughts, kind words,
and good actions. Thanks to the vultures, the bones are laid bare in less
than an hour, and, in two or three weeks, the tropical sun scorches them
into such a state of fragility, that the slightest breath of wind is
enough to reduce them to powder and to carry them down into the pit. No
smell is left behind, no source of plagues and epidemics. I do not know
that this way may not be preferable to cremation, which leaves in the
air about the Ghat a faint but disagreeable odour. The Ghat is a place by
the sea, or river shore, where Hindus burn their dead. Instead of feeding the
old Slavonic deity "Mother Wet Earth" with carrion, Parsees give to Armasti
pure dust. Armasti means, literally, "fostering cow," and Zoroaster teaches
that the cultivation of land is the noblest of all occupations in the eyes of
God. Accordingly, the worship of Earth is so sacred among the Parsees, that
they take all possible precautions against polluting the "fostering cow" that
gives them "a hundred golden grains for every single grain." In the season of
the Monsoon, when, during four months, the rain pours incessantly down and
washes into the well everything that is left by the vultures, the water
absorbed by the earth is filtered, for the bottom of the well, the walls of
which are built of granite, is, to this end, covered with sand and charcoal. |
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