3/7/09

siddhartha, once more

He now regarded people in a different light than he had previously: not very clever, not very proud and therefore all the more warm, curious and sympathetic.

When he now took the usual kind of travellers across, businessmen, soldiers and women, they no longer seemed alien to him as they once had. He did not understand or share their thoughts and views, but he shared with them life's urges and desires. Although he had reached a high stage of self-discipline and bore his last wound well, he now felt as if these ordinary people were his brothers. Their vanities, desires and trivialities no longer seemed absurd to him; they had become understandable, lovable and even worthy of respect. There was the blind love of a mother for her child, the blind foolish pride of a fond father for his only son, the blind eager strivings of a young vain woman for ornament and the admiration of men. All these little simple, foolish, but tremendously strong, vital, passionate urges and desires no longer seemed trivial to Siddhartha. For their sake he saw people live and do great things, travel, conduct wars, sufer and endure immensely, and he loved them for it. He saw life, vitality, the indestructible and Brahman in all their desires and needs. These people were worthy of love and admiration in their blind loyalty, in their blind strength and tenacity. With the expression of one small thing, one tiny little thing, they lacked nothing that the sage and thinker had, and that was the consciousness of the unity of all life. And many a time Siddhartha even doubted whether this knowledge, this thought was of such great value, whether it was not also perhaps the childish self-flattery of thinkers, who were perhaps only thinking children. The men of the world were equal to the thinkers in every other respect and were often superior to them, just as animals in their tenacious undeviating actions in cases of necessity may often seem superior to human beings.

Within Siddhartha there slowly grew and ripened the knowledge of what wisdom really was and the goal of his long seeking. It was nothing but a preparation of the soul, a capacity, a secret art of thinking, feeling and breathing thoughts of unity at every moment of life.
as i read these words, i marveled at the depths of human consciousness they must have found root in. have you ever wondered - when one writes down their thoughts - where those thoughts must stem from? oft, they are thoughts one understands, likes, identifies with. only rarely do we find in those thoughts an enlivening of our own deepest, so far unacknowledged, truths. and that moment, it is grand, when an unvoiced yearning from within suddenly finds expression in the words of a stranger, no longer a stranger. that is how i felt when i read this passage. there. now the karma is resolved.

2 comments:

Amrithaa said...

and sheer brilliance revelaed in writing and thought in just that one final paragraph! :) ever admiring,
~ a.

8&20 said...

and of course, i have you to thank immensely for introducing me to this masterpiece. the funny thing is, as more time passes, and i dwell more on the writing, it seems to carve out a special spot for itself within.