Book Title: Indian Antiquary Vol 06
Author(s): Jas Burgess
Publisher: Swati Publications

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Page 396
________________ 334 THE INDIAN ANTIQUARY. [NOVEMBER, 1877. and abstain from animal food and all victuals cooked by fire, being content to subsist upon trnits, which they do not so much as gather from the trees, but pick up when they have dropped to the ground, and their drink is the water of the river Tagaben a. Throughout life they go about naked, saying that the body has been given by the Deity as a covering for the soul. They hold that God is light, but not such light as we see with the eye, nor such as the sun or fire, but God is with them the Word-by which term they do not mean articulate speech, but the discourse of reason, whereby the hidden mysteries of knowledge are discerned by the wise. This light, however, which they call the Word, and think to be God, is, they say, known only by the Brachhmans themselves, because they alone have discarded vanity, * which is the outermost covering of the soul. The members of this sect regard death with contemptuous indifference, and, as we have seen already, they always pronounce the name of the Deity with a tone of peculiar reverence, and ndore him with hymns. They neither have wives nor beget children. Persons who desire to lead a life like theirs cross over from the other side of the river, and remain with them for good, never returning to their own country. These also are called Brachhmans, although they do not follow the same mode of life, for there are women in the country, from whom the native inhabitants are sprung, and of these women they beget offspring. With regard to the Word, which they call God, they hold that it is corporeal, and that it wears the body as its external covering, just as one wears the woollen surcoat, and that when it divests itself of the body with which it is enwrapped it becomes manifest to the eye. There is war, the Brachhmans bold, in the body wherewith they are clothed, and they regard the body as being the fruitful source of wars, and, as we have already shown, fight against it like soldiers in battle contending against the enemy. They maintain, moreover, that all men are held in bondage, like prisoners of war,t to their own innate enemies, the sensual appetites, gluttony, anger, joy, grief, longing desire, and such like, while it is only the man who has triumphed over these enemies who goes to God. Danda mis accordingly, to whom Alexander the Makedonian paid a visit, is spoken of by the Brachhmans as a god because he conquered in the warfare against the body, and on the other hand they condemn Kalanos as one who had impiously apostatized from their philosophy. The Brachhmans, therefore, when they have shuffled off the body, see the pure sunlight as fish see it when they spring up out of the water into the air. FRAGM. LV. Pallad. de Bragmanibus, pp. 8, 20 et seq. ed. Londin. 1668. (Camerar. libell. gnomolog. pp. 116, 124 et seq.) Of Kalanos and Mandanis. (Cf. Fragm. xli. 19, xliv., xlv.) They (the Bragmanes) subsist upon such fruits as they can find, and on wild herbs, which the earth spontaneously produces, and drink only water. They wander about in the woods, and sleep at night on pallets of the leaves of trees... . Kalanos, then, your false friend, held this opinion, but he is despised and trodden upon FRAGM. LV. B. Ambrosias. De Boribus Brachmanorum, pp. 62, 69 et 1. od. Pallad. Londin. 1663. of Calanus and Mandanis. They (the Drachmans) eat what they find on the ground, such as leaves of trees and wild herbs, like cattle..... “Calonus is your friend, but he is despised nnd trodden upon by us. He, then, who was the author of many evils among you, is honoured and Probably the Sanskrit Tuo vend, now the Tungahhadra, a large affluent of the Krishna. || Vide ante, vol. V. p. 128, notet. A doctrine of the Ve. dinta school of philosophy, according to which the avul in incased as in a sheath, or rather a succession of sbenthx. The first or inner case is the intellectual one, compound of the sheer and simple elements uncombined, and consisting of the intellect joined with the five senses. The second is the mental sheath, in which mind is joined with the preceding, or, as some hold, ' with the organs of action. The third comprises these organs and the vital faculties, and is called the organic or vital case. These three sheathe (kofa) constitute the subtlo frame which attends the soul in its tronamigrations. The exterior case is composed of the course elements combined in certain proportions, and is called the ross body. See Colebrooke's Essay on the Philosophy of the Hindus, Cowell'e ed. pp. 396-6. The affinity between God and light is the burden of the Gayatri or holiest verse of the Veda. Kevodofia which probably translates ahankara, literally egotism, and hence' self-consciousness,' the peculiar and uppropriate function of which is selfish conviction; that is, a bilief that in perception and meditation 'I am concerned; that the objects of sense concern Me-in short that I AM. The knowledge, however, which comes from comprehending that Being which has self-existence completely destroys the ignorance which says 'I am.' + Compare Plato, Phaedo, cap. 32, where Sokrates speaks of the soul as nt present confined in the body as in a species of prison. This was a doctrine of the Pythagorean, whose pbilosophy, even in its most striking peculiarities, bears such a close resemblance to the Indian as greatly to favour the supposition that it was directly borrowed from it. There was even a tradition that Pythagoras had visited India.

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