A 'mArgazhi' diary: some reflections - 5.3
From the Bhakti List Archives
• December 27, 1999
Dear bhakti-list members, Today (27 Dec) adiyen again looks at Standard No:2 of Kamban's "Benchmarks of Poetic Excellence" i.e. "Anra porul taral". According to this standard of Kamban a work of Tamil poery must comprehensively deal with the subject of "purushArthA-s" which are 4 in number: (1) "aram" (virtue of charity) (2) "porul" (wealth) (3) "inbam" (pleasure) and (4) "viDu" (spiritual emancipation). According to pundits and the "AchAryA-s", Goda's tiruppAvai treats the subject of "purushArthA-s" in a way that meets and far exceeds the above Kamban standard. All of us, at some time or other, find ourselves smitten by the pensive mood when silently we pose the question to ourselves "What am I living my life for?". This is indeed a very difficult question to answer with any degree of honesty or objectivity at any time in our lives. But the Vedic religion gives us a very simple and clear answer to the question. It says that all of us live on earth only to fulfill 4 principal objectives viz. (1)"kAma" (2) "arthA" (3) "dharmA" and (4) "mOksha" which are the same as the Tamil "inbam", "poruL", "aram" and "veeDu". The fulfilment of desire ("kAmA") to derive pure pleasure ("inbam") is one of the principal ends of human existence. From the moment of birth as a baby until the time it goes to death as an old man, the soul is ceaselessly engaged in the search for Pleasure. There is no doubt about this fact of life. Unfortunately, in the course of life, man's appetite for Pleasure ("inbam") never remains constant. It varies in nature and in intensity. It waxes and wanes. At one time man hungers for objects of pleasure belonging to the realms of the "flesh" viz. wealth, fame or power (i.e. "arthA" or "porul") or sensual pleasures ("ulpa-kAma") i.e. wine, women and creature comforts. At other times, however, man hankers after the Pleasures belonging to the realm of the "spirit" --- knowledge, ideas, social achievement, intellectual fulfilment, emotional bliss or simple familial contentment. In the course of thus having to pursue and attain the objects ("arthA"/"porul") of the Pleasure-Principle of life ("kAma"/"inbam"), Man employs "dharmA" --- those modes of conduct needed to achieve the desired goals. "Dharma" is essentially the sum of all the right efforts Man expends in order to realize "purushArthA", his goals in life. When such modes of conduct are inspired by high purpose they are called "dharmA". When inspired by ignoble ideals and low ethics they are called "a-dharmA". Thus, within this ever-dynamic matrix of 4 principal Vedantic "purushArthA-s", every man lives and strives ceaselessly to enrich his existential condition and make it meaningful. The power of "arthA" or "porul" to satiate "kAma" or desire is extremely limited. Human appetite for the pleasures of the "flesh" or "spirit" is voracious but not insatiable. A point is reached in life when the "inbam" of "acquisition" ceases. When that happens Man begins to gradually savour instead the "inbam" or pleasure of "giving" or "charity". A wealthy man who did nothing but amass wealth all his life will suddenly turn to giving it all away in philanthrophy. He will set up innumerable trusts and foundations of charity in the hope they will be his living monuments after death. A man famed for some branch of learning or performing art will suddenly find "inbam" in "giving back" to society his knowledge, his skills or his acumen instead of trying to profit from it. He will probably suddenly at the end of his career put his heart and soul into teaching students, doing honorary work, community service etc. Such "giving away" of "porul" is called "aram"(charity). Conduct that is charitable in nature is said to conform to "dAna-dharmA" or ("ara-kattalai" in Tamil). Now, there are some men however who (due to the Grace of God or "purva-janma-visEsha-karma" or both) achieve in life a rare awareness of the unique possibilities of "purushArthA-s". Such men are known to easily tire of the "inbam" that "arthA" and "aram" affords. They see the small Pleasures yielded by worldly life as erratic, inconstant and unworthy. Such souls are variously called "gnyAni-s", "mumukshu-s", "seekers of truth" etc. "gnyAni-s" do not reject the world of "flesh" and "spirit" but they do not embrace it either like other ordinary men do. The mental constitution of "gnyAni-s" is such that they are naturally led to seek that "inbam" which is not at all of this world but of an altogether different "Order" existing beyond the boundaries of temporality and corporeality. (The "purusha-suktam" picturesquely describes this "Order Beyond" as "athyaTishta- dasAm-gulam"... "that world which is at least 10 feet beyond the reach of this one"!). Such exalted souls or "gnyAni-s" have no time for anything else in life but the pursuit of "mOksha- inbam" of "mOksha" or "veeDu" which the Upanishads also describe as "mOkshAnanda" -- the pleasure derived when freedom from the shackles of bodily destiny ("prakriti-sambandham") is attained forever. This the 4th "purushArthA". "MokshA" is also known to be a state of existence which is beyond the pale of the "purushArthA-s". This in SriVaishnava faith is called the state of the "dAsa-bhuthan"... the state of eternal and blissful servitude to the Supreme One in His Celestial Abode ("parama-padam"). Swami Desikan in his poem "paramArtha-stuthi" spoke of this very aspiration of the "gnyAni" for "parama-padam" in simple but soul-stirring lines: (Verse 7) avadheerya chaturvidham pumartham Bhava-dhartE viniyukta-jeevitah: sann I labhatE Bhavatah: falAni jantuh: nikhilAn-yatra nidarshanam jatAyuh: II (Any living being that transcends the 4-fold "purushArthA-s" of life and dedicates itself wholly to You, O Almighty One... such a soul does easily reaps all the fruits of Thy World of Bliss which Jatayu (of the Ramayana) too earned!"). ********** ************ ********* Now, it is not at all easy to comprehend and ingest the Vedantic concepts of the 4-fold "purushArthA-s" and/or to be able to put them to good use in living out our lives. It demands a great deal of self-knowledge ("atma-svarupa- gnyAna") and knowledge of our relationship to this world and to the Almighty. But the chief purpose of life, according to Vedanta, is to understand and trancend the "purushArthA-s". Once we do attain an intuitive understanding of the principles of "aram", "porul", "inbam" and "mOksa" we are said to be on the certain road to Godhead. Andal's "tiruppAvai", scholars and "achAryA-s" remind us, actually teems with several scintillating references to this great Vedantic matrix of "purushArthA-s" described above. adiyen will study them in the next page of this "mArgazhi diary". dAsAnu-dasa-bhuthan, Sampathkumaran _________________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com
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