Andal
PREOCCUPIED from the earliest times with divine
knowledge and religious aspiration the Indian mind has turned all forms of
human life and emotion and all the phenomena of the universe into symbols and means by which the embodied soul may strive after and grasp the Supreme.
Indian devotion has especially seized upon the most intimate human relations
and made them stepping-stones to the supra-human. God the Guru, God the Master,
God the Friend, God the Mother, God the Child, God the Self, each of these
experiences – for to us these are more than merely ideas, – it has carried to
its extreme possibilities. But none of them has it pursued, embraced, sung with
a more exultant passion of intimate realisation than the yearning for God the
Lover, God the Beloved. It would seem as if this passionate human symbol were
the natural culminating- point for the mounting flame of the soul’s devotion:
for it is found wherever that devotion has entered into the most secret shrine
of the inner temple. We meet it in Islamic poetry; certain experiences of the
Christian mystics repeat the forms and images with which we are familiar in the
East, but usually with a certain timorousness foreign to the Eastern
temperament. For the devotee who has once had this intense experience it is
that which admits to the most profound and hidden mystery of the universe; for
him the heart has the key of the last secret. Page – 371
giving
a powerful and original turn to the images of our old classic poetry; for there
it has been sung out by the rapt heart of a woman to the Heart of the Universe. Page – 372 |