Page:A History of Indian Philosophy Vol 1.djvu/52

 3 6 The Earlier Upaniads [CH. The Uktha (verse) of Rg-Veda was identified in the Aitareya AraI!yaka under several allegorical forms with the PraI!a the Udgltha of the Samaveda was identified with am, PraI!a, sun and eye; in Chandogya II. the Saman was identified with am, rain, water, seasons, PraI!a, etc., in Chandogya III. 16-17 man was identified with sacrifice; his hunger, thirst, sorrow, with initia- tion; laughing, eating, etc., with the utterance of the Mantras; and asceticism, gift, sincerity, restraint from injury, truth, with sacrificial fees (dakilii). The gifted mind of these cultured Vedic Indians was anxious to come to some unity, but logical precision of thought had not developed, and as a result of that we find in the AraI!yakas the most grotesque and fanciful unifications of things which to our eyes have little or no connection. Any kind of instru- mentality in producing an effect was often considered as pure identity. Thus in Ait. AraI!. II. I. 3 we find "Then comes the origin of food. The seed of Prajapati are the gods. The seed of the gods is rain. The seed of rain is herbs. The seed of herbs is food. The seed of food is seed. The seed of seed is creatures. The seed of creatures is the heart. The seed of the heart is the mind. The seed of the mind is speech. The seed of speech is action. The act done is this man the abode of Brahman 2." The word Brahman according to SayaI!a meant mantras (magical verses), the ceremonies, the hotr priest, the great. Hillebrandt points out that it is spoken of in R.V. as being new, "as not having hitherto existed," and as "coming into being from the fathers." It originates from the seat of the Rta, springs forth at the sound of the sacrifice, begins really to exist when the soma juice is pressed and the hymns are recited at the savana rite, endures with the help of the gods even in battle, and soma is its guardian (R.V. VIII. 37. I, VIII. 69. 9, VI. 23. 5, I. 47. 2, VII. 22. 9, VI. 52. 3, etc.). On the strength of these Hillebrandt justifies the conjecture of Haug that it signifies a mysterious power which can be called forth by various ceremonies, and his definition of it, as the magical force which is derived from the orderly cooperation of the hymns, the chants and the sacrificial gifts s. I am disposed to think that this meaning is closely connected with the meaning as we find it in many passages in the A.raI!yakas and the U paniads. The meaning in many of these seems to be midway between 1 Ait. AraQ. II. 1-3. 2 Keith's Translation of Aitareya .Arat;tyaka. 8 lIillchrandt's article on :Brahman, E. R. E.