English
poets and Advaita Vedanta
Literature
is itself is a philosophy, though some critics differ, there are innumerable
literary examples of visionary poets revealing primeval truths. These poetic
revelations are universal spiritual truths to which no one person, age or
religion can lay exclusive claims.
Tennyson
acknowledges that inteelect is not potent enough to realise ultimate reality-
it only “stirs the surface- shadow “but never “hath dipt into…/ the abysm of
all abysms”. Vedic scriptures declare the illusory dualistic veil or surface-
shadow as ‘maya’. This is something we need to overcome.
Mystics
perceive reality through self- realization and poets and thinkers perceive it
through imagination. Once they experience out- of- body consciousness, poets
reach the realm of pure consciousness and self esteems “to dissolve and fade
away into boundless being; and this is not a confused state, but the clearest
of the clearest… the loss of personality seeming not extinction but the only
true life”. Tennyson here conveys the essence of Advaita Vedanta, the cardinal
tenet which is the same. Brahmin alone is real. The universe is unreal, and the
individual soul is none other than the universal soul.
On the
death of Keats, Shelley knew; “He hath awakened from the dream of life”.
Wordsworth feels the same state when the “breath of this corporeal frame” is
“almost suspended” and then “we are laid asleep in body, become a living soul”.
D. H Lawrence is over joyed at the prospect of discarding his flesh “Like
luggage of some departed traveler”.
A
parallel is found in the autobiography of Sri. Yogananda; “The flesh was as
though dead, yet in m,y intense awareness I knew that never before had I been
fully alive…The spirit of God, I realized, is exhaustless Bliss”.
Evidently
this state is not confined to sages. Plato regarded this divine madnedd to be a
divine blessing granted to man. Saint
Paul and Francis of Assissi are reported to have fallen in to the same
ecstatic trance. The poet William Blake confidently said; “I am I n God’s
prescence night and day”. In this mystical trance, which is seeming the the
soul with bodily eyes closed, is when we receive the highest kind of intuitive
knowledge.
In the
Kathopanishad, Yama tells Nachiketa that the supreme person, the size of a
tomb, dwells forever in the hearts of all being. Krishna assures us in the Gita
that He is seated in the heart of all beins. Christ knew that the kingdom of
Heaven is within us.
Poets
are born, not made. Socretes says what poets compose they compose not by wisdom
but because they are inspired. The purest creative moments of their inspiration
have filled literature with pure magic. Entirely different from the tradition
of mystics, their vision nevertheless contributes to our spiritual heritage.