ocean, till it is almost impossible to distinguish between
the various streams and currents once its tributaries.
Yet it is this very power of adaptation and growth that
constitutes the greatness of that system which not only embraces Eastern Asia,
but bore its seeds long ago to blossom in the Syrian desert, and in the form of
Christianity completes the circling of the world, with its fragrance of love
and renunciation.
The several forms which the thought of the great Teacher
has assumed, as it has come in contact with various nationalities and periods -
even as the same raindrops may call to life the flowers of many different
climes - are indeed difficult to analyse and describe in their true order of
development. For Asia is vast, India itself larger than Europe west of the Vistula, and the twenty-three Indian, twelve Chinese, and thirteen Japanese schools, with
their innumerable subdivisions, under which later students love
that the word itself is a limitation, and go straightway,
as the natural sequence, to pour water on the head of the Siva-lingam. Unless
we can grasp the secret of this inclusion of opposites, the mutual relations of
Northern and Southern Buddhism must baffle us. For it is not possible to say
that either is true, and the other false, but it is perfectly comprehensible
that, as the narrower basis of Southern Buddhism, we have the echo of the great
voice itself, crying alone in the wilderness, amongst those who know nothing of
its whence or whither, while in the Northern school we listen to the Buddha in
his true relativity, as the apex of the religious experience of his country.
Northern Buddhism is thus like some great mountain ravine, through which India
pours her intellectual torrents upon the world, and the contention that in
Kashmir was made the most authoritative deposit of the doctrine, though it may
or may not be true in the
sense intended, has an inevitable accuracy of its own,
deeper than the words imply.
Essentially, according to both interpretations, the message
of Buddha was a message of the Freedom of the Soul, and those who heard were
the emancipated children of the Ganges, already drinking to their full of the
purity of the Absolute, in their Mahabharata and Upanishads. But beyond its
philosophic grandeur, across all the flight of centuries and through the
repetitions of both schools alike, we hear the divine voice tremble still with
that passion of pity that stood forth in the midst of the most individualistic
race in the world, and lifted the dumb beast to one level with man. In face of
the spiritual feudalism whereby Caste makes a peasant in all his poverty one of
the aristocrats of humanity, we behold him in his infinite mercy, dreaming of
the common people as one great heart, standing as the breaker
of social bondage, and proclaiming equality and brotherhood
to all. It was this second element, so akin to the feeling of Confucian China
itself, that distinguished him from all previous developers of Vedic thought,
and enabled his teaching to embrace all Asia, if not the whole of humankind.
Kapilavastu, the place of his birth, stands in Nepal, and was in his days even more Turanian than now. Scholars are wont sometimes to
claim for him a Tartar origin, for the Sakyas may have been Sakas,
or Scythians, and the frankly Mongolian type in which the earliest images
represent him, as well as the golden or yellow colour of the skin described in
the earliest sûtras, and remarkable presumptive evidence. The Taoists even go
ridiculously further, and narrate in the Roshi-Kakokio, the Book of the
Conversion of the Barbarians by Laotse, how Laotse himself, after his mysterious
disappearance in Kwankokukwan, travelled
to India, and there reincarnated himself as Gautama!
At any rate it is certain, whether or not there was Tartar
blood in his veins, that he embodied the root-idea of that race, and in thereby
universalising Indian idealism in its highest intensity, becomes the ocean in
which the Ganges and the Hoang-Ho mingle their waters.
The monastic idea further differentiates him from all those
other rishis and sannyasins who preached in the forests, but whose spirit of
independence made of them stars, and not constellations. The existence of the Buddhist Church, mother of all churches as it is, demonstrates the dual trend of the
Buddhist idea. For the organisation of the sannyasin is the thraldom of the
emancipated, and yet the very soul of the Faith is its inquiry into the nature
of freedom from that suffering which is known as life.
But, indeed, both freedom and bondage must have been modes
of the great Sage.
with his own lips, he ordered his disciples to talk in the
dialects of the people.
Such varying interpretations of a single truth, clothed
thus with equal authority in widely different garbs, led inevitably to
schismatic disputes. At first these were mainly concerned with the discipline
or rule, which was the most important act of the great spiritual Deedsman, but
later they involved such discussion of philosophic standpoints as to divide
Buddhism into countless sects.
The original disruption seems to have occurred between
those who represented the highest culture of that Indian thought which was a
development of the Upanishads, and the acceptors of the popular interpretation
of the new doctrine and discipline.
The first stage of Buddhism, immediately after the
Nirvana - which we may consider to have taken place about the middle of the
sixth century B.C. - is concerned with the ascendency of the primary
[paragraph continues] India, till the reflux from Siam, a few centuries later, of the
Southern doctrine, of which it remains the present stronghold.
Northern India and Kashmir, where immediate disciples
preached the faith, formed the busiest seat of Buddhist activity. It was in Kashmir,
in the first century after Christ, that Kanishka - that King of the Gettaes who
extended his power from Central Asia to the Punjaub, and left his footprints at
Mathura, near Agra - called a great Buddhist council, whose influence spread
Buddhism farther into Central Asia. But all this was only enforcing the work
begun by Asoka, the great descendant of Chandra Gupta (fourth century B.C.).
Nagarjuna was an Indian monk, whose name is well known in China and Japan. In the second century of the Christian era, he followed in the wake of previous
teachers, known as Asvaghosha and Vasumitra, the latter of whom had acted as
president of Kanishka's council. Nagarjuna gave ultimate
form to this, the first school of Buddhism, by means of his eight negations and
the elucidation of the middle path that lies between two opposites, as well as
by his recognition of the infinite self, the great soul and light which
pervades the All. This is a doctrine which the Buddha of the Pali texts (the
Southern school) does not deny, though he there preaches the non-existence of
the finite self. The fact that the memory of Nagarjuna connects itself with
Orissa and Southern India, and that his immediate successor, Deva, came from Ceylon, shows the wide range within which the influence of this first school worked.
In India the art of this early Buddhism was a natural
growth out of that of the Epic age that went before. For it is idle to deny the
existence of pre-Buddhistic Indian art, ascribing its sudden birth to the
influence of the Greeks, as European archæologists are wont to do. The
influence of the Greeks, and if it be necessary to
establish a relation with any foreign school, it must surely be with that old
Asiatic art whose traces are to be found amongst Mesopotamians, Chinese, and
Persians, the last of whom are but a branch race of the Indian.
The lofty iron pillar of Asoka at Delhi-strange marvel of
casting, which Europe, with all her scientific mechanism, cannot imitate
to-day, like the twelve colossal iron images of Asoka's contemporary, the Shin
Emperor of China, points us to ages of skilled workmanship and vast resources.
Too little effort is spent in reconstructing the idea of that great splendour
and activity which must have existed, in order to leave such wreckage as it has
to a later age. It may be that the desolate wastes of Kurukshetra, and the
wailing weeds of Rajagriha, still cherish the memory of an ancient glory, which
they cower down to cover from alien eyes.
Images of the Buddha himself, though absent from the early
stupas, and now undistinguishable by us among the existing specimens of this
early period, may probably have been the first work of his disciples, who soon
learned to clothe his memory with the Jataka legends, and to beautify his ideal
personality.
In the post-Asokan period in India we find Buddhist
art-activity working out of the confinement of its primitive type into freer
forms and a wider range of subjects, yet remaining always a legitimate
development of the national school, whether seen in the rock-temples of Orissa
and the rails of Sanchi, or in the elegant delineations of Amaravati, the
culmination of the art of this school of the third century.
The remains of Mathura and Gandhara fall into the general
movement, for Kanishka and the Gettaes, in imposing their Mongolian traits on
Indian art, could but bring it within the shadow of
reaches extraordinary scientific expression. It must be
understood that Buddhism, owing to its special definition of Maya, is a
religious idea remarkably retentive of scientific effort, and we have in this
period a forcible demonstration of the fact. This was the age of that great
intellectual expansion when Kalidasa sang, and astronomy scaled its heights
under Varahamihira, lasting till the seventh century, with Nalanda as its
centre of learning.
The art of this second Buddhist epoch is best seen in the
wall-paintings of Ajanta, and in the sculptures of the Ellora caves, now the
few remaining specimens of a great Indian art, which doubtless, thanks to
innumerable travellers, gave its inspiration to the Tâng art of China.
The third phase of Buddhism,
the era of concrete idealism, begins with the seventh century to sound the
dominant note of the faith, spreading its influence
to Thibet, there to become, on the one hand, Lamaism, and
on the other Tantrikism, and reaching China and Japan as the Esoteric doctrine,
to create the art of the Heian period.
It was now that the idea of the Southern school of
Buddhism, which had always been working side by side with its companion
movement, penetrated Burmah and Siam., and, returning upon Ceylon, absorbed the
remnant of the Northern adherents in that island, thus creating a new stratum
of Indo-Chinese art, very different in style from that of the North.
Hinduism - that form into which the Indian national
consciousness had been striving to resolve Buddhism ever since its appearance
as a creed - is now recognised once more as the inclusive form of the nation's
life. The great Vedantic revival of Sankaracharya is the assimilation of
Buddhism, and its emergence in a new dynamic form. And now, in spite
of the separation of ages, Japan is drawn closer than ever
to the motherland of thought.
NOTES
The spiritual feudalism whereby. - This is an allusion to the ideal of
Brahminhood, which is complete culture rooted and practised in an extreme
simplicity of life. The Brahmin villager may be not only a scholar in the
European university sense of the term, but also a man of emancipated intellect
and character. And yet it will be his pride to remain always the same frugal
villager. Much more does this standard hold good of the sannyasin, who is
expected to worship poverty as did S. Francis of Assisi. It may be said that in
India, amongst both these classes, many men are to be found of whom the
statement made in the text is by no means exaggerated.
Mahabharata. - The epic of "Great India,"
which sings of the war between the Kurus and Pandavas. This war must have
occurred some ten or twelve centuries before Christ, and its history is still
the heroic feature in the education of Indian boys of the upper classes. It
contains the Bhagavad Gita, as one of its episodes, and it may be said of this
short gospel that it embodies all the essential features of Northern Buddhism.
The Upanishads. - These were written at least as
early as from 2000 to 700 B.C.
They are supplementary to the Vedas, and form the great religious classics of
the Hindu people. Their subject-matter is the realisation of the super-personal
existence. For depth and grandeur they are without rivals in the literature of
the world.
The Ramayana. - The second of the great Indian epics,
dealing with the heroic love of Rama and Sita.
Kurukshetra, or Field of the
Kurus. - The great plain
in the neighbourhood of Delhi, where the eighteen days' battle, recorded in the
Mahabharata, took place. It was here that the Gita was spoken. It is now only a
place of pilgrimage.
Rajagriha. - The ancient capital of Magadha, before it was removed to Patna, within the province now known as Behar, India.
Nalanda. - The great monastery and university of Buddhist learning, in the vicinity of Rajagriha.