Page:The Religion of the Veda.djvu/167

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Transparent and Opaque Gods I 5 I


of real sentiment towards the godswPoetic inspiration the true religious feeling-“The complacent masten singersm'l‘he poets’ own estimate of their workw—The

divine quality of devotion.

OR my part I always come to this theme in the Spirit of scientific elation. You know from preceding statements what I mean by transparent gods. They are the gods who are at one and the same time nature object and person. In other words, they are mythic formations whose personi- fication is arrested by the continued action and the vivid memory of the very qualities which lead to personification, Figurativcly speaking, just when the chemical is about to precipitate or to crystalise into something unrecognisablc, and far removed from its elements, it is shaken and dissolved anew. We are spared the labor of a qualitative and quantin tative analysis. In the midst of the uncertainties and intricacies of this subject as a whole the assurance that these processes be renews the courage of the investigator. There is hope that out of the Babel of discordant opinions, many of them grown on the soil of just scepticism, the gods and the beliefs of ethnic religions will reveal their origins. I believe that, next to the Science of Language, the Science of Religion, is the clearest of mental or historical sciences, for the very reason that it is possible to