Page 5 - BHĀRATA –THE LAND OF SEERS AND SAGES
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Rishi – Head of the Human World
In the early days of the Indian civilization, the Rishi was the
head of the human world. The deep and significant ways in
which the stamp of the Rishi was imprinted on the entire life
and culture of the people has been described poetically by Sri
Aurobindo in the following passage:
“He was at once sage, poet, priest, scientist, prophet,
educator, scholar and legislator. He composed a song, and it
became one of the sacred hymns of the people; he emerged
from rapt communion with God to utter some puissant
sentence, which in after ages became the germ of mighty
philosophies; he conducted a sacrifice, and kings and peoples
rose on its seven flaming tongues to wealth and greatness; he
formulated an observant aphorism, and it was made the
foundation of some future science, ethical, practical or
physical; he gave a decision in a dispute and his verdict was
seed of a great code or legislative theory. In Himalayan forests
or by the confluence of great rivers he lived as the centre of a
patriarchal family whose link was thought-interchange and not
blood-relationship, bright-eyed children of sages, heroic
striplings, earnest pursuers of knowledge, destined to become
themselves great Rishis or renowned leaders of thought and
action.” (CWSA, Vol. 36, p. 134)