siddharta by hermann hesse
TRANSCRIPT
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Siddharta by Hermann Hesse
Summary & Analysis
from www.gradesaver.com/ClassicNotes
About Siddhartha
Published in 1922, Siddhartha is the most famous and influential novel by Nobel
prize-winning (1946) German author Hermann Hesse. Though set in India, the
concerns of Siddhartha are universal, expressing Hesse's general interest in the
conflict between mind, body, and spirit. While people have contemplated this
conflict since time immemorial, it took on a special urgency for Hesse.
Psychoanalysis had exploded onto the European intellectual scene in the first
decades of the 20th century, and its investigations into the fundamental well-
springs of human behavior revolutionized the our self-conceptions; the
sovereignty of reason was crumbling as the Id emerged supreme. As a result, a
new understanding of the whole human animal had to be worked out. Also,
political conflicts in the second decade let to a war in which technological
inventions, monuments to human reason and ingenuity, were used to slaughter
people in terrible ways. This also called for a reexamination of the relationship
between the various aspects of ourselves. These two events, the emergence of
psychoanalysis and World War I, then, set the intellectual and moral context in
which Siddhartha was written.
Hesse endorsement of unity and pacifism in Siddhartha proved too simplisticand distant for his contemporaries, and the novel receded to the back of Hesse's
growing literary corpus. It was not until after World War II that the world was
ready to read Siddhartha seriously again. In the 1950's the first English
translation of Siddhartha was published by New Directions, a publishing house
associated with Jack Kerouac and other so-called "Beat" authors. It was not until
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the 1960's, though, that Siddhartha really took its place as a fixture in the
American counterculture. The novel's mystical Indian setting and exhortation to
"find yourself" appealed this group greatly, and the novel enjoyed 22 printings by
the middle of the 1970's. The same qualities which made the book attractive to
60's counterculture, though, also tend get the book labeled as adolescentliterature, a sort of Indian Catcher in the Rye. Interestingly, the novel's use of
Indian religious/philosophical ideas has stirred some controversy as high schools
and universities debate its value as a aid in teaching Eastern religions. As
Hesse's use of these concepts is somewhat free and often Westernized,
Siddhartha is now read primarily as a beautifully crafted examination of the quest
for self-understanding.
Part One: Siddhartha
The Brahmins Son
Siddhartha, the son of a Brahmin (a Hindu Priest), and his best friend, Govinda,
have grown up learning the ways of the Brahmins. Everyone in their village loves
Siddhartha. But although he brings joy to everyone's life, Siddhartha feels little joy
himself. He is troubled by restless dreams and begins to wonder if he has learned
all that his father and the other Brahmins can teach him. As Hesse says, "...they
had already poured the sum total of their knowledge into his waiting vessel; andthe vessel was not full, his intellect was not satisfied, his soul was not at peace,
his heart was not still" (5).
Siddhartha is dissatisfied with the Brahmans because despite their knowledge,
the Brahmins are seekers still, performing the same exercises again and again in
order to reach their goal< Samanas. ascetic the to him leads that path new this
for search Siddhartha?s is It (7). error? detour, seeking
When Siddhartha announces his intention to join the Samanas, his father
becomes very upset and forbids Siddhartha's departure. In respectful defiance,
Siddhartha does not move. His frustrated father leaves him, gazing out of his
window periodically to see if Siddhartha has left. The obstinate youth, though,
remains motionless. Night passes. In the morning, Siddhartha's father returns to
his intransigent son and realizes that while Siddhartha's body remains is present,
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his mind had already departed. Siddhartha's father acquiesces to his son's
wishes and allows him to leave, reminded him that he is welcome back should he
find disillusionment with the Samanas. Govinda joins Siddhartha as they
disappear into the forest in search of the Samanas.
With the Samanas
As Samanas, Siddhartha and Govinda relinquish all their possessions and
dedicate themselves to meditation, fasting, and other methods of mortification. As
a result of this, the normal human world becomes anathema to Siddhartha. It is
all illusory and destined to decay, leaving those who treasure it in great pain. With
the Samanas, "Siddhartha had one goal< the to path for is was it But of peace
come. not did Siddhartha, memory a became pain while attained. and oblivion
into fades Self gone, When pain. as felt longer no he until endured pain, physical
through self-negation His (14). die? let sorrow
After having been with the Samanas for some time, Siddhartha expresses
concern that he is no closer to his goal than he was before joining the Samanas.
Govinda replies that while they have grown in spirit, they still have much to learn.
In response, Siddhartha derisively comparesthe Samanas' life to that of a
drunkard, a series of temporary respites from the pains of existence. Ultimately,
Siddhartha reasons, one cannot really learn anything from teachers or thedoctrines they espouse. As Siddhartha tells Govinda, "There is, my friend, only a
knowledge< the to that this for is Siddhartha by of and no he soon. Samanas
leave will declares reason, For him. teach nothing have certain feels but thoughts
his implications unsettled (19). learning? than knowledge, man enemy worse has
knowledge believe beginning am I creature, every you me in Ataman,
everywhere,>
Three years after joining the Samanas, Siddhartha and Govinda hear intriguing
rumors of a great man, Goatama, the Buddha, who, having attained
enlightenment, teaches others the way to peace. Govinda is immediately
entranced by this tale and tells Siddhartha of his intent to seek out Goatama.
Siddhartha, surprised by Govinda's uncharacteristic initiative, wishes his friend
well. Govinda, though, wishes Siddhartha to seek the Buddha with him.
Siddhartha expresses his doubt that anything new can be learned from this man,
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but surrenders to Govinda's enthusiasm and agrees to go. The leaders of the
Samanas scolds Siddhartha and Govinda for their departure. Siddhartha then
demonstrates his mastery of the Samana ways by hypnotizing the old master.
Goatama
Siddhartha and Govinda travel to Savathi, where they discover that the Buddha
is staying in Jetavana, in the garden of Anathapindika. Arriving in Jetavana,
Siddhartha recognizes Goatama immediately despite his nondescript dress: "he
wore his gown and walked along exactly like the other monks, but his face and
his step...spoke of peace, spoke of completeness,...an unfading light, an
invulnerable peace."(28). And while Siddhartha is not terribly interested in what
the Buddha has to say, he is completely taken with the Buddha's demeanor.
The two men hear Gotama's sermon, after which Govinda announces his
intention to join in Goatama's discipleship. Siddhartha commends Govinda for his
decision, but says that he will not join up. Govinda asks Siddhartha what fault he
finds in the Buddha's program that makes him resist pledging his allegiance.
Siddhartha says that he finds no fault; he just does not want to join. The next day
Govinda takes his monk's robe and bids Siddhartha a sad farewell.
As Siddhartha is leaving, he runs into Goatama in the woods and questions the
Buddha about his teachings. Siddhartha compliments the theoretical coherence
of Gotama's worldview, the ultimate unity of creation and the incessant chain of
causes and effects, but remarks that Goatama's doctrine of salvation, the
transcendence of causation, calls into question the consistency of his position.
Goatama responds by saying that he goal of his teaching is not "to explain the
world to those who are thirsty for knowledge. It's goal is quite different; its goal is
salvation from suffering. That is what Goatama teaches, nothing else" (33).
Siddhartha, afraid that he has offended the Buddha, reiterates his confidence in
the Buddha's holiness, but expresses his doubt that any teaching can ever
provide the learner with the experience of Nirvana. And while Gotama's path may
be appropriate for some, Siddhartha says that he must take his own path, lest
self-deception overtake him and he admit to Nirvana before having actually
attained it. The Buddha admonishes Siddhartha to beware his own cleverness
then wishes him well on his path.
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Awakening
As Siddhartha leaves the Buddha, he realizes that a change has overcome him:
he has outgrown the desire for teachers. From teachers he had sought to
discover the mystery of his Self. As Siddhartha says, "Truly, nothing in the world
has occupied my thoughts as much as the Self, this riddle, that I live, that I am
one and am separated and different from everybody else, that I am Siddhartha"
(38). But in seeking this Self, Siddhartha has only succeeded in fleeing from it.
He was so consumed in annihilating this Self that he had lost sight of it
completely. The path to self-knowledge< the to Siddhartha by proceed it with
Atman of a and as will knowledge I (39). Siddhartha? secret myself from learn
pupil; own my be myself, ?I it, puts Instead, others. voice listening one
This awakening leads to a change in Siddhartha's perception of the world.
Whereas he formerly reviled the world as a painful illusion, a distraction from a
submerged, unitary reality, he now sees that the value in the world of the senses.
Unlike the Brahmins and Samanas who ignored the wondrous diversity of shapes
and colors around them, seeking to reduce everything to the common
denominator of Braham, Siddhartha became convinced that truth was in the
plurality rather than the commonality of nature. As he says, "meaning and reality
were not hidden somewhere behind things, they were in them, in all of them"
(40).
This realization set Siddhartha apart from all of his previous associations. He
was no longer a Brahmin or a Samansa, and he had resisted following his friend
Govinda into the Buddha's discipleship. While this consciousness of solitude was
frightening, it was also exhilarating; untethered from these communities and
languages of thought, Siddhartha was more himself than ever. Enlivened by this
new feeling of authenticity, Siddhartha "bean to walk quickly and impatiently, no
longer homewards, no longer to his father, no longer looking backwards" (42).
Part One: Siddhartha
Analysis
The Brahmins Son
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One of the most difficult hindrances in approaching this novel in a sophisticated
manner is its use of Indian religious/philosophical concepts. Unfortunately, Hesse
does not always do a good job explaining these concepts, and so Siddhartha's
conflicts, which may be intelligible on an intuitive level, defy complete
comprehension. Many of these concepts are invoked in this first chapter, and so Iwill take the opportunity here to explicate some of the most significant of these. It
should be said, though, that this is not an authoritative elaboration of these
concepts. As within any vibrant religious or philosophical tradition, there is a
diversity of opinions on even central issues. The picture presented here is meant
only to provide the reader with enough background to appreciate the context in
which Siddhartha's life is lived.
Although Buddhist inventions become more significant as the book progresses,
Siddhartha, and Buddhism generally, take Hinduism as their starting point.
Hinduism is at its core a pantheistic religion in that it holds that, despite
appearances, the Divine, Brahman, is ultimately indistinguishable from its
creation. The world is not just suffused with the Divine, it is actually is the Divine.
This is as true of human beings as it is of every other aspect of Nature. The
aspect of the Divine which resides in humans is called Atman; it is not that this
Atman is an incomplete piece of Brahman, and that if one were to take the sum of
the Divine in all things one would constitute the whole of Brahman. Brahman is
indivisible, and so Atman is just the name we apply to Brahman in ourselves.
The phenomenal world which we daily experience is called Maya. Ultimately,
this world is an illusion, an elaborate costume which covers the essence of
Absolute Reality, Brahman, which, unnoticed, animates everything. Importantly,
our subjective selves, our egos, are Maya as well. For reasons unknown to us,
our Atman enters the cycle of birth and rebirth, Samsara, advancing through a
series of lives, from unconsciousness, to consciousness, to self-consciousness.
Self-consciousness results in the development of the ego, but it does not
terminate there. As we are not really our ego but are Atman-Brahman, we are not
fully self-conscious until we identify ourselves with our true natures. It is this
realization which liberates us from the cycle of rebirth, a liberation, Mukti, which
dissolves our individuality and reunites us the totality of being from which we
sprang.
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Siddhartha is the son of a Brahmin, a Hindu priest. According to the Hindic
concept of Karma, our condition in our present life is the direct result of our
actions in our previous lives. Being born a Brahmin means that one's soul, jiva, is
nearing the end of its journey of self-consciousness, its journey to itself. As a
Brahmin, Siddhartha's role in life is to work single-mindedly on achieving Nirvana,oneness with Brahman. It is this quest which we watch Siddhartha follow
throughout the novel.
We are told that Siddhartha is exceptionally skilled in the Brahmin's art. He
knows how to meditate on the mantra, Om, the most sacred, and recognizes the
Atman within himself. He has, we are told, learned all that the Brahmins can
teach, yet he still feels unsatisfied, the peace of Nirvana still alludes him.
Moreover, he has never seen nor heard of any Brahmin who has reached
Nirvana. If Nirvana is oneness with Brahman and Brahman is Atman, then the
path to the Nirvana must proceed inward; all other paths, all other activities,
including the path of the Brahmin must be distractions. It is for this reason that
Siddhartha joins the Samanas, hoping that their focus on self-purification will
better direct him to Atman and to Nirvana.
This brings out two important thematic issues to consider when reading the
novel. First, the relationship between the actual practice of Hinduism and the
beliefs and attitudes espoused by Hesse's Siddhartha. Hinduism, in theory at
least, is an extraordinarily tolerant religion, asserting that that are many different
ways one can approach the Divine. Which way appeals to each person depends
on the person; no path is ultimately better than another. There is a definite sense
in which Siddhartha's denunciation of Brahminism appears more than merely an
acknowledgment that it doesn't quite work for himself. By noting that he has
known no Brahmin who has achieved Nirvana, Siddhartha seems to be saying
that Brahminism will not lead to Nirvana. Such universal claims may fit the tenor
of Hesse's universal exhortation to self-awareness< the to is of not be Hinduism.
perspective represent do they Everyman
Second, there is a tension between two of Siddhartha's pursuits, discovering
what is true of the world and finding a life of absolute peace. It seems at this point
that Siddhartha is conflating these two: that which is true will bring peace. This is
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underscored by the fact that Siddhartha's lack of peace is regularly explicated in
terms of his being "thirsty for knowledge" (4). Perhaps knowledge will not bring
peace. Perhaps peace does not rely on knowledge. These concerns are taken up
at greater length later in the novel.
It is also important to see how the life of Siddhartha is meant to parallel the life
of the Buddha, referred to in the novel only by his last name, Goatama.
(Siddhartha is also the Buddha's first name). Though the Buddha was born a
prince and not a Brahmin, he was also possessed of things which make an
earthly life easier, including precocious intelligence and a fine physical form.
(Hesse tells us, "Love stirred in the hearts of the young Brahmins' daughters
when Siddhartha walked through the streets of the town, with his lofty brow, his
king-like eyes and his slim figure" (4)). Despite these traits, both men dedicated
themselves to a religious/philosophical life. Drawing such parallelism between
Siddhartha and the Buddha is a way of foreshadowing the general direction of
Siddhartha's path. A full scale comparison between the two men is not necessary
to understand the novel, but one should be aware of the intentional similarities.
(For those who wish to know more, a good resource on the life of the Buddha is
Paul Carus' The Gospel of the Buddha).
In terms of actual writing, Hesse's language is remarkably simple. Take the first
sentence for example: "In the shade of the house, in the sunshine on the river
bank by the boats, in the shade of the sallow wood and the fig tree, Siddhartha,
the handsome Brahmin's son, grew up with his friend Govinda" (3). The sentence
structure is uncomplicated, just a string of descriptions linked list-like by commas.
The descriptions too are straightforward, using common images, which, while
simple, conjure clear and potent mental pictures, words like Oshade,' Osunshine,'
and Oriver.' This style contrasts powerfully with the complex, abstract concepts
which Hesse attempts to convey. This combination, though, helps give a religious
tone to the writing, highlighted by the repeated allusions to Hindu holy books,
notably the Upanishads and the Rig Veda. This is underscored by the
commandment-like punctuation and syntax of the novel, setting certain
statements apart from the writing with a colon. For example, "In the evening, after
the hour of contemplation, Siddhartha said to Govinda: OTomorrow morning, by
friend, Siddhartha is going to join the Samansas. He is going to become a
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Samansa" (9). The use of the third person in self-referential utterances< the to is
it a in voice an parable-like. or allegorical almost religious, more seem makes
which novelistic objectivity provides self-awareness?also about ostensibly novel>
This allegorical quality is further developed by the novel's use of somewhat
hyperbolic though picturesque images to depict ordinary events like the passage
of time: "The Brahmin was silent so long that the stars passed across the small
window and changed their design before the silence in the room was finally
broken" (10). In addition, the rather flat characterization of the protagonists
heightens the impersonal symbolism of Siddhartha's journey; it is as if we are
given just enough of Siddhartha's personality to identify with his quest, but not
enough to fill him out as a realistic character. Indeed, even those circumstances
in which Siddhartha seems to be distracted from his goal, circumstances in which
he seems the most human, are transformed into educational experiences,
necessary for his eventual enlightenment. Hesse's use of narrative repetition, as
with Siddhartha's father's repeatedly checking on his obstinate son throughout
the night, also lends the novel an allegorical air, an air which, while providing rich
and interesting details, also raises the story above the local and announces an
intention to provide a lesson valuable to all readers.
With the Samanas
Siddhartha's time with the Samanas marks the first leg of his spiritual quest. As
an ascetic, Siddhartha sheds all of his possessions and practices mortification of
the flesh in the service of his "one goal< the to him that path Siddhartha?s Self,
Siddhartha on with of peace not and Self longer he (14). die? let sorrow
The Self can be divided into two basic components, the ego and the Atman.
The ego is the consciousness which differentiates an individual from all other
things. The Atman, as we have seen, is the consciousness which unites an
individual with all other things. Ego is Maya and diversity is an illusion; underlying
all individuation in form is a great unity, Brahman. Becoming empty of thirst,
desires, pleasure, and sorrow means not identifying oneself with the ego, the
seat of thirst, desires, pleasure, and sorrow. Instead of ego, one identifies oneself
with Atman and so loses the differentiation which ego provides. This is what
Hesse means when he says that "when all the Self was conquered and dead,
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when all passions and desires were silent, then the last must awaken, the
innermost of Being which is no longer Self" (14).
The effect this desire to be rid of Self has on Siddhartha is very interesting. We
are told that Siddhartha saw the various aspects of ordinary human life as "not
worth a passing glance,....[E]verything lied, stank of lies; they were illusions of
sense, happiness, and beauty. All were doomed to decay. The world tasted bitter.
Life was pain" (14). This is a curious thing to say since not all ordinary life< the to
that this is It was source world on it with of a and pain. as will in be which their
pain? preclude way best participates ego ephemeral reality denying words, other
In pain.?? ?Life declaration encompassed attitude merit finitude realization simple
Does end. ultimately people, including things, external rely pleasures all fact
ephemerality, seems generalization? pessimistic such What filled life
This question again raises a concern about a theme discussed previously, the
relationship between the search for truth and the truth for peace. Put in these
terms, the question becomes, do we posit a reality beyond the ego only to
escape the pains of finitude, or do we deny the ego because we know that there
is a reality beyond it which more truthfully represents our nature? This issues
comes to a head in the next chapter when Siddhartha speaks to the Buddha. At
the present, though, it is unclear where Siddhartha's answer would be.
Another important question is why the path of Samanas does not allow
Siddhartha to reach his goal. We are told that "he slipped out of his Self in a
thousand different forms. He was animal, carcass, stone, wood, water, and each
time he reawakened" (15). Why? The answer seems to be that he has been
relying on the teachings of others to guide him. As with the Brahmins, Siddhartha
knows of no Samana who has actually attained Nirvana. Where Govinda pleads
that they still have much to learn from their teachers, Siddhartha repudiates
teaching altogether. Siddhartha hypothesizes that the path to the Self must beself-directed; Atman directs itself to itself.
It is in the midst of this disillusionment with teachers that The Buddha appears
on the scene. His arrival is the sort of turn of events which might seem a cheap
contrivance in a regular novel, but in a allegorical work such as this, its
occurrence in an instance of the novel's moral structure. Just when Siddhartha
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loses faith in instruction because none of his instructors have actually achieved
the goal towards which they direct others, an instructor who has achieved the
goal appears. Thus, Siddhartha and Govinda's departure to meet the Buddha
seems preordained, an appropriate seeming for an allegory. Also preordained is
Govinda's conflicts with Siddhartha, the former in favor of orthodoxy and learningfrom others while the latter favors the iconoclasm of self-teaching. It is, after all,
Govinda who suggests the trip to see the Buddha. This trait of Govinda's makes
Siddhartha's comments about Govinda's independence ironic.
The above conflict is an instance of the constant juxtaposition between
Siddhartha and Govinda in the novel. The latter is a foil to the former, allowing
Hesse to highlight the unique qualities of Siddhartha by contrasting him with
Govinda. As these two friends begin the novel at approximately the same point in
their spiritual journey, their later differences help emphasize just how Siddhartha
has come. This significance of this juxtaposition to the novel generally is
demonstrated by Govinda's reappearance in the novel whenever Siddhartha
ends one phase of his life to begin another. Also, it might be said that
juxtaposition characterizes the form of the novel more generally as at any
moment in the novel Siddhartha is defined by his battle between two opposing
forces, i.e. sense and thought, Maya and Brahman, pain and peace, etc. It is his
position between these poles which designates Siddhartha's progress down his
path to enlightenment.
And as we are supposed to identify Siddhartha with the Buddha, there is also
interesting foreshadowing of Siddhartha's own path in the early descriptions of
the Buddha. We are told that "this alleged Buddha had formerly been an ascetic
and had lived in the woods, [and] had then turned to high living and the pleasures
of the world" (21). This is, of course, what Siddhartha does in Part II.
Siddhartha's hyponosis of the old Samana master at the end of the chapter highlights his superiority over his teachers, forcing us to conclude that if
Siddhartha cannot reach Nirvana by the Samana path, it is impossible for anyone
to do so. This episode allows Hesse to close off this aspect of Siddhartha's past;
he truly has no more to learn from this type of life. Again, a hyperbolic, almost
inhuman happening which becomes appropriate in the context of a allegory.
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Goatama
The unique nature of the Buddha is brought out right at the beginning of the
chapter. We are told that the Buddha is resting at his favorite abode, a grove
given to him by a rich merchant, a great devotee. Such an association with
worldly things would surely have been avoided by the ascetic Samanas. As the
Buddha is superior to the Samanas< the to that path Siddhartha?s is world with
not a while Samanas have has in they This fact II. Part life worldly turning
foreshadows again salvation. only renouncing believing wrong were means
trappings uncomfortable Buddha not
Siddhartha's immediate recognition of the Buddha highlights Siddhartha's
uniqueness, especially in contrast to Govinda, whom we are told recognizes the
Buddha only when he is pointed out. The initial descriptions of the Buddha are
important in understanding the concept of Nirvana, the goal for which Siddhartha
strives. Hesse tells us that the Buddha's "peaceful countenance was neither
happy nor sad," so the experience of Nirvana cannot be reduced to an emotions
such as happiness (28). Rather than happy, the Buddha is content, peaceful and
complete, lacking nothing: "Every finger of his hand spoke of peace, spoke of
completeness, sought nothing, imitated nothing, reflected a continuos quiet, an
fading light, an invulnerable peace" (28). Siddhartha's preternatural perception of
all of this in the Buddha's manner speaks to the importance of this interaction
between the Buddha and Siddhartha and helps explain Siddhartha's
enchantment with the Buddha. "Never had Siddhartha esteemed a man so much,
never had he loved a man so much" (28). It is important to recognize that this
esteem and love is offered without ever hearing the Buddha speak. In fact,
"[Siddhartha] was not very curious about the teachings" (28). This shift in focus
from words and teachings to experiencing particular states of consciousness is
very significant and sets the stage for the next stage in Siddhartha's quest.
The Buddha's actual sermon is an abbreviated allusion to Buddhism's Four
Noble Truths. As Hesse puts it, "Life was pain, the world was full of suffering, but
the path to the release of suffering had been found. There was salvation for those
who went the way of the Buddha" (29). (It does not seem coincidental that the
book is separated into two parts, part I with 4 chapters and part II with 8 chapters:
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there are Four Noble Truths to Buddhism and the Buddha's path to salvation is
called the Eightfold path). This focus on suffering and the attainment of peace as
the abolition of suffering is very important to the novel. This is central to
Siddhartha's discussion with the Buddha, which forms the start of the climax of
part I of the book.
There are two thematic concerns at the heart of Siddhartha and the Buddha's
discussion, both of which we have discussed previously. The first relies on the
relationship between seeking truth and seeking peace. To express the same
point another way, the question is one of metaphysics or ethics, a question of
reality, truth, and knowledge or how one should live one's life. Siddhartha tells the
Buddha that his view of the universe as cause and effect, his metaphysics, is
unimpeachable, but it seems to break down at a crucial point, the point at which
we are able to escape from this causal chain, the point of salvation. The Buddha
responds that the goal of his teaching is "not to explain the world to those who
are thirsty for knowledge. Its goal is quite different; its goal is salvation from
suffering. That is what Goatama teaches, nothing else" (33).
This means that the Buddha is privileging ethics over metaphysics. Finding
peace from suffering is what matters, not discovering the true nature of ourselves
or of the universe. This comports with the Buddhist doctrine of AnAtman, or no-
soul, which denies the Hindu duality between the absolute reality of Brahman and
the false reality of Maya. Given that the pain from which Siddhartha has tried to
escape is specifically the pain of metaphysical ignorance, it is odd that he does
not respond to the Buddha here. We will return to this question later, as it seems
to be one of the unresolved issues in the novel.
Siddhartha then expresses doubt that the Buddha's teaching can ever bring
someone to Nirvana. As Siddhartha says, "The teachings of the enlightened
Buddha embrace much, they teach much< the to that this Siddhartha?s is one byit But of not a become For feels I you secret be seem experience does because
This fact seems such only reached mark. off comments this, Given yourself.
intoxicated how tell cannot mean like being what telling make example,
consciousness. state achieved; first-personally known can goal nature approach
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tells Buddhism true. course, This, oneself. Nirvana, secret, (34). thousands?
hundreds among alone experienced
Siddhartha's commentary is really a metaphysical rather than an ethical point.
Siddhartha believes that the Self as Atman will guide us through some sort of
inner voice. This is why he denies the value of teachers; they distract one from
this inner guide. The Buddha does not believe in the Atman, at least not in the
same way, and so seems to believe that people can be taught to approach
Nirvana. It is Siddhartha's metaphysics, then, his view of what the Self really is,
that makes him dissatisfied with Buddhism. This is what Siddhartha is getting at
when he responds that "I must judge for myself. I must choose and reject" (35).
While the Buddha's path may work for some, it does not work for himself. He
must follow his inner voice. If this is true, though, why does Siddhartha respond
to the Buddha that there is nothing wrong with other people following his
teachings. Is it that their inner voice tells them different things than Siddhartha's?
How could this be if the Atman is really Brahman, the unity of all things. If their
voices are the same, either they are right in following Buddha's path or
Siddhartha is right in rejecting it. This problem raises tensions which are more
fully developed in the next chapter.
Awakening
In this final chapter of part I, Siddhartha reviews all of his experiences up to that
point and comes to conclusions that will shape his future. First, he concludes that
he is done with teachers. This was clear from the previous chapter. He then asks
what he intended to learn from the teachers and answers that he sought to know
the nature of Self. The way he expresses this is very interesting. He says, "truly
nothing in the world has occupied my thoughts as much as the Self, this riddle,
that I live, that I am one and am separated and different from everyone else, that
I am Siddhartha" (38). This provides an enlightening interpretation of Siddhartha'squest, because it is the first time he considers the Self as a solitary unity apart
from the substratum of Atman to which the ego is attached. He has sought that
which unites him with all things instead of that which marks him as distinct, as
Siddhartha.
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Siddhartha admits this in the next paragraph, saying that "the reason why I do
not know anything about myself...is due to one thing, to one single thing< the to
that this for is was one one?s Siddhartha on by with Atman of a and Self as his
than I in myself from myself, more does reality all seems chapter. first clear made
quest surprising shock That point. precisely personality: singular objectiveexpansive identifying commit view Yes, (38). way? lost so, doing things....But
nucleus Atman,...the Brahman, seeking myself. fleeing afraid>
After this "awakening," Siddhartha commits himself to learning from himself and
not search single-mindedly for Atman. While this seems a result of his previous
experiences, a continuity with his previous behaviors, it is actually a radical shift,
one which contrasts Siddhartha's path from any traditionally associated with
Indian religion/philosophy. This concern with authenticity, being true to one's
particularity, derives from a decidedly Western context, and it is in this direction
that Siddhartha moves in this chapter. Moreover, it is not clear why Siddhartha
makes this move. He has lost himself on the way, but it is not clear why this is
bad. It was not an unexpected side-effect of his quest. It was the very heart of it.
Hesse doesn't seem to make this any easier as he equivocates in his use of the
term OSelf.' The only reason for change consistent with Siddhartha's past is that
suggested by his conversation with the Buddha: his previous paths have not
alleviated his suffering. This is a far cry from Siddhartha's present contention that
he has failed because he has lost himself. Siddhartha's logic here seems
obscure.
The effect of Siddhartha's contemplation is his denial of Hindu duality; he know
longer believes that the world in which we commonly live is an illusion, Maya. As
he says, "Meaning and reality were not hidden somewhere behind things, they
were in them, in all of them" (40). Why he decides this, though, is not clear. All in
all, it seems like a convenient way to conclude Siddhartha's life as a thinker, the
first part of his tripartite quest. There seems to be no obvious connection between
listening to one's inner voice and appreciating the diversity of the world. The
voice is not necessarily any more part of the world< the to him that this is was it.
one Siddhartha world by with Atman But of not a while and into he have but than
has in from are Indian an or more which two He out This In Buddha like Nirvana,
alone himself context. Eastern ideas Western importing Hesse extent
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underscores further thinkers convictions spiritual deepest against solitude
harrowing sense Camus. Sartre Kierkegaard come could ever,? firmly despair,
icy feeling overwhelmed heavens, star stood when away, melted around moment,
?At sentence Indeed, Existentialism. European precursor startling chapter
paragraphs last surprisingly, Somewhat close. chapter?s powerfully brought path,another traveling far this. done yet awakened tree. Bodhi under awakening
Buddha?s mirror meant transfiguration Buddha, agrees case, any rejecting. now
thought-centered it
Part Two: Siddhartha
Kamala
After rejecting his former beliefs about the world's suspicious, illusory character,Siddhartha becomes enthralled by its beauteous details. He reflects on his
previous experiences and realizes that "he had never found his Self, because he
had wanted to trap it in the net of thoughts" (47). Neither, though, is the Self to be
trapped in the net of senses. The Self is a totality which cannot be understood
through only one aspect. Siddhartha, then, resolves "only [to] strive after
whatever the inward voice commanded him, not tarry anywhere but where the
voice advised him" (48).
Having left Govinda and the Buddha, Siddhartha spends the night in a
Ferryman's hut. There he dreams of suckling the bosom of a woman and tasting
the pleasures of life. The next morning he meets the Ferryman and crosses the
river. Siddhartha admits to having no money to pay for the voyage, but the
Ferryman says that friendship is payment enough. Siddhartha then comes to a
village where he meets a woman with whom he comes close to having sex. He
stops, though, just before the point of intercourse because his inner voice
commands him not to do so. Leaving the woman, Siddhartha continues on to a
large town where he sees a beautiful woman being carried on a sedan chair by
her servants. Smitten, Siddhartha determines to met her and enters town to make
himself presentable.
A couple of days later, Siddhartha returns to the grove where he saw the
beautiful woman< the to him that for is Siddhartha with of not a and he will teach
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but in do which The such only what when job. give who Kamaswami merchant
see instructs she Kamala returns day next poem. kiss trading before robe, away
sends fasting. waiting, thinking, replies, has, skills asks She things. acquire might
where gifts. her buy money shoes, clothes, nice obtains so responds Love. art
acquaintance, Making her. meet begs Kamala
Amongst the People
At Kamala's request, Siddhartha goes to see Kamaswami. The merchant asks
Siddhartha about his background and skills. After some philosophical wordplay,
Kamaswami learns that Siddhartha can read and write and offers him a job.
Siddhartha moves into the merchant's house and learns about business. Soon he
is living on his own and visiting Kamala regularly for his love lessons. "Here with
Kamala lay the value and meaning of his present life, not in Kamaswami's
business" (66).
Although Siddhartha is successful as a merchant, he shows little enthusiasm for
business or anything else except for being with Kamala. This lack of enthusiasm
stems from a realization Siddhartha has about his relations with other people;
"Although he found it so easy to speak to everyone,...he was very conscious of
the fact that there was something that separated him from them< the to him that
this is was ever of not a and Self felt he his than in from do which The He Thisfact ordinary life only who has. anyone better knows admits Kamala, involved
truly aspect activities. daily participating really indicates distance possess. people
behaviors emotions possesses (70). Samana? been had due>
The more time Siddhartha spent in the town, the more distracted he became
from his quest. As Hesse puts it, "At times he heard within him a soft, gentle
voice, which reminded him quietly, complained quietly, so that he could hardly
hear it" (71). The only outlet he had for reflection was with Kamala with whom he
would discuss the Buddha and the nature of enlightenment. Kamala remarks that
Siddhartha's frequent recollections of the Buddha indicates that he is a Samana
still at heart, a state which prevent him from fully appreciating his present
existence.
Samsara
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At last, Siddhartha begins to feel attached to ordinary life. The consequence of
this, however, was that "that eager readiness to hear the divine voice within his
own heart had gradually become a memory, had passed" (76). This transition
was not easy, though. While he excites his senses and narrows the distance
between his Self and his daily activities, Siddhartha does not possess the senseof importance with which ordinary people live their lives, and for this he envies
them.
Eventually, "the soul sickness of the rich crept over him, and Siddhartha gives
himself completely to his acquisitiveness and his insatiable desire to consume
(78). This change is most profoundly represented by Siddhartha's passionate
gambling. Siddhartha begins gambling as a way to show his contempt for riches,
but soon the thrill of the game became its own reward, the higher the stakes, the
more potent the intoxication. This downward spiral is finally arrested by a dream
Siddhartha has.
Earlier during the night of the dream, Siddhartha notices the first traces of age
on Kamala's face, provoking Siddhartha's own fear of mortality. After he leaves
Kamala, he tries to deaden his anxieties in an orgy of dance and wine, but this
only makes him feel more sick and desperate. That night he dreams that
Kamala's songbird has died and that he threw its carcass out into the street. At
this discarding of the bird, Siddhartha feels that he had discarded all that was
valuable within himself. Upon waking, Siddhartha goes to his pleasure garden
and reflects upon his life to that point. He realizes that he is tired of his present
life, his hedonistic routine and his possessions. Siddhartha then leaves the town,
never to return. When Kamala hears of his departure, which was not unexpected,
she releases her songbird and closes her house to visitors. After a time, she
discovers she is pregnant with Siddhartha's child.
By the River
After leaving town, Siddhartha returns to the river where had met the ferryman.
Disillusioned with himself and the world, he contemplates suicide. As Hesse
says, "There was no more purpose; there was nothing more than a deep, painful
longing to shake off this whole confused dream, to spit out this stale wine, to
make an end of this bitter, painful life" (88). Right before he surrenders to a
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watery death, though, Siddhartha hears the sound "Om" emanating from within
him. Although he stops his self-destruction, his crisis deepens as he begins to
understand how wretched his life has been. Overwhelmed, Siddhartha falls into a
deep sleep.
When he awakes from this sleep, Siddhartha feels refreshed and happy. At first
he wonders if perhaps he actually did die and was reborn anew. Eventually,
though, "he recognized himself, he recognized his hands and feet, the place
where he lay and the Self in his breast, Siddhartha, self-willed, individualistic"
(91). Soon he realizes that his old friend Govinda is near him. Govinda, not
recognizing Siddhartha in the garb of a rich man, tells him that he stopped to
watch over his sleep. Siddhartha discloses his identity, and the two friends speak
briefly before Govinda returns to the Buddha.
Siddhartha sits by the river for a while and considers his life, concluding that
although his recent existence has almost pressed him to suicide, it was good for
him to have lived it. As Siddhartha says, "I had to experience despair, I had to
sink to the greatest mental depths, to thoughts of suicide in order to experience
grace, to hear Om again, to sleep deeply again and to awaken refreshed again"
(97). He had to let the Brahmin, the Samana, the pleasure-monger, and the man
of property all die in order to find the self that lurked beneath these identities.
Now he is happy and free like a child, possessed of a great capacity to love. He
is now ready to complete his life's journey.
The Ferryman
Intrigued by the river's beauty and silent wisdom, Siddhartha decides to stay by
the river. Siddhartha soon meets the ferryman Vasuveda who had taken him
across the river at the beginning at Part II. Siddhartha soon discloses all his
thoughts to Vasuveda who has a remarkable aptitude for listening. He tells
Vasuveda his life story up to his recent experience by the river, and Vasuveda
entreats him to stay with him.
The two grow together as Siddhartha begins to learn the river's wisdom. Among
this wisdom is the unreality of time, which Siddhartha expresses by analogy to
reincarnation. As he says, "Siddhartha's previous lives were also not in the past,
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and his death and his return to Brahma are not in the future. Nothing was nothing
will be, everything has reality and presence" (107). Transformed by this wisdom,
Siddhartha begins to emulate Vasuveda's demeanor, expressing a contented
peace in the routine of daily life. Years pass.
One day the two ferrymen hear that the Buddha is dying. Kamala, on hearing
the news as well, travels with her son to be near Goatama as be passes into
eternity. As she sits down to rest in the forest, she is bitten by a snake. She cries
for help, and the nearby Vesuveda comes to her aid. The old ferryman takes her
back to his hut where Siddhartha immediately recognizes her. The dying Kamala
introduces Siddhartha to his son. On recognizing that Siddhartha has finally
found the peace he sought for so long, she dies. As Hesse says, "It had been her
intention to make a pilgrimage to Goatama...to obtain some peace, and instead
she found only Siddhartha, and it was good, just as good as if she had seen the
other" (113). Vesuveda and Siddhartha make her funeral pyre as the young boy
sleeps.
The Son
After Kamala dies, Siddhartha keeps his son with him by the river. The boy,
though, refuses to accept Siddhartha as his father and consequently does
nothing he is told. As Hesse says, "[Siddhartha] had considered himself rich andhappy when the boy had come to him, but as time passed and the boy remained
unfriendly and sulky,...Siddhartha began to realize that no happiness and peace
had come to him with his son, only sorrow and trouble" (118). Many months pass,
but the boy remains intransigent. Vasuveda advises Siddhartha to let the boy
leave and rejoin the life of which his mother's death deprived him. Siddhartha
agrees in theory, but he cannot let his son go. He loves the boy as he has loved
no other and wants to save him the misery of his own follies in the town.
Siddhartha begins to feel that this experience with his son had awakened new
emotions in him. We are told that "he had never undergone the follies of love for
another person. He had never been able to do this, and it had then seemed to
him that this was the biggest difference between him and the ordinary people
(122). And although Siddhartha recognized that this passion was in the end no
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better than the passion for wine or women, he indulged himself, feeling that this
folly had to be experienced in order to complete his worldly education.
Eventually, the boy runs away and Siddhartha becomes very distraught.
Vasuveda tells Siddhartha to let him go, but Siddhartha follows him. Upon
reaching the town, Siddhartha recalls his own experiences there and admits to
himself what he knew all along, that he cannot stop the boy from living his own
life. Siddhartha feels a great sorrow at this loss, and the happiness he had known
as a Ferryman leaves him. He sits down and waits for his suffering to cease,
murmuring "Om" to himself to counteract the pain. Vasuveda soon arrives and
leads the despondent Siddhartha back to the river.
Om
The pain of losing his son is long-lasting for Siddhartha. It enables him,
however, to identify with ordinary people more than ever before. He reasons that
"with the exception of one small thing, one tiny little thing, they, [ordinary people]
lacked nothing that the sage and thinker had, and that was the consciousness of
the unity of all life" (130). Siddhartha even doubts the value of this
consciousness. Perhaps, as he has said before, the experience of unity rather
than a knowledge of it is what is ultimately important.
Though his sorrow allows Siddhartha to begin to understand what wisdom really
is, the thought of his son has not left him. One day his pain becomes too much
and Siddhartha sets off in a desperate search of his son, but stops as he hears
the river laughing at him. He looks into the river, sees his own father whom he
had left, and turns back, concluding that "everything that was not suffered to the
end and finally concluded, recurred, and the same sorrows were undergone"
(132). Returning to his hut, Siddhartha tells Vasuveda all of this, but as he does,
Siddhartha notices a remarkable change in the old man.
After having heard of Siddhartha's woe, Vasuveda leads Siddhartha back to the
river, imploring him to listen deeply. At first Siddhartha hears only the voices of
sorrow, but these voices are soon joined by voices of joy, and at last all the
voices are subsumed under the great sound of "Om." Realizing the unity of these
voices, Siddhartha's pain fades away and "his Self had merged into unity" (136).
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He has at last found salvation. Recognizing his friend's achievement, Vasuveda
departs into the woods to die, thereby joining the unity he had helped Siddhartha
find at last.
Govinda
Still restless and unsatisfied after all his years of searching, Govinda goes to
speak to the Ferryman reputed to be a sage. The Ferryman, Siddhartha,
recognizes Govinda immediately, though Govinda does not recognize him.
Govinda tells Siddhartha about his inability to find what he has so long sought.
Siddhartha tells Govinda that he does not find because he pays too much
attention to the search. As Siddhartha says, "Seeking means: to have a goal; but
finding means: to be free, to be receptive, to have no goal" (140). When
Siddhartha finally addresses Govinda by name, Govinda recognizes him, and
happy to have reunited after so long, Govinda spends the night at Siddhartha's
hut.
The next day Govinda asks Siddhartha to explain the doctrines by which he
lives. Siddhartha repeats his oft mentioned refrain that he eschews teachers and
doctrines, arguing that while knowledge is communicable wisdom is not; "one can
find it, live it, be fortified by it, do wonders through it, but one cannot
communicate and teach it" (142). This leads Siddhartha to express his doubtsabout words altogether. According to Siddhartha, words never express the entire
truth of anything. The reason for this is that time is not real. Contrary to our
words, there is no thing which is only one thing; every thing is always everything.
The lesson that Siddhartha draws from the unity of all things in everything is that
"everything that exists is good....Everything is necessary, everything needs only
my agreement, my assent, my loving understanding" (144). Ultimately,
expressing love and admiration toward all things is the most important thing in the
world. Govinda is confused by most of what Siddhartha says, but he feels certainthat his old friend is a holy man.
Preparing to leave, Govinda asks Siddhartha for something to help him along
his path. Siddhartha tells Govinda to kiss his forehead. Doing so causes Govinda
to see a continuous stream of different faces in place of Siddhartha's.
Overwhelmed by this display of unity and timelessness, Govinda falls to ground
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in front of the man "whose smile reminded him or everything that he had ever
loved in his life, of everything that had ever been of value and holy in his life"
(152).
Part Two: Analysis
Kamala
This chapter is the beginning of Siddhartha's new life. He no longer believes
that this world hides a more true one behind it. Siddhartha's goal from now on is
to discover his place in this world, which requires his experiencing all aspects of
it. The contemplative and ascetic lives robbed him of this totality. He will no
longer privilege any aspect of his being, thought or senses; he will only listen to
the prompting of his inner voice. Just what this voice is and where it comes fromis not clear. Was it always really there, just hidden? Does its interiority mean it is
a distinct aspect of the Self from thoughts or senses? If it is, is it of this world, like
thoughts and senses, or is it somewhere else, hidden? There seems to be no
simple answer to these questions. Siddhartha simply acquiesces to its will,
granting it an authority which is not justified except with the facile justification that
it is himself. But since the nature of Self is precisely at issue, this seems an
unsatisfactory answer.
Alone, Siddhartha spends the night in a Ferryman's cabin and has a dream in
which he suckles the bosom of a woman. This symbolizes the newness of
Siddhartha's present path, a second childhood of sorts. As Thoreau wished to
suck the marrow from life, Siddhartha wishes to suck as much from his allegorical
mother, life, as he can. The pleasurable and intoxicating effects of this
foreshadows Siddhartha's turn to a sensuous and sensual life.
There is foreshadowing as well in Siddhartha's interaction with the Ferryman.
First, the Ferryman suggests that one can learn much from the river if one only
listens. After Siddhartha's disillusionment with a life of the senses, he learns how
to synthesize a life of thought and the senses by listening to the voice of the river.
Second, the Ferryman proclaims that Siddhartha will come back to the river as
his friend, which happens later in the novel. Siddhartha's comparison of the
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Ferryman to Govinda also presages the Ferryman's future status as Siddhartha's
faithful companion.
Siddhartha's rather unlikely interactions with the woman by the river emphasize
the mythic quality of the story as well as foreshadow the importance the art of
love will have in Siddhartha's near future, a future beginning with his meeting of
Kamala. Kamala is the great archetype of the woman in the novel< the to him that
is it. Siddhartha world if not a and he have than has in more which novel other
fact worldly only were reached like can there clear when around Buddha?s she
She might her knows Nirvana). would sex, powerful anything remark suggests
relationship (This trappings. gathered enjoy coincidentally, which, offering Love,
offer, finest represents sensual voluptuous (51). gown? gold green above neck
slender observant, clever eyes, dark arch, high painted eyebrows artful fig, cut
freshly mouth red bright face, very sweet, bright, saw hair black heaped-up
?Beneath introduction: Consider universality. toward pretenses Hesse?s
undermine all, at woman>
Also, the prominence of the number three in this section is indicative of a
pattern throughout the novel, heightening both its allegorical and religious
quality< the to for Siddhartha?s is one Siddhartha with of a and into as he will
him. teach in which these wants life Brahman, she Kamala before skills acquire
possesses unity. great synthesizes senses, identifies thought, periods: distinct
three divided well, level broader On things instance, are, There Destroyer. Shiva
Preserver, Vishnu Creator, Brahma parts, separated Hinduism, God Christianity,>
Amongst the People
This chapter introduces Kamaswami, Siddhartha's employer. Like Kamala,
Kamaswami represents worldly existence; he even shares two of her strongest
traits, clever eyes and a sensual mouth. This focus on the mouth signifies the
strength of the appetitive and consuming in Kamaswami and Kamala, acquisition
of money for the former and sex for the latter.
The most important thing to take from this chapter is Siddhartha's awareness of
how profoundly he is separated from common people. While he entered the city
with a mind to experience life fully, his attitude has not changed so much from
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when he was a Samana. He still maintains the distance between his lived life and
his Self which characterized his former belief in the duality of the world. That this
is problematic for Siddhartha is demonstrated by the quiet revolt of his inner
voice, "which reminded him quietly, complained quietly, so that he could hardly
hear it" (71). The only area in which this distance is bridged is his time withKamala, though not completely, as she notes. That love is the highest form of
worldly existence is indicated again by the fact that in love giving and taking
become one, a sublimation of the more materialistic commerce which
Kamaswami represents.
It is also notable that Siddhartha finally identifies himself with another living
person. Although there is a certain similarity between Siddhartha and the most
significant persons in previous chapters, his Father, Govinda, Goatama, this is
the first time Siddhartha notes this similarity himself. It is curious, though, in what
way this similarity is drawn out. While Kamala was first presented as the
embodiment of worldly living, Siddhartha finds that they share a distance from
their lives. As Siddhartha says to Kamala, "within in you there is a stillness and
sanctuary to which you can retreat at any time and be yourself" (71). While this
quality seems at first to be positive, by the end of the chapter it takes on a
potentially negative tone. This is expressed in Siddhartha's statement that
"Maybe...I am like you. You cannot love either, otherwise how could you practice
love as an art? Perhaps people like us cannot love. Ordinary people can< the to
that Siddhartha?s is one Siddhartha with then finding of not and as he his in an
makes which experience their does because This way words, other In realization
love foreshadows cannot goal himself live quest give she Kamala next truly
toward world. fully gives journey, stage pointing well impossible, often searching
future living. actual progress concerned too art. living practices implication art, If
(73). secret?>
Samsara
This chapter completes Siddhartha's journey into the world of ordinary living.
While he enjoys a feast for the senses previously unknown to him, he loses sight
of himself, his inner voice drowned out by the din of stimulation which Siddhartha
experiences. It is interesting that Siddhartha experiences primarily the negative
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results of this existence, "the soul sickness of greed." Why this happens is not so
clear. Hesse tells us that Siddhartha envied the ordinary people because he
lacked "the sense of importance with which they lived their lives, the depth of
their pleasures and sorrows, the anxious but sweet happiness of their continual
power to love" (77). Ironically enough, this seems to indicate that Siddhartha'sproblem in this regard was that he did not give himself enough to this life; while
he sought to satisfy his senses, he retained enough of his distant, thinking self to
feel guilty at his behaviors. Why did the copresence of thought and sense create
such a problem for Siddhartha? Are we to assume that those who feel the
importance that Siddhartha lacked had completely forsaken their thinking selves,
that they really were children? Why couldn't Siddhartha gain their self-importance
by losing his thinking self? It seems as if the most likely answer is that Siddhartha
is really different than most people. While everyone possesses an inner voice,not everyone has heard it. Siddhartha has and because of this, he can never live
the life of an ordinary man. What may be innocuous or beneficial for others takes
on a bad taste in Siddhartha's mouth. Again, though, this limits the universality of
Siddhartha's quest.
Siddhartha's obsession with dice symbolizes the Hindu cycle of death and
rebirth known as Samara, not coincidentally, the name of this chapter. That
Siddhartha is sickened by his unending participation in this "senseless cycle"
indicates his readiness to step out of Samara, to liberate himself from the
scourge of time and find Nirvana. As Siddhartha says when reflecting about his
whole life in the town, "this was a game called Samsara, a game for children, a
game which was perhaps enjoyable played once, twice, ten times< the to that
Siddhartha?s is It was Siddhartha it with of not a and as no he until through in
from represent they which experience their interesting In can Buddhism first
Hesse could people at Truth. Noble e.g. suffering, universality stresses closer
much defeating futile core its Samsara idea nature. true appreciate pass learning
possible. quickly escape something bad, wholly cosmology, Hindu addiction.
gambling bad unconditionally chooses (84). longer? play finished game knew
Then continually? playing worth>
The chapter's focus on Samsara is also brought out in Siddhartha's first
awareness of his own mortality. Samara is a cycle of rebirth, but every beginning
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requires an end to what preceded it. Seeing old age beginning to overtake
Kamala, Siddhartha realizes that staying in this world, living according to the
rules of its game, means a continuous series of deaths as well as lives.
Renouncing Samara and ordinary human life is renouncing inevitable death. This
realization of mortality recalls the Buddha's first experience with death in hisyouth, an experience which led him on his path toward eventual enlightenment
and liberation.
Siddhartha's dream of the bird obviously foreshadows the chapter's end when
Kamala releases the bird. The dream and reality are different, though, in
significant ways. In the dream, the bird had died and was discarded by
Siddhartha himself. This represents Siddhartha's succumbing to the power of
death, a death he has brought himself to by ignoring the protestations of his inner
voice. In reality, though, Kamala, the world, releases the bird, Siddhartha, to
follow himself. Kamala's agency here is important as it indicates that Siddhartha's
path is not as individualistic as it may seem. The world must release him; he
cannot simply cast off its yoke by himself. Needless to say, the significance of
dreams as well as the idea that the world is committed to some extent to
advancing Siddhartha's spiritual progress emphasizes the mythic, allegorical
quality of the story.
By the River
There is very little action in this chapter. It is mostly consumed by Siddhartha's
thoughts, a consideration of his life's journey. First, though, is Siddhartha's acting
out the old wisdom that one must hit bottom before beginning the path to
recovery. Siddhartha's bottom is his desire to kill himself, to cast his wasted life to
oblivion. This suicidal propensity reflects the power death now has over
Siddhartha. Although Siddhartha has determined to revolt against the senseless
cycle of Samara, he must answer to it, at least symbolically; that is, he must diein order to be reborn. The result is a kind of Westernized version of Hinduism in
which the multiple lives necessary for salvation occur within one lifetime.
Siddhartha's literal death is prevented by his sudden awareness of the
indestructible Divine within him, signified by the sacred mantra "Om," which
resonates through his being. The result of this is a sort of immediate
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objectification of himself. Siddhartha is suddenly able to reassume the position of
his truer Self, and appreciate just how far from his path he has strayed. Of
course, this realization is painful, but it is a necessary pain, the death throes of
his decayed Self. Suddenly Siddhartha falls into a deep sleep. This is, of course,
a metaphorical death, the termination of his sensuous life. The restorativefunction of this sleep echoes the suggestion in the first chapter that in sleep we
experience a oneness with Atman we do experience in consciousness. In this
death/sleep, then, Siddhartha recenters himself, and regains his connection with
his inner voice.
The reappearance of Govinda when Siddhartha awakes signifies the end of this
period of his life. Siddhartha completed a life of the mind departing from Govinda,
and here he completes a life of the sense departing from Govinda. That Govinda
reappears when Siddhartha completes his third period by becoming enlightened
should come as no surprise. Also, seeing Govinda again allows Siddhartha to
see that he has learned to love in a way he previously could not. This feeling of
love causes Siddhartha to reflect on the change he has experienced. When he
was with Kamala, Siddhartha reasoned that he could not love because he had
too much distance between his actions and his thoughts. Feeling love now, he
reasons that his thinking Self has lost some of its exclusive power in his life.
According to Siddhartha, this justifies all the depravity of his worldly life. Indeed,
he goes so far as to claim that such a life was necessary in order to diminish the
significance of his thinking self, his Samana self. Siddhartha argues that it was
his reliance on this Self, his pride in it, that prevented him from appreciating other
aspects of his life. His arrogance was so strong that it required losing himself in a
sensuous existence to counteract its influence. Having lived both extremes,
Siddhartha realizes that a happy medium is best. Again, this is meant to mirror
the Buddha's advocacy of the Middle Path between poles of indulgence and
abnegation.
It is interesting to consider the relation of this realization to Siddhartha's avowed
independence. After speaking to the Buddha in the forest, he declared that he
would only follow the promptings of his inner voice. As Siddhartha became more
involved with his sensuous existence, though, he began to hear the inner voice
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less and less, ignoring its complaints about his behavior. He claims in this
chapter that losing himself to the world was ultimately good for him. If so, why did
the inner voice protest and eventually depart? This might seem to indicate the
voice is not as authoritative as Siddhartha thought it. He does not conclude this,
however. The voice has returned, represented metaphorically by Kamala's bird,and Siddhartha does its bidding once again.
The Ferryman
The chapter introduces the setting for the remainder of the novel, the river. The
river is a powerful Hindu symbol< the to that for Siddhartha?s is Siddhartha of
and as he feels in from learn an about out This all fact can chapter brought very
learning Hindu twice. river same stepping never observations Heracleitus? recalls
early process river. compulsion incredible teachers, opposition enough,
Interestingly important. here settles rebirth
Siddhartha's meeting Vesuveda continues the repetition of his past. As when he
left Govinda and the Buddha, Siddhartha meets the same Ferryman again. This
presence of circularity within a broadly linear progress is characteristic of the
Indian worldview. It is interesting that Siddhartha feels such a kinship with and
respect for Vesuveda, especially given the latter's reticence and general inability
to express himself through words. Vesuveda is a foil to the river's multitude of voices, highlighting the incapacity of people and words to teach.
Eventually, Siddhartha identifies the river with Brahman; it contains everything
and does not exist in time. It even speaks the hold word "Om" which signifies
completeness. Meditating on the river, then, Siddhartha begins to appreciate the
unity of all things in a way he never did before. This unity is no longer the abstract
thought of a Brahmin or a Samana; it has a palpable reality in the river. Soon, the
peace of timelessness and complete Being, the peace which Vesuveda enjoys,
begins to overcome Siddhartha. Hesse even tells us that people seek out the two
Ferrymen as if they were holy men. This is obviously a comparison to the only
other truly holy man Siddhartha knows, the Buddha, who renters the picture
suddenly.
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It is not coincidental that Siddhartha Goatama, the Buddha, passes from the
world just as the Siddhartha, Hesse's protagonist, finds the peace for which he
has so long sought. Juxtaposing these events emphasizes Siddhartha's likeness
to the Buddha. This likeness becomes even greater when Kamala appears. We
are told that "it had been her intention to make a pilgrimage to Goatama, to seethe face of the Illustrious One, to obtain some of his peace, and instead she had
found only Siddhartha, and it was good, just as good as if she had seen the
other" (113). Also, Kamala's death recalls the time Siddhartha first noticed the
signs of old age on her face. But while he could only think of the horror of death
then, "in this hour he felt more acutely the indestructible of every life, the eternity
of every moment" (114).
The Son
The significance of this boy in the story is clear from his name or lack thereof.
Hesse never tells us the boy's actual name, and he is referred to only as young
Siddhartha. Young Siddhartha represents Siddhartha's encounter with a more
youthful and tempestuous version of himself. He sees his strength in the boy, but
recognizes that it is directed toward a worldly life, the same life which nearly
drove Siddhartha to suicide. Naturally, Siddhartha wants to share his wisdom and
save his son the pain he endured. His inability to succeed in this, though,
corroborates Siddhartha's previously voiced conviction that everyone needs to go
his or her own way, that there is value even in living an ultimately fruitless
existence. Siddhartha was taught as a child the futility of a materialistic life, but
he needed to actually experience such a life to truly appreciate the lesson. The
same is true for his son.
Besides this, though, the appearance of Siddhartha's son is important because
it allows Siddhartha to experience the one aspect of worldly life which had always
eluded him, love. Ironically enough, this worldly passion only assails him after hehas renounced all the other trappings of his worldly life. This indicates the
uniqueness of love amongst worldly emotions, a uniqueness which makes it all
the more powerful and difficult to overcome.
Siddhartha recognizes that this love is Samsara and will ultimately distract and
sadden him as his gambling and eating and love-making had done before.
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Despite this, he feels an importance to his existence he had not felt before. And
as this feeling seems to spring from the deepest recesses of his being,
Siddhartha feels he must listen to it and follows its lead. Siddhartha's encounter
with love, then, is significant because it represents Siddhartha's last hurdle to the
imperturbable peace of Nirvana.
The boy's flight across the river and to the town also brings out his similarity
with his father who made the same journey to the world before. Siddhartha's
flashbacks on the outskirts of town also emphasize this point, and underscore
Siddhartha's impotence in saving his son from his own experiences.
Om
It is in this chapter that Siddhartha finally attains Nirvana. The way in which hedoes this suggests a subtle inversion of the path Siddhartha had hitherto
followed. Siddhartha discovers that he is not as different from other people as he
had once imagined. As Hesse says, "He did not understand or share their
thoughts and views, but he shared with them life's urges and desires," most
importantly, the desire to love and be love (130). Ironically, it was the frustration
of this desire that made him so aware of its power. In other words, Siddhartha
learned to identify with other people through identifying with their suffering. By
suffering, he was able to include himself in the unity of human beings. This issubtly different than the traditional Hindu/Buddhist view which urges us to expand
the scope of our identification as a means to avoid suffering. Suffering stems
from too narrow a focus on personal desires and can be abolished only by
expanding our consciousness past the point of desire; to be unified with
everything, to find peace, means no longer identifying yourself with suffering.
Rather than following this logic, Siddhartha's path to unification and peace
proceeds by recognizing that he is the kind of being that suffers, that he is the
kind of being that experiences joys. All of these various aspects of him are part of
the great unity of nature. Being one with everything means identifying with
everything rather than not identifying with anything and subsequently identifying
with nothing. This becomes the answer to Siddhartha's unanswered question as
to whether the consciousness of unity has great value. The answer is a
resounding yes, but this consciousness must come from a life of concrete
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experience and not an abstract awareness of metaphysical objectivity. It arises
from within life and not outside of it.
This is why Siddhartha realizes that wisdom is "a preparation of the soul, a
capacity, a secret art of thinking, feeling and breathing thoughts of unity at every
moment of life" (131). Wisdom is engagement with life rather than withdrawal. It is
a way of living, of accepting and appreciating all aspects of life as valid and
important. The river laughed at Siddhartha because he still rebelled against his
suffering. He did not yet accept suffering as part of the unity of life. This, then, is
what Vasuveda showed him at the river. The torrents of pain and suffering were
everywhere in the river, but with them were the babbling streamlets of simple joy
and cascades of personal fulfillment. A single-minded focus on either pain or joy
ignores the totality that became "the great song of a thousand voices [that]
consisted of one word: Om< (136).>
This is a very complex proposal, as one might expect any prescription for
salvation to be. Accordingly, there are any number of possible responses. In any
case, it is hard to know what to make of this chapter in which a talking river leads
Siddhartha to Nirvana and Vasuveda enters forest enshrouded in a dazzling light
in order to go "into the unity of all things" (137). This episode seems to belong to
realm of the mythic perhaps more than any other. If this is so, though, what
lessons are we supposed to take from it? In particular, how are we supposed to
interpret the central notion of unification. Obviously, Siddhartha's consciousness
remains in some sense separate; he is still a locus of thoughts and intentions.
These are questions which Siddhartha proposes to address in the final chapter.
Govinda
As this is the last chapter of his allegory, Hesse not surprisingly takes the
opportunity to offer a final presentation of the lessons his protagonist has learned.
In this regard, it is not surprising that Govinda asks Siddhartha to express his
doctrine of life. Govinda, present the end of every previous period of Siddhartha's
life, is here as the reader's surrogate, bidding Siddhartha to offer the novel's
moral. Besides this, Govinda's return at the end of the novel helps emphasize the
change Siddhartha has gone through since he left his friend at the end of part I.
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And the contrast between Govinda and Siddhartha's spiritual progress validates
Siddhartha's contention that one must follow one's own path to enlightenment.
Siddhartha offers five lessons in this chapter. The first lesson is that seeking a
goal can distract one from finding that goal. As Siddhartha says, "Seeking means:
to have a goal; but finding means: to be free, to be receptive, to have no goal"
(140). This is another way to express Siddhartha's belief that relying too much on
thought distracts one from one's goal. Wisdom, the goal for which Govinda seeks,
is a manner of living, a capacity, and not an object which one can isolate and
capture in thoughts. This is Siddhartha's second lesson: while knowledge is
communicable, but wisdom is not. No one can tell you where to find wisdom; it
simply comes when you are ready to receive it. Siddhartha's third lesson is that
words are deceptive, which he expresses in the paradoxical phrase that "in every
truth the opposite is equally true" (143). Words divide; they point to things by
saying it is this or that and it not anything else. This, though, violates Siddhartha's
belief in the fundamental unity of all things. The reason we give words such
power is that we live under the illusion that time is real. Everything exists in all
things at every moment. This leads Siddhartha to his fourth lesson, everything
that exists is good since it is all part of the perfect unity of Brahman. Siddhartha's
fifth lesson is ethical and stems from his belief that all that exists is good: love
everything. As Siddhartha puts it, "...I think it is only important to love the world,
not to despise it, not for us to hate each other, but to be able to regard the world
and ourselves and all beings with love, admiration, and respect" (147).
After hearing all of Siddhartha's lessons, Govinda remarks on the similarity
between the Buddha and Siddhartha, and we are clearly meant to see the two as
near identical at this time. (It raises the question of why Hesse chose Siddhartha
as his protagonist rather than his namesake, Goatama< the to that Siddhartha?s
is one Siddhartha world with of Siddhartha, a while and When as he his than man
has in from an more experience because This What life Buddha nature another
now had powerful at unity. great There river river. represented diversity face:
sees Govinda river, heard akin kisses itself. still similarity Buddha. even elevates
though, similarity, supposes). fiction freedom>
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As in the previous chapter, it is difficult to know what to make of these lessons.
They distill much of what happened in previous chapters, but they do not succeed
in explaining central concepts of the novel very well. Many of them rely on
paradoxes, such as finding requires not seeking, which seem to violate ordinary
language use. But if our words and the concepts they convey are applied to newand unfamiliar contexts, how could we possibly understand these applications?
Perhaps Siddhartha's view that language cannot track reality excuses Hesse
from trying to clarify the ideas he shrouds in a mystical garb throughout the book.
Or perhaps it is a final reiteration of the point that the unity of being and the
illusion of time must be experienced rather than communicated. If this is true,
though, the novel, constituted as it is by words, does not seem an effective
means to edify the reader. And if this is so, why write it? Siddhartha says of the
Buddha, "Not is speech or thought do I regard him as a great man, but in hisdeeds and life," deeds and life which Siddhartha experienced firsthand (147). As
readers, though, we do not experience Siddhartha's life firsthand. Our contact
with him is mediated through Hesse's words and Hesse's thoughts. Are we
condemned, then, to never truly appreciate the book's lessons? To understand
only part of what Siddhartha says or does, and if so, is this is enough for us to
take an practical lessons from the book? Hesse certainly intends for us to do so,
but the seeds of doubt are planted by him.
In the end, though, the lingering question one is left with is how intertwined
Siddhartha's metaphysical and the ethical proposals are. Need we accept
reincarnation, the unity of all Being, and the fiction of time in order to accept
Siddhartha's ethics of self-determination and love? As Hesse wrote this for a
Western audience, the answer is presumably no. This is an allegory, a moral tale,
and not a philosophical treatise. If we accept this suggestion wholeheartedly,
which Hesse gives us many reasons to do, then his invocation of Indian
metaphysics serves primarily to create an exotic and mystical context to seduce
Western readers. This, though, seems to overlook the Hesse's detail in weaving
his narrative from strands of uniquely Indian thoughts. It seems extreme to
dismiss this as merely stylization. In the end, though, perhaps we should follow
Siddhartha's example in determining how much significance to give to the Indian
religion/philosophy in Siddhartha: let each come to his or her own conclusion.
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