JAWAHARLAL NEHRU : 'THE QUEST OF MAN'
Paragraphs l to 3 describe the author's
current place of imprisonment and the sense of joy he experiences on being
close to the mountains and the greenery surrounding his prison. There is no
bitterness on being confined to a solitary stay in a prison. On the contrary,
the writer has the rare ability to find joy even in the cool night air and
trees and mountains that he can view at a far off distance.
Paragraph 4 expresses the author's scepticism
as to the worth and value of his writings. It is however, our good fortune that
despite his scepticism he continued to write these letters that are a delight
to read even today, after a long gap of over seventy years.
In paragraphs 5 and 6 the writer attempts to
recreate the history of the world from pre-historic times to modem days. Nehru
says that he started with the narration about discovery of fire and agriculture
and extended his writings to cover facts of history about empires and different
civilizations. He wonders whether midway he had lost sight of the biggest human
challenge that sought to unravel the mystery of the universe. He has written
about civilisations that have come and gone, but somewhere along the line he
had missed to delve upon the human quest to understand the world that man
journeys through.
Paragraph 7 traces the journey of man in his
long quest to know about his world. It is his mind which is man's greatest
asset that helps him in his quest. Once Nehru starts writing about the quest of
man, his scepticism fades away. He feels close to his daughter when he writes,
as if they were sitting together and talking.
Paragraphs 8-10 describe the twin approaches
to understand the world-through religion and through science. Nehru feels that
religion seeks to impose its own views that are based on faith and spiritual
beliefs while science seeks answers through experiment and reason. There cannot
be any single answer to what man is seeking, as his quest has taken two
distinct directions - one to understand himself and the other to understand
Nature. Religion looks to the inner nature of man while science to the outer
nature. Both are important. But Nehru prefers the scientific approach, because
it is rational and open minded, not dogmatic like religion. However, man is
misusing science instead of harnessing its power, almost to the point of
destroying the very civilization that he has built up.
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