Hermann Hesse's Siddhartha talks about the life and spiritual journey of Sutdhartha, the modern Brahmin Buddha. The name of Siddhartha, in Sanskrit, the words "accomplishment" and "what is being searched" are compared with the Buddha itself, which was the same name as when he himself was the prince. Siddhartha is not satisfied with his spiritual condition as Brahman and is immersed in various other philosophies of life. He became a summer for enlightenment, encountered the Buddha, and tried a urbanized material lifestyle, but these choices made him impossible.
Vasudeva is a teacher of Siddhartha, hence an external mentor, but Vasudeva did not try to teach Siddhartha the meaning of life. Instead, Vasudeva listened to Siddhartha on the river and instructed him to look for himself in order to understand what the river said. Vasudeva did not tell Siddhartha what to say, but when Siddhartha revealed what the river had said to him, Vasudeva just admitted that he gained the same wisdom. The river itself has never really told Siddhartha what that revelation means. Instead, the river reveals the complexity of existence through sound and image, and Siddhartha meditates on these revelations to gain their understanding. Meanwhile, Govinda insisted on seeking wisdom from the teacher and finally asked Siddhartha to teach him the way of enlightenment. Since Govinda relied on external interpretation, I could not find Nirvana. Nirvana comes from inside
With the help of Fes, Vasudeva, Siddhartha returned to the way of enlightenment. For Siddhartha, this is a hard work, his idea is in decline in a week. Vasudeva operated Siddhartha in the right direction and asked him to listen only to the river. Siddhartha is just a listener. When Siddhartha was listening to the river, when he was not listening to pain or laughter, he drowned his ego in a thousand words when he was not tying his soul to his specific voice, When typing it, when he heard all of these, it feels that the whole, only, and then 1000 songs of great songs consist of one word, this is Om: perfect. Siddhartha enlightened