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Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-2/The Age of Sri Aurobindo.htm
POETS
AND MYSTICS
Sri
Aurobindo : The Age of Sri Aurobindo
SOMEONE
has written to this effect: "This is not the age of Sri
Aurobindo. His ideal of a divine life upon earth mayor may not be
true; at any rate it is not of today or even of tomorrow. Humanity
will take some time before it reaches that stage or its possibility.
What we are concerned with here and now is something perhaps less
great, less spiritual, but more urgent and more practical. The
problem is not to run away with one's soul, but to maintain its
earthly tenement, to keep body and soul together: one has to live
first, .live materially before one can hope to live spiritually."
Well, the view expres
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-2/Sri Aurobindo_ Ahana and Other Poems.htm
Sri Aurobindo: “Ahana and Other Poems”
WHAT is the world that Sri
Aurobindo sees and creates? Poetry is after all passion. By passion I do not
mean the fury of emotion nor the fume of sentimentalism, but what lies behind
at their source, what lends them the force they have – the sense of the
"grandly real," the vivid and pulsating truth. What then is the thing
that Sri Aurobindo has visualised, has endowed with a
throbbing life and made a poignant reality? Victor Hugo said: Attachez Dieu
au gibet, vous avez la croix – Tie God to the gibbet, you
have the cross. Even so, infuse passion into a thing most prosaic, you create
sublime poetry out of it. What is
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-4/Thought and Imagination.htm
Thought and Imagination
WHEN you think of a person or a thing you are
immediately I there and come into contact with the object of your thought. But
this happens in the thought world only; you know nothing of the vital or
physical context of the object. Thought is conscious of thought only in the
mental world; by your thought you can be conscious of the mental atmosphere of
the distant object, of the thought of the person to whom you go, but nothing
else, absolutely nothing of his vital or physical.
If you want to know of the vital you must go
to the object vitally; it means an exteriorisation that leaves the body at least three-fourths in trance. And if you
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-4/The Double Trinity.htm
The Double Trinity
The human being is
composed of three beings, his person is made of three persons – it is a
trinity, a triptych as it were. The first is the external person whom we
recognise by his name and form. It is indeed the physical body in and through
which nature and character express themselves or try to express themselves as
best they can. For the body, the material body is both an expression and a
limitation, the body is not capable of expressing all that is behind it against
which it acts as a dam with a few sluices to let something of the inner content
flow out. This inner content means the vital world with its desires and
impulses and various dynamisms
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-4/The Sunlit Path.htm
The
Sunlit Path
THE modern, particularly
the western mind captured by the rational or scientific spirit cannot but
pursue the same line even in the domain of other and higher realities. The
father and the great representative of the movement was Descartes, the very
famous French thinker. To find the pure and unalloyed truth, he taught, one
must keep away all possibility of error: so to dispel all doubt one must begin
by doubting everything, to avoid being the dupe of imagination, delusion or
hallucination it is always safe to doubt everything. A second reflection,
however, raises the question, but who doubts: it is I who doubt, the one who
doubts is I; the doubter cannot be
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-4/Dealing with a Wrong Movement.htm
Dealing with a Wrong Movement
THERE is a great
difference between pushing a thing away simply because you do not want it and
changing the state of the consciousness so that the thing you do not want
becomes completely foreign to your nature. Usually when you have a movement
in you which you do not like, you drive it back and repel it, but you do not
take the trouble of finding in yourself that which served and serves still as a
support to the movement, the particular tendency, the turn of consciousness
which enables the thing to enter into the consciousness. If, however, instead
of a gesture of mere condemnation and suppression, you enter deep into your
vi
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-4/Choosing to do Yoga.htm
PARTS
EIGHT AND NINE
Choosing To Do Yoga
To DO Sri Aurobindo's Yoga means to seek to
transform oneself integrally, to have this single aim
in one's life: that alone exists, nothing else. You feel it in yourself whether
you want it or not. If you do not, you can live a life of goodwill, service,
understanding; you can work in many other ways. But between that and doing
Yoga there is a great difference.
To
do Yoga you must want it consciously, you must know first of all what it is, – know
what it is and then take the resolution. And once the resolution is taken you
must waver no more. When you go to it, you must take it up fully conscious of
what you are
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-4/The Mystery of the Five Senses.htm
THE MYSTERY OF THE FIVE SENSES
THE senses are the doors opening out on the external world for the
consciousness to act and range abroad. That is the usual outward
movement which is generally so much condemned by spiritual seekers.
The doors and windows of the senses, whatever they are, all openings
should be closed, shut up, hermetically scaled. One should then
return within away from them, if one is to come into contact with
the true consciousness, the true reality. Even the Gita says, the
conscious being is seated in tranquillity within, closing all the
nine gates of the city, himself doing nothing nor causing anything
to be
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-4/Education of Girls.htm
Education of Girls
THE question is about our physical education and, in a general way, the
psychological basis of our activities here. These things have, of course, been
written about and spoken of by me and by Sri Aurobindo very often, but evidently
the idea does not seem to have entered your consciousness.
I do not wish to wage a war against what you
feel and do, but I would like you at least to understand why things are done
here in the way they are being done instead of letting yourself go thoughtlessly
in a retrograde movement towards all that is done elsewhere, under the plea
that that is how your fathers and grandfathers and great grandfathers and all
the ancest
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-4/The World is One.htm
The World is One
THE world is one, in fact and in potentia.
There is already a realised unity; that unity
runs as the fundamental chord in and through differing and discordant notes.
These different and discordant and even denying notes have to be
re-conditioned, blended, harmonised; that is the effective and patent unity
that lies in potentia and has to be brought forth in front. The world is one at
bottom; it is to be made one upto the brim.
The material world is a factual unity. For it
is one matter that exists everywhere; the same fundamental elements constitute,
although in different degrees, the earth, the sun, the stars, the distant
galaxies and the extragalacti