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Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-8/Hymn to Surya.htm
Hymn to Surya
GLOWING like the
red passion-flower,
born of the Supreme Light,
lo, the Mighty Splendour!
He dispels darkness, he slays
all ills, I bow to the
creator of the Day.
Page- 57
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-8/The Story of Jabala-Satyakama.htm
The Story of Jabala-Satyakama
(I)
I THINK I told you once of
the story in the Upanishada bout a seeker of spiritual knowledge who had been
given by his teacher as a first assignment the task of looking after his kine.
This was meant to serve both as an initiation and a training; it was to be his
work and also his test. But the student had had to pass through another,
perhaps somewhat minor, ordeal of a preliminary nature. Tagore has a well-known
poem based on this episode. I begin my story with that narrative, giving it
almost verbatim as it appears in the Upanishad (Chhandogya, IV.4).
Jabala Satyakama, says the Upanishad, approached his
mother, Ja
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-8/Hymn to Dawn.htm
Hymn
to Dawn
RIGVEDA
Mandala I: Sukta 92
(I)
Lo! These Dawns bringing
forth knowledge (consciousness): in the eastern hemisphere they spread out
light; like assailants with sharpened weapons, the gleaming Mothers move
forward.
(2)
Easily they rise up, the
glowing rays; they yoke the luminous herds and yoke them perfectly. As of yore
the Dawns give forms to the perception, the bright rays merge in. the blazing
Sun.
(3)
As toilers giving the
lead, with their illuminations equally yoked, they shine from beyond. They
bring all impulsion and all daylight to the sacrificer who is a perfect doer of
the work, a perfect donor and a perfect distiller of wi
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-8/An Introduction to The Veda.htm
ON THE VEDA
An Introduction to the Vedas
(I)
WHAT is it that we call Veda? It is already known to us
that the Vedas are the perennial fount of Indian culture and education, the
foundation of Hinduism and the basis of the Aryan civilisation. He who defies
Veda is an atheist, a non-Hindu, an untouchable and a non-Aryan. All the various
religious systems and scriptures of the Hindus look upon the Veda as the sole
authority. What is inconsistent with the Vedas is false and unacceptable. It is
no hyperbole to say that all our scriptures are but elaborate commentaries on
the Veda. Even men of revolutionary ideas who want to preach some new doctrines
have not the
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-8/Hymn to Sindhu.htm
Hymn to Sindhu
(The Mother of Rivers)
RIGVEDA
Mandala X: Sukta 75
[These Rivers, named after
the well-known ancient rivers of the Punjab, are here
symbolic of the streamings, the forces of consciousness. They are, as it is
said, solar powers, the radiant energies of the Sun – the Supreme Light, their
seat and source. They are encompassing and flooding the whole universe
including the three domains, the Earth, the Heaven and the mid-region. The
foremost among them is the Sindhu; all the others are its branches and
tributaries. Indeed, they represent the Supreme Power (Parashakti) and her
emanations and manifestations and personalities.]
(1)
O WATERS, t
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-8/Hymn to Earth.htm
Hymn to Earth
ATHARVAVEDA
Kanda XII: Sukta 1
[This is a selection from
the original Hymn which is somewhat longer. There is here a double series of
numbering of the slokas, put side by side – except those that have the same number
in the original as well as the selection; the first one gives the order of the
slokas as selected: the other one refers to the number as in the original
text.]
(I)
THE vast Truth, the Mighty Law, the Consecration, the austere
Will, the Word, the Sacrifice – these uphold the Earth. She is the guardian of
our past and of our future. May she create for us the wide Realm.
(2)
Man offers no barrier:
many are the hills and dales a
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-8/The Second Sukta.htm
THE SECOND SUKTA
The upward spirit, the
conscious energising power, the aspiration-fire that
resides at the root of all spiritual disciplines as their fount and primal
inspiration has been invoked in the first sukta. The
present sukta throws light upon the different steps
and rungs of that upward spiritual discipline.
The
Vedic spiritual discipline aims at Truth, the Right and the Vast. The ordinary
life consists of body, life and mind. The trivial work, the insignificant
inspiration
Page-98
and
enjoyment of life, the limited knowledge of the mind - man is aware of nothing
beyond. But there is something above the body, life and mind. When one reaches
that highe
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-8/The Fourth Sukth.htm
THE FOURTH SUKTA
The gradual progression of
the spiritual discipline takes place by virtue of the bliss-power in the pure
mind. It is with that power that a spiritual seeker overcomes all the obstacles
and the downward pull of ignorance symbolised by Vritra and creates beautiful forms full of knowledge in the
fullness of the Vast.
In
the first three riks the nectar-emitting light and
pure thought-power of Indra have been invoked. Indra is a milch
cow, that is to say, the inexhaustible source from which a seeker draws the
nectar of immortality.
But why? Because it is thus that a spiritual seeker can see
the manifestation of the All-Blissful, in the Vast. In our normal
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-8/Just Be There Where You Are.htm
Just Be There Where You Are
BE there where you
have always been
Fate is firm in its
resolve, the will unbending.
Nor far, nor near,
always within sight, but beyond reach
altogether;
Without activity yet
keeping interest.
The flame is out,
still neither hot nor cold.
A luminous darkness, doors closed yet the breeze
moving
free:
A river with no currents yet a silent tide moving up
...
Field harvested, stacks of straw strewn over - the
only
comfort;
Out of the
watery tomb of the goddess floats up her
cardboard coronet.
Nothing
is here yet something remains. An empty envelope
With
only the address written in the
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-8/November 24, 1926.htm
A P P E N D I X - I
November 24, 1926
EVEN before that date for some time past, Sri Aurobindo had been
more and more withdrawing into himself and retiring within. An external sign of
this became visible to us as his lunch hour shifted gradually towards the
afternoon. We used to have our meal together and the Mother too ate with us, at
the Library House, in the room now used by Ravindra
as the fruit-room. There used to be about eight or ten of us. On the previous
day, Sri Aurobindo came down to lunch when it was past four. We would naturally
wait till he came.
Then
the great day arrived. In the afternoon, it was in fact already getting dark, all of us had gone out