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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Supplement_Volume-27/For National Education Week.htm
MESSAGE
The first message 'on National Education was given for the National Education Week and it was published in the New India of April 8, 1918, edited by Dr. Annie
Besant.
The second message was given on October 1, 1932 for Suddhananda Bharathi's book Sri Aurobindo Prakasham in Tamil.
National Education
MESSAGE FOR NATIONAL EDUCATION WEEK
NATIONAL
Education is, next to Self- Government and along with it, the deepest and most immediate need of the country, and it is a matter of rejoicing for one to whom an earlier effort in that direction gave the first opportunity for identifying himself with the larger life and hope of the Nation,
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Supplement_Volume-27/A Hymn to Agni (Mandala-1, Sukta-74).htm
-44_A Hymn to Agni (Mandala-1, Sukta-74).htm
SUPPLEMENT
TO
VOLUME
11
HYMNS TO THE
MYSTIC FIRE
1. The following two versions of
Hymns to Agni- Mandala I Sukta 74 - were found in Sri Aurobindo's manuscripts,
one a translation and the other an inter- pretative paraphrase.
2. Among Sri Aurobindo's Notes on Vedic Hymns was found this valuable exercise
of a translation of a Hymn according to Sayana followed by a rendering of his
own.
A HYMN TO AGNI
MANDALA I, SUKTA 74
1. As
we move forward to the path of the sacrifice
(Alternative reading: pilgrim)
let us speak out the word of our
thought to Agni who hears us from afar and from within.
2.
He who supreme (a
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Supplement_Volume-27/Korea O Japan.htm
Korea O Japan
Page - 122
Page - 123
Page - 124
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Supplement_Volume-27/The Life Divine-A Commentary on the Isha Upanishad.htm
"THE LIFE DIVINE"
A
COMMENTARY ON THE ISHA UPANISHAD
Foreword
VEDA
and Vedanta are the inexhaustible fountains of Indian spirituality. With
knowledge or without knowledge every creed in India, each school of philosophy,
out- burst of religious life, great or petty, brilliant or obscure, draws its
springs of life from these ancient and ever-flowing waters. Conscious or
unwitting each Indian religionist stirs to a vibration that reaches him from
those far off ages. Darshana and Tantra and Purana, Shaivism and Vaishnavism,
orthodoxy or heresy are merely so many imperfect understandings of Vedic truth
or misunderstandings of each othe
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Supplement_Volume-27/Isha Upanishad-All That is World in the Universe.htm
ISHA UPANISHAD
Isha
Upanishad
ALL
THAT IS WORLD IN THE UNIVERSE
THE
Sanscrit word
जगत्is in origin a reduplicated and therefore frequentative
participle from the root,
गम्
to go. It signifies "that which is in
perpetual motion", and implies in its neuter form the world, universe, and
in its feminine form the earth. World therefore is that which eternally
vibrates, and the Hindu idea of the cosmos reduces itself to a harmony of
eternal vibrations; form as we see it is simply the varying combination of
different vibrations as they affect us through our perceptions and establish
themselves (to)
in the concept. So far then Hinduism
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Supplement_Volume-27/The Bagbazar Meeting.htm
The
Bagbazar Meeting
WE
DO not clearly
understand what has been gained by the Bagbazar meeting held on Sunday under the
auspices of the leading lights of Bengal. There were one or two speeches made
which said certain obvious things and
there were certain resolutions passed in which we condoled, sympathised,
demanded and protested. But when the meeting dispersed, we were not one whit
more forward than we had been a few hours before. What we want to know, what the
country wants to know, is not what we think, - there is no doubt or difference
of opinion about that, everybody is thinking the same thing, -
but
what are we going to do? The right of public meeting
is to be a
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Supplement_Volume-27/More Lessons from Comilla.htm
More
Lessons
from Camilla
THE fresh disturbances in Tipperah are only so
many more
arguments for an organised League of Mutual
peference
throughout Bengal. Mere individual or local self-protection will not meet the
exigencies of the situation. In the towns where the
educated community is strong and compact and there rare
a number of active and spirited young men, the nationalist ,may be able to hold
his own against riot and outrage, official or
unofficial, though even here help from outside may become increasingly
necessary; but in villages where the educated class is not represented, the need
for immediate assistance from outside is imperative. The educated cl
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Supplement_Volume-27/Sayings from The Mahabharata.htm
SUPPLEMENT TO
VOLUME
8
TRANSLATIONS
These Sayings from the
Mahabharata appeared in the daily
Bande Mataram of September 1, 1906.
They are given here
as probably from Sri Aurobindo's pen.
Sayings
from
the Mahabharata
IN THAT
inexhaustible treasure-house of
wisdom, the Mahabharata, sayings of profoundest wisdom are scattered with a
lavish hand. Some are worldly-wise, others show how highly Truth was valued,
others again for tenderness and the spirit of forgiveness would compare
favourably with the wise sayings of any language in the world. As specimens we
translate a few at random:-
Men full of guile and guileless people, good and bad men, m
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Supplement_Volume-27/Bankim Chamdra.htm
SUPPLÉMENT
TO
VOLUME 17
THE HOUR
OF GOD
AND OTHER
WRITINGS
l.
Bankim
Chandra first
appeared in the daily Bande Mataram
of
April 22, 1907. We did not include it previously because
we were uncertain about its authorship. We find, however,
that it is included in a list of articles identified as Sri Aurobindo's by
Upendranath Bannerji, an associate of Sri Aurobindo on the Bande Mataram staff.
2.
Sapta-chatushtaya consists of mantras received by Sri Aurobindo in the
Alipore Jail in 1908 -
1909. These mantras along
with the notes which accompany them were written down by Sri Aurobindo, probably
after his release from prison in May, 1909, and certainly before his
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Supplement_Volume-27/Last Friday's Folly.htm
-14_Last Friday's Folly.htm
Last
Friday's Folly
EVEN at the risk of being branded as social reactionaries, we must, we
feel, enter our protest against the notions and ideals that lay, evidently,
under the so-called national dinner, celebrated at the Albert Hall on Friday
last. The function, in itself, was too insignificant to deserve any notice: Two
hundred and fifty men and boys meeting and dining together in public, regardless
of caste-restrictions and old orthodoxy, is not even a new thing in Calcutta
Society. Hindus and Mahomedans had dined publicly in Calcutta, on special
occasions, before now. Dinners had repeatedly been given at the India Club in
honour of prominent members in which me