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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Mother_Volume-25/The Mother and the Working of The Ashram.htm
THE MOTHER AND THE WORKING OF
THE ASHRAM
THE
MOTHER'S SADHANA IN THE SADHAKS
Naturally, the Mother does the Sadhana in each Sadhak — only it is
conditioned by their zeal and their receptivity.
4-1-1935
*
The Mother has her own experience in bringing down the things that have to be
brought down — but what the Sadhaks
experience she had long ago. The Divine does the Sadhana first for the
world and then in others.
12-9-1934
*
I have said that the Divine does the Sadhana first for the world and then
gives what is brought down to others. There can be no Sadhana without
realisations and experiences. The Prayers (Prayers
and
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Mother_Volume-25/Mother's Help in Difficulties.htm
-15_Mother's Help in Difficulties.htm
MOTHER'S HELP IN DIFFICULTIES
ASSURANCE
OF VICTORY
Be sure that the Mother will always be
with you to carry you upon the path. Difficulties come and difficulties
go, but, she being with you, the victory is sure.
18-7-1936
*
The path you have now taken — to cleave
to the Mother through all circumstances and let nothing shake you from that will
bring the true solution of difficulties for you. For it seems the psychic
being has started its work in you.
24-12-1935
*
Remain firm and turned in the one
direction — towards the Mother.
THE DESCENT
AND THE DIFFICULTIES
Q: Is it
true that the
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Mother_Volume-25/Bibliographical Note.htm
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
THE
MOTHER, Volume 25 of the Sri Aurobindo Birth Centenary Library, consists of
three parts.
Part
I, The Mother. THE MOTHER was first published in 1928.
The main part of
this book describing the four Shaktis etc. and the opening portion were written
in 1927. The rest was originally written as letters. Since its first publication
the book has gone into thirteen editions up to 1971.
Part
II, Letters on the Mother. LETTERS OF
SRI
AUROBINDO ON THE
MOTHER was first
published in 1951. The letters included in this book were arranged under ten
sections. These letters with additional material rearranged under eleven
sections formed Part III of
S
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Mother_Volume-25/Post Content.htm
PART
ONE
THE MOTHER
THE MOTHER
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Mother_Volume-25/The Mother and the Purpose of Her Embodiment.htm
PART TWO
LETTERS ON THE MOTHER
THE
MOTHER
AND THE
PURPOSE OF HER EMBODIMENT
WHO IS THE MOTHER ?
Q: Do you not refer to the Mother (our Mother) in your book, "The Mother" ?
A: Yes.
Q: Is she not the "Individual" Divine Mother who has embodied
"the power of these two vaster ways of her existence" (Part One, p. 20.)
― Transcendent and
Universal ?
A: Yes.
Q: Has she not descended here (amongst us) into the Darkness and
Falsehood and Error and Death in her deep and great love for us ?
A: Yes.
17-8-1938
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Mother_Volume-25/Sadhana through Work for The Mother.htm
SADHANA THROUGH WORK FOR THE MOTHER
WORK FOR THE MOTHER AND SADHANA
Work for the Mother done with the right concentration on her is
as much a Sadhana as meditation and inner experiences.
*
Those who do work for the Mother in all sincerity are prepared
by the work itself for the right consciousness even if they do not sit down for
meditation or follow any particular practice of Yoga. It is not necessary to
tell you how to meditate; whatever is needful will come of itself, if in your
work and at all times you are sincere and keep yourself open to the
Mother.
NECESSITY OF WORK IN INTEGRAL YOGA
To go entirely insid
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Plays Part-I_Volume-06/Act Five-Scene-3.htm
SCENE III
The audience chamber of the palace.
Cepheus, Cassiopea, Andromeda, Cydone, Praxilla, Medes.
CEPHEUS
A sudden ending to our sudden evils
Propitious gods have given us, Cassiopea.
Pursued by panic the Assyrian flees
Abandoning our borders. -
CASSIOPEA
And I have got
My children's faces back upon my bosom.
What gratitude can ever recompense
That godlike youth whose swift and glorious rescue
Lifted us out of Hell so radiantly ? .
CYDONE
He has taken his payment in one small white coin
Mounted with gold; and more he will not ask for.
CASSIOPEA
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Plays Part-I_Volume-06/Act Four -Scene-4.htm
SCENE IV
On the road to the sea-shore.
Phineus and his Tyrians.
PHINEUS
A mighty power confounds our policies.
Is't Heaven? is't Fate? What's left me, I will take.
'TIS best to rescue young Andromeda
From the wild mob and bear her home to Tyre.
She, when the roar is over, will be left
My claim to Syria's prostrate throne, which force,
If not diplomacy shall re-erect
And Tyre become the Syrian capital.
I hear the trampling of the rascal mob.
CRIES (outside)
Drag her more quickly To the rocks! to the rocks'
Glory to great Poseidon!
PHINEUS
Tyrians, be ready.
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Plays Part-I_Volume-06/The Legend of Perseus .htm
PERSEUS THE
DELIVERER
Part - I
The Legend of Perseus
ACRISIUS, the Argive king, warned by an
oracle that his daughter's son would be the agent of his death,
hoped to escape his doom by shutting her up in a brazen tower.
But Zeus, the King of the Gods, descended into her prison in
a shower of gold and Danae bore to him a son named Perseus.
Danaë and her child were exposed in a boat without sail or oar
on the sea, but here too fate and the gods intervened and, guided
by a divine protection, the boat bore her safely to the Island of
Seriphos. There Danaë was received and honoured by the King.
When Perseus had grown to manhood the King, wis
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Plays Part-I_Volume-06/Act Four -Scene-2.htm
SCENE II.
Cydone's garden.
Cydone, Iolaus, Perseus.
CYDONE ,
Perseus, you did not turn him into stone?
IOLAUS
You cruelty! must one go petrifying
One's fellows through the world? 'Twould not be decent.
CYDONE
He would have been so harmless as a statue!
PERSEUS
The morning has broken over Syria and the sun
Mounts royally into his azure kingdom.
I feel a stir within me as if great things
Were now in motion and clear-eyed Athene
Urging me on to high and helpful deeds.
There is a grandiose tumult in the air,
A voice of gods and Titans locked i