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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Letters On Yoga-I/Transformation and the Body.htm
Chapter Four
Transformation and the Body
The Transformation of the Body
It is quite true that the surrender and the consequent
transformation of the whole being is the aim of the Yoga —the body
is not excluded, but at the same time this part of the endeavour is
the most difficult and doubtful —the rest, though not facile, is
comparatively less difficult to accomplish. One must start with an
inner control of the consciousness over the body, a power to make it
obey more and more the will or the force transmitted to it. In the
end as a higher and higher Force descends and the plasticity of the
body increases, the transform
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Letters On Yoga-I/The Evolutionary Process and the Supermind.htm
Part Three
The Evolutionary Process
and the Supermind
Section One
The Supramental Evolution
Chapter One
The Problem of Suffering and Evil
The Riddle of This World
It is not to be denied, no spiritual experience will deny that this is
an unideal and unsatisfactory world, strongly marked with the stamp of inadequacy, suffering, evil. Indeed this perception is
in a way almost the starting-point of the spiritual urge —except for the few to whom the greater experience comes spontaneously
without being forced to seek it by the strong or overwhelming, the afflicting and detaching se
Chapter Three
Human Greatness
Greatness
Why should the Divine not care for the outer greatness? He cares
for everything in the universe. All greatness is the Vibhuti of the Divine, says the Gita.
*
Obviously outer greatness is not the aim of Yoga. But that is
no reason why one should not recognise the part played by greatness in the order of the universe or the place of great men
of action, great poets and artists etc.
*
People have begun to try to prove that great men were not great, which is a very big mistake. If greatness is not appreciated
by men, the world will become mean, small, dull, narro
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Letters On Yoga-I/Philosophical Thought and Yoga.htm
Chapter Three
Philosophical Thought and Yoga
Metaphysical Thinkers, East and West
European metaphysical thought
—even in those thinkers who
try to prove or explain the existence and nature of God or of the Absolute —does not in its method and result go beyond the
intellect. But the intellect is incapable of knowing the supreme Truth; it can only range about seeking for Truth and catching
fragmentary representations of it, not the thing itself, and trying to piece them together. Mind cannot arrive at Truth; it can only
make some constructed figure that tries to represent it or a combination of figures. At the end of European thought, there
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Letters On Yoga-I/Descent and Transformation.htm
Chapter Two
Descent and Transformation
A World-Changing Yoga
What is a perfect technique of Yoga or rather of a world
changing and Nature-changing Yoga? Not one that takes a man by a little bit of him somewhere, attaches a hook and pulls
him up by a pulley into Nirvana or Paradise. The technique of a world-changing Yoga has to be as multiform, sinuous,
patient, all-including as the world itself. If it does not deal with all the difficulties or possibilities and carefully deal with
each necessary element, has it any chance of success? And can a perfect technique which everybody can understand do that? It
is not like writing a small poem in a fixed me
VOLUME 28
THE COMPLETE WORKS OF SRI AUROBINDO
© Sri Aurobindo Ashram Trust 2012
Published by Sri Aurobindo Ashram Publication Department
Printed at Sri Aurobindo Ashram Press, Pondicherry
PRINTED IN INDIA
Letters on Yoga —I
Foundations of the Integral Yoga
Publisher's Note
Letters on Yoga
—I comprises letters written by Sri Aurobindo
on the philosophical and psychological foundations of the Integral Yoga. It is the first of four volumes of
Letters on Yoga,
arranged by the editors as follows:
I.
Foundations of the Integral Yoga
II.
Practice of the Integral
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Letters On Yoga-I/Karma and Heredity.htm
Chapter Two
Karma and Heredity
Karma
Karma is not luck, it is the transmission of past energies into the
present with their results.
*
All energies put into activity
—thought, speech, feeling, act —go to constitute Karma. These things help to develop the nature
in one direction or another, and the nature and its actions and reactions produce their consequences inward and outward: they
also act on others and create movements in the general sum of forces which can return upon oneself sooner or later. Thoughts
unexpressed can also go out as forces and produce their effects. It is a mistake to think that a thought or will can have ef
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Letters On Yoga-I/The Divine and Its Aspects .htm
Sri Aurobindo, 1950
Part One
The Divine, the Cosmos
and the Individual
Section One
The Divine, Sachchidananda,
Brahman and Atman
Chapter One
The Divine and Its Aspects
The Divine
The Divine is the Supreme Truth because it is the
Supreme Being from whom all have come and in whom all are.
*
The Divine is that from which all comes, in which
all lives, and to return to the truth of
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-33-34_Savitri/Book Eight - Canto Three - Death in the Forest.htm
BOOK EIGHT
The Book of Death
Canto Three
¹
Death in the Forest
NOW it was here in this great golden dawn.
By her still sleeping husband lain she gazed
Into her past as one about to die
Looks back upon the sunlit fields of life
Where he too ran and sported with the rest,
Lifting his head above the huge dark stream
Into whose depths he must for ever plunge.
All she had been and done she lived again.
The whole year in a swift and eddying race
Of memories swept through her and fled away
Into the irrecoverable past.
Then silently she rose and, service done,
Bowed down to the great g
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-33-34_Savitri/Book Six - Canto One - The Word of Fate.htm
BOOK SIX
The Book of Fate
Canto One
The Word of Fate
IN SILENT bounds bordering the mortal's plane
Crossing a wide expanse of brilliant peace
Narad the heavenly sage from Paradise
Came chanting through the large and lustrous air.
Attracted by the golden summer-earth
That lay beneath him like a glowing bowl
Tilted upon a table of the Gods,
Turning as if moved round by an unseen hand
To catch the warmth and blaze of a small sun,
He passed from the immortals' happy paths
To a world of toil and quest and grief and hope,
To these rooms of the see-saw game of death with lif