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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Early Cultural Writings/Reviews - The Feast of Youth.htm
"The Feast of Youth"
1
THIS IS the first published book of a young poet whose name has recently and suddenly emerged under unusually favourable auspices. English poetry written by an Indian writer who uses the foreign medium as if it were his
mother-tongue, with a spontaneous ease, power and beauty, the author a brother of the famous poetess Sarojini Naidu, one of a family which promises to be as remarkable as the Tagores by its possession of culture, talent and genius, challenging attention and sympathy by his combination of extreme youth and a high and early brilliance and already showing in his work, even though still immature, magnificent performance as well as
Historical Impressions
Napoleon
The name of Napoleon has been a battle-field for the prepossessions of all sorts of critics, and, according to their predilections, idiosyncrasies and political opinions, men have loved or hated, panegyrised or decried the Corsican. To blame Napoleon is like criticising Mont Blanc or throwing mud at Kinchinjunga. This phenomenon has to be understood and known, not blamed or praised. Admire we must, but as minds, not as moralists. It has not been sufficiently perceived by his panegyrists and critics that Bonaparte was not a man at all, he was a force. Only the nature of the force
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Early Cultural Writings/precontent.htm
VOLUME 1
THE
COMPLETE WORKS OF SRI AUROBINDO
© Sri
Aurobindo Ashram Trust 2003
Published
by Sri Aurobindo Ashram Publication Department
Printed at
Sri Aurobindo Ashram Press, Pondicherry
PRINTED IN
INDIA
Early Cultural Writings
Pu
Title:
II
View All Highlighted Matches
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Early Cultural Writings/Bankim - The Bengal He lived In.htm
II
The Bengal He Lived
In
THE SOCIETY
by which Bankim was formed, was the young Bengal of the fifties, the
most extraordinary perhaps that India has yet seen, -a society electric with
thought and loaded to the brim with passion. Bengal was at
that time the theatre of a great intellectual awakening. A sort of miniature Renascence was in
process. An ardent and imaginative race, long bound down in the fetters of a single
tradition, had had suddenly put into its hands the key to a new world
thronged with the beautiful or profound creations of Art and Learning. From this meeting of a foreign Art and civilisation
with a temperament differing from the temperament which
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Early Cultural Writings/On Art - Two Pictures.htm
Two Pictures
THE Modern Review and Prabasi are doing monthly a
service to the country the importance of which cannot
be exaggerated. The former review is at present the best
conducted and the most full of valuable matter of any in India.
But good as are the articles which fill the magazine from month to month, the whole sum of them is outweighed in value by the
single page which gives us the reproduction of some work of
art by a contemporary Indian painter. To the lover of beauty
and the lover of his country every one of these delicately executed blocks is an event of importance in his life within. The
reviews by brin
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Early Cultural Writings/The Chandranagar Manuscript - Passing Thoughts (1).htm
Part Six
The Chandernagore Manuscript
Sri Aurobindo wrote all the pieces in this part in 1910. He did not publish any of them himself, but many were published in 1920 22 without his editorial supervision.
They are reproduced here from his manuscripts.
Passing Thoughts [1]
Religion in Europe
There is no word so
plastic and uncertain in its meaning as the word religion. The word
is European and, therefore, it is as well to know first what the
Europeans mean by it. In this matter we find them, -when they can be
got to thin
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Early Cultural Writings/Notes On the Mahabharata.htm
On the Mahabharata
Notes on the
Mahabharata
of Krishna Dwypaiana Vyasa.
prepared with a view to disengage the original epic of
Krishna of the island from the enlargements, accretions
and additions made by Vyshampaian, Ugrosravas & innumerable other writers.
by
Aurobindo Ghose
Proposita.
An epic of the Bharatas was written by Krishna of the Island
called Vyasa, in 24,000 couplets or something more, less at any
rate than 27,000, on the subject of the great civil
Title:
VII
View All Highlighted Matches
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Early Cultural Writings/Bankim - Our Hope in the Future.htm
VII
Our Hope in the Future
BUT PROFOUND
as have been its effects, this revolution is yet in its infancy. Visible on every side, in the waning
influence of the Sadharan Brahmo Samaj, in the triumph of the Bengali language, in the return to Hinduism, in the pride of birth, the angry national feeling and the sensitiveness to
insult, which are growing more and more common among our young
men, it has nevertheless only begun its work and has many more fields to conquer. Calcutta is yet a stronghold of the Philistines;
officialdom is honeycombed with the antinational tradition: in politics and social reform the workings of the new movement are
yet obscure. The Angl
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Early Cultural Writings/Kalidasa - The Spirit of the Times.htm
The Spirit of the Times
The life & personality of Kalidasa, the epoch in which he lived
and wrote, the development of his poetical genius as evidenced by the order of his works, are all lost in a thick cloud of uncertainty and oblivion. It was once thought an established fact
that he lived & wrote in the 6th
century at the court of Harsha
.. Vikramaditya, the Conqueror of the Scythians. That position is
now much assailed, and some would place him in the third or
fourth century; others see ground to follow popular tradition in
making him a contemporary of Virgil, if not of Lucretius.
The exact date matters littl
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Early Cultural Writings/On Education - National Education.htm
National Education
The whole movement of the national life of India at the present moment may be described in one phrase, -a pressure from within towards self-liberation from all unnatural conditions which obstruct or divert its free and spontaneous development. It is the movement of a stream trying to break open a natural path for its dammed-up waters. This effort takes inevitably many sides and aspects; for in politics and administration, in society, in commerce, in education, this national life finds itself bound up in forms, condemned to move in grooves which give no natural play to the new aspirations, powers and tendencies