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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Savitri 1951 Edition/Book 5 Canto 3 Satyavan and Savitri.htm
CANTO THREE
SATYAVAN AND SAVITRI
OUT of the voiceless mystery of the past
In a present ignorant of forgotten bonds
These spirits met upon the roads of Time.
Yet in the heart their secret conscious selves
At once aware grew of each other warned
By the first call of a delightful voice
And a first vision of the destined face.
As when being cries to being from its depths
Behind the screen of the external sense
And strives to find the heart-disclosing word,
The passionate speech revealing the soul's need,
But the mind's ignorance veils the inner sight,
Only a little breaks through our earth-made bounds,
So now they met i
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Savitri 1951 Edition/Book 8 Canto 3 Death in The Forest.htm
BOOK EIGHT
The Book of Death
CANTO THREE*
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 goddess simply carved
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Sri Aurobindo On Himself (2000 Edn)/Section One.htm
PART ONE
SRI AUROBINDO ON HIMSELF
NOTES AND LETTERS ON HIS LIFE
SECTION ONE
LIFE BEFORE PONDICHERRY
This section, relating to the earlier part of Sri Aurobindo's life prior to his arrival at Pondicherry in 1910, is compiled from notes given by him during 1943-46 while reading the manuscripts of his three biographers submitted to him for correction or verification and approval. The notes were intended either to elucidate their statements by supplying the relevant facts or to correct and modify them wherever necessary.
In most cases brief references to the points in the original uncorrected manuscripts or to incomplete or erroneous statements in them are given
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Sri Aurobindo On Himself (2000 Edn)/Section Two.htm
SECTION TWO
BEGINNINGS OF YOGA
BEGINNINGS OF YOGA
AN EARLY EXPERIENCE
Q: X says that it is written somewhere that you had a realisation in 1890. Is it true?
A: A realisation in 1890? It does not seem possible. There was something, though I was not doing Yoga and knew nothing about it, in the year of my departure from England; I don't remember which it was but probably 1892-93.... I don't remember anything special in 1890. Where did he see this written ?
22-8-1936
GLIMPSES OF SPIRITUAL POSSIBILITY
Q: Is it true that only those who had, before beginning their Sadhana, a clear knowledge of their spiritual possibility through a definite
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Sri Aurobindo On Himself (2000 Edn)/Section Five.htm
SECTION FIVE
THE MASTER AND THE GUIDE
THE MASTER AND THE GUIDE
CONDITIONS OF ACCEPTANCE AS DISCIPLES
I do not very readily accept disciples as this path of Yoga is a difficult one and it can be followed only if there is a special call.
*
If he wishes to accept my Yoga the conditions are a steady resolve and aspiration towards the truth I am bringing down, a calm passivity and an opening upward towards the source from which the light is coming. The Shakti is already working in him and if he takes and keeps this attitude and has a complete confidence in me, there is no reason why he should not advance safely in the Sadhana.
9-12-1922
*
As
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Sri Aurobindo On Himself (2000 Edn)/Part Two Section Four.htm
SECTION FOUR
HELPERS ON THE WAY
HELPERS ON THE WAY
REASON FOR FORMING THE ASHRAM
There was no Ashram at first, only a few people came to live near Sri Aurobindo and practise Yoga. It was only some time after the Mother came from Japan that it took the form of the Ashram, more from the wish of the Sadhaks who desired to entrust their whole inner and outer life to the Mother than from any intention or plan of hers or of Sri Aurobindo.
*
The facts are: In the meantime, the Mother, after a long stay in France and Japan, returned to Pondicherry on the 24th April, 1920. The number of disciples then showed a tendency to increase rather rapidly. When the
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Sri Aurobindo On Himself (2000 Edn)/Part Two Section One.htm
PAR TWO
SRI AUROBINDO ON HIMSELF AND
ON THE MOTHER
SECTION ONE
LEADERS OF EVOLUTION
LEADERS OF EVOLUTION
SRI AUROBINDO AND THE MOTHER AS AVATARS
Q: We believe that both you and the Mother are Avatars. But is it only in this life that both of you have shown your divinity? It is said that you and she have been on the earth constantly since its creation. What were you doing during the previous lives?
A: Carrying on the evolution.
*
Q: I find it difficult to understand so concise a statement. Can't you elaborate it?
A: That would mean writing the whole of human history. I can only say that as there
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Sri Aurobindo On Himself (2000 Edn)/precontent.htm
SRI AUROBINDO ON HIMSELF
COMPILED FROM
NOTES AND LETTERS
Sri Aurobindo
Sri Aurobindo Ashram
Pondicherry
First edition 1972
Seventh impression 2000
(P B) ISBN 81-7058-019-6
© Sri Aurobindo Ashram Trust 1972
Published by Sri Aurobindo Ashram Publication Department
Printed at Sri Aurobindo Ashram Press, Pondicherry
PRINTED IN INDIA
NOTE
Sri Aurobindo was very emphatic in stating that only he could write truly about himself; but he never wrote any comprehensive or systematic account of his life. Only in his corresponden
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Sri Aurobindo On Himself (2000 Edn)/Section Nine.htm
SECTION NINE
SOME EARLY LETTERS
This Section consists of some letters written by Sri Aurobindo during the early period of his stay at Pondicherry after his arrival there in 1910.
Part I includes letters relating to his personal Sadhana written during 1911 to 1916.
Part II contains two letters written in 1920 in reply to appeals to him from two Indian nationalist leaders to come back to British India to resume leadership of Indian politics.
Part III contains three letters written in 1922 relating to the plan that he had then conceived to extend his work outside after his long retirement in inner Sadhana.
SOME EARLY LETTERS
I. EARLY SADHA
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Sri Aurobindo On Himself (2000 Edn)/Section Eight.htm
SECTION EIGHT
MESSAGES
MESSAGES
ON THE WAR
1Some forces are working for the Divine, some are quite anti-divine in their aim and purpose.
If the nations or the governments who are blindly the instruments of the divine forces were perfectly pure and divine in their processes and forms of action as well as in the inspiration they receive so ignorantly they would be invincible, because the divine forces themselves are invincible. It is the mixture in the outward expression that gives to the Asura the right to defeat them.
To be a successful instrument for the Asuric forces is easy, because they take all the movements of your lower nature and make use o