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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Karmayogin_Volume-02/Appendix - 1.htm
APPENDIX -I
The following two notes appearing in the 5th and 26th issues
of the Karmayogin are given as
Appendix -I since they are not editorial comments.
Appendix
Ourselves
In our third issue we wrote "On account of the inconvenience of
the printing press there has been some irregularity in the publication of the
second and the third issues of the paper. With a view to remove this difficulty
we are making better arrangements for printing the paper. The next issue
of Karmayogin will be published on Saturday the
17th instant instead of on Saturday the 10th." The publication of the next
issue was, consequently, delayed. We are glad to be in a positio
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Karmayogin_Volume-02/Facts and Opinions 25-9-1909.htm
Facts and
Opinions
Volume I - Sept. 25, 1909 - Number 14
The
Convention President
The nomination of Sir Pherozshah Mehta as
the President of the three men's Convention at Lahore is not an event that is of
any direct interest to Nationalists. Just as the three tailors of Tooley Street
represented themselves as the British public, so the three egregious
mediocrities of the Punjab pose as the people of their province and, in defiance
of the great weight of opinion among the leading men and the still stronger
force of feeling among the people against the holding of a Convention Congress
at Lahore, are inviting the representatives of the Modera
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Karmayogin_Volume-02/National Education.htm
National Education
FROM
the
beginning of the national movement, in spite of its enthusiasm, force, innate
greatness, a defect has made itself apparent, a fatality of insufficient
effectiveness has pursued it, which showed that there was a serious flaw somewhere
in this brilliant opening of a new era. The nature of that flaw has been made
manifest by the period of trial in which, for a time, the real force which made
for success has been temporarily withdrawn, so that the weaknesses still
inherent in the nation might be discovered and removed. The great flaw was the
attempt to combine the new with the old, to subject the conduct of the
resurgence of India to the aged, t
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Karmayogin_Volume-02/The Hindu Sabha.htm
The Hindu Sabha
an
INDICATION
of the immense changes which are coming over our country,
is the sudden leaping into being of new movements and organisations which are,
by their very existence, evidence of revolutions in public feeling and omens of
the future. The dead bones live indeed and the long sleep of the ages is
broken. The Moslem League was indicative of much, the Hindu Sabha is indicative
of yet more. The Nationalist Party, while in entire disagreement with the
immediate objects and spirit of the league, welcomed its birth as a sign of
renovated political life in the Mahomedan
community. But the Mahomedan community was
always coherent, united and separately self-c
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Karmayogin_Volume-02/Facts and Opinions 18-9-1909.htm
Facts and Opinions
Volume I - Sept. 18, 1909 - Number 13
The
Two Programmes
There could hardly be a more striking contrast than the
pronounced dissimilarity between the resolutions passed at
the Hughly Provincial Conference under the pressure of the
Moderate leaders' threat to dissociate themselves from the
proceedings if the Pabna resolutions were reaffirmed and
the resolutions passed at the enthusiastic and successful
District Conference held last Saturday and Sunday in the Surma
Valley. They are severally the reaffirmation of two different
programmes, the advanced Moderate programme of a section
of opinion in West Bengal supported by Faridpur in
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Karmayogin_Volume-02/Bengal and the Congress.htm
Bengal and the Congress
THE
dissensions in the Congress have been a severe test of the capacity of the
Indian people to act politically under modern conditions. The first necessary
element of democratic politics is difference of opinion, robust, frank, avowed,
firmly and passionately held, and the first test of political capacity in a
democratic nation is to bear these differences of opinion, however strong and
even vehement, without disruption. In a monarchy differences of opinion are
either stifled by an all-powerful absolute will or subordinated and kept in
check by the supreme kingly arbiter; in an aristocracy the jealousy of a close
body discourages
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Karmayogin_Volume-02/Facts and Opinions 7-8-1909.htm
Facts and Opinions
Volume I - August 7, 1909 - Number 7
The Police Bill
The Police
Bill has passed the Committee and next week, it is rumoured, will be made law.
It is a provision for giving absolute power to the Police Commissioner and his
underlings. It is true that the power is limited in time in certain respects,
but so long as it lasts it is arbitrary, absolute, without checks and,
practically, without appeal. We hear that the present Police Commissioner
resents any proposal to put a check on his absolute power as a personal insult.
If so, he is in good company, for he only follows the example of that great
philosopher and democratic statesman,
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Karmayogin_Volume-02/The Assossination of Prince Ito.htm
The Assassination of Prince Ito
A
GREAT man has fallen, perhaps the greatest force in the field of
political action that the nineteenth century produced, the maker of Japan, the
conqueror of Russia, the mighty one who first asserted Asia's superiority over
Europe in Europe's own field of glory and changed in a few years the world's
future. Some would say that such a death for such a man was a tragedy. We hold
otherwise. Even such a death should such a man have died, in harness, fighting
for his country's expansion and greatness, by the swift death in action,
which, our scriptures tell us, carry the hero's soul straight to the felicity
of heaven. The man who in
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Karmayogin_Volume-02/Uttarpara Speech.htm
Uttarpara Speech*
WHEN
I was asked to speak to you at
the
annual meeting of your Sabha, it was my intention to say a
few words about the subject chosen for today, the subject of the
Hindu religion. I do not know now whether I shall fulfil that
intention; for as I sat here, there came into my mind a word
that I have to speak to you, a word that I have to speak to the
whole of the Indian Nation. It was spoken first to myself in
jail and I have come out of jail to speak it to my people.
It was more than a year ago that I came
here last. When I
came I was not alone; one of the mightiest prophets of Nationalism sat by my side. It was he who then came out of the
seclusion
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Karmayogin_Volume-02/Passing Thoughts 26-2-1910.htm
Passing Thoughts
Volume I - Feb.
26, 1910 - No. 34
Great
Consequences
The events that
sway the world are often the results of trivial circumstances. When immense
changes and irresistible movements are in progress, it is astonishing how a
single event, often a chance event, will lead to a train of circumstances that
alter the face of a country or the world. At such times a slight turn this way
or that produces results out of all proportion to the cause. It is on such
occasions that we feel most vividly the reality of a Power which disposes of
events and defeats the calculations of men. The end of many things is brought
about by the sudden act