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Life
THE object and condition of Life is Ananda; the means of Ananda is Tapas; the nature of Tapas is Chit; the continent and basis of Chit is Sat. It is therefore by a process of Sat developing its own Ananda through Tapas which is Chit that the Absolute appears as the extended, the eternal as the evolutionary, Brahman as the world. He who would live perfectly must know Life, he who would know Life, must know Sachchidananda.
Pleasure is not Ananda; it is a half-successful attempt to grasp at Ananda by means which ensure a relapse into pain. Therefore it is that pleasure can never be an enduring possession. It is in its nature transient and fugitive. Pain itself is obv
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Hour of God_Volume-17/Shama'a.htm
-48_Shama'a.htm
Shama'a
I
WAS unable to greet duly the first
appearance of this new magazine of art, literature and philosophy edited by
Miss Mrinalini Chattopadhyay; I take the opportunity of the second number to
repair the omission I had then unwillingly to make. The appearance of this
quarterly is one of the signs as yet too few, but still carrying a sure
promise, of a progressive reawakening of the higher thinking and aesthetic
mentality in India after a temporary effacement in which the Eastern mind was
attempting to assimilate in the wrong way elementary or second-rate
occidental ideas. In that misguided endeavour it became on the intellectual and
practical side ineffectively utilitaria
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Hour of God_Volume-17/The Real Difficulty.htm
The Real Difficulty
THE real difficulty is always in ourselves, not in our surroundings. There are three things necessary in order to make men invincible, Will, Disinterestedness and Faith. We may have a will to emancipate ourselves, but sufficient faith may be lacking. We may have a faith in our ultimate emancipation, but the will to use the necessary means may be wanting. And even if there are will and faith, we may use them with a violent attachment to the fruit of our work or with passions of hatred, blind excitement or hasty forcefulness which may produce evil reactions. For this reason it is necessary, in a work of such magnitude, to have resort to a higher Powe
Karma
GOD leads man while man is misleading himself; the higher nature watches over the stumblings of the lower mortality: this is the tangle and contradiction out of which we have to escape into a clear knowledge, the self-unity to which alone is possible a faultless action.
That thou shouldst have pity on creatures is well, but not well, if thou art a slave to thy pity. Be a slave to nothing except to God, not even to His most luminous angels.
Beatitude is God's aim for humanity; get this supreme good for thyself first that thou mayst distribute it entirely to thy fellow- beings.
He who acquires for himself alone, acquires ill though he may call it heaven and virtu
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Hour of God_Volume-17/Consciousness Psychogy.htm
Consciousness
—
Psychology
ALL
that exists or can exist in this or any other universe can be rendered into
terms of consciousness; there is nothing that cannot be known. This knowing need
not be always a mental knowledge. For the greater part of existence is either
above or below mind, and mind can know only indirectly what is above or what is
below it. But the one true and complete way of knowing is by direct knowledge.
All
can be rendered into terms of consciousness because all is either a creation of
consciousness or else one of its forms. All exists in an infinite conscious
existence and is a part or a form of it. In proportion as one can share directly
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Hour of God_Volume-17/Psychology.htm
Psychology
PSYCHOLOGY
is the science of consciousness and its states and operations in Nature and,
if that can be glimpsed or experienced, its states and operations beyond what we
know
as Nature.
It
is not enough to observe and know the movements of our surface nature and the
superficial nature of other living creatures, just as it is not enough for
Science to observe and know as electricity
only the movements of lightning in the clouds or for the astronomer to observe
and know only those movements and properties of the stars that are visible to
the unaided eye. Here as there a whole world of occult phenomena have to be laid
bare and brought under control before the psyc
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Hour of God_Volume-17/A Preface of National Educaton.htm
VI
EDUCATION AND ART
A Preface on National Education
THE necessity and unmixed good of universal education has become a fixed dogma to the modern intelligence, a thing held to be beyond dispute by any liberal mind or awakened national conscience, and whether the tenet be or not altogether beyond cavil, it may at any rate be presumed that it answers to a present and imperative need of the intellectual and vital effort of the race. But there is not quite so universal an agreement or common attainment to a reasoned or luminous idea on what education is or practically or ideally should be. Add to this uncertainty the demand - naturally insistent a
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Hour of God_Volume-17/Nammalwar.htm
Nammalwar
THE SUPREME VAISHNAVA SAINT AND POET
MARAN, renowned as Nammalwar
("Our Saint") among the Vaishnavas and the greatest of their saints
and poets, was born in a small town called Kuruhur,
in the southernmost region of the Tamil country - Tiru-nel-veli
(Tinnevelly). His father, Kari, was a petty prince
who paid . tribute to the Pandyan King of Madura. We have no means of ascertaining the date of the Alwar's birth, as the traditional account is untrustworthy
and full of inconsistencies. We are told that the infant was mute for several
years after his birth. Nammalwar renounced the world
early in life and spent his time singing and meditating on Go
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Hour of God_Volume-17/Hymns to the Goddess.htm
Hymns
to the Goddess*
THIS is
one of a series of publications by Mr. Arthur Avalon consisting of texts and
translations of the Tantras. The hymns collected and translated in this volume
are, however, taken from other sources besides the Tantras. Many of them are
from the considerable body of devotional hymns attributed by tradition to the
philosopher Shankaracharya, a few from the Mahabharata and the Puranas. Most
are well-known stotras addressed to the various forms and names of the
female Energy, Mother of the worlds, whose worship is an important part of that
many-sided and synthetic whole which we call Hinduism.
The work of
translation has been admirably done. T