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Acronyms used in the website

SABCL - Sri Aurobindo Birth Centenary Library

CWSA - Complete Works of Sri Aurobindo

CWM - Collected Works of The Mother

Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Dilip Kumar Roy/English/Sri Aurobindo to Dilip - Volume I/1932.htm
1932 1932 The German translation of your poem is very well done. As for Frau Füllöp Miller1 whose judgement on men is as unanswerable as yours on European women. We will follow the profound Asquithian policy which is good throughout the ages: "Wait and see". 1932 ? ... PS. Did you read Cromnur Byng's compliments on my poems (I had sent him about a dozen of my latest) that he "greatly admired my beautiful poems ?" What would Thomson say to that? If even my beginner's poems are so appreciated (for I would not think he was insincere here—Englishmen are very chary of praise in such matters) how would he respond to the magnificent mature poems of Harin ? By the w
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Jugal Kishore Mukherjee/English/The Destiny of the Body/The Waking State and the ^Why^ of the Samadhi-Plunge.htm
-012_The Waking State and the ^Why^ of the Samadhi-Plunge.htm Chapter III THE WAKING STATE AND THE 'WHY' OF THE SAMADHI-PLUNGE Above us dwells a superconscient god Hidden in the mystery of his own light: Around us is a vast of ignorance Lit by the uncertain ray of the human mind, Below us sleeps the Inconscient dark and mute. (Sri Aurobindo, Savitri, Book VII, Canto II, p. 484) Since mind-consciousness is the sole waking state possessed by mental being,...it cannot ordinarily quite enter into another without leaving behind completely both all our waking existence and all our inward mind. This is the necessity of the Yogic trance.
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Jugal Kishore Mukherjee/English/The Destiny of the Body/The Evolution of Hunger.htm
Chapter V THE EVOLUTION OF HUNGER The law of Hunger must give place progressively to the law of Love, the law of Division to the law of Unity, the law of Death to the law of Immortality. (Sri Aurobindo, The Life Divine, p. 195) Our life, a breath of force and movement and possession attached to a form of mind and body and restricted by the form, limited in its force, hampered in its movement, besieged in its possession and therefore a thing of discords at war with itself and its environment, hungering and unsatisfied, moving inconstantly from object to object and unable to embrace and retain their multiplicity, devouring its objects of
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Jugal Kishore Mukherjee/English/The Destiny of the Body/The Challenge.htm
Part One PROLEGOMENA Chapter I THE CHALLENGE "Wilt thou claim immortality, O heart, Crying against the eternal witnesses... I only am eternal and endure.... I am a timeless Nothingness carrying all,... I, Death, am He; there is no other God. All from my depths are born, they live by death; All to my depths return and are no more." (Sri Aurobindo, Savitri, Book IX, Canto II, pp. 592-93) "I bow not to Thee, O huge mask of Death, Black lie of night to the cowed soul of man, Unreal, inescapable end of things, Thou grim jest played with the immortal spirit." (Ibid, p. 588)
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Jugal Kishore Mukherjee/English/The Destiny of the Body/Metaphysics of Hunger - The Universal ^Yajna^.htm
-033_Metaphysics of Hunger - The Universal ^Yajna^.htm Chapter IV METAPHYSICS OF HUNGER: THE UNIVERSAL 'YAJNA' A thousand salutations to the Great Mother who pervadest all becomings in the shape of Hunger and Thirst. (Chandi Saptashati, III.16,19) To whatever god the oblation is offered, Hunger and Thirst surely have their share in the offering.1 (Aitareya Upanishad, I.2.5) By the Apāna...food was seized and of Apāna Death was born. (Ibid., I.3.10 & I.1.4) They preyed upon the world and were its prey. (Sri Aurobindo, Savitri, Book II, Canto IV, p. 144) A Hunger amorous of its suffering prey, Life that devours, my image see in
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Jugal Kishore Mukherjee/English/The Destiny of the Body/The Ineluctable Guest.htm
Chapter II THE INELUCTABLE GUEST I am a timeless Nothingness carrying all, I am the Illimitable, the mute Alone. I, Death, am He; there is no other God. All from my depths are born, they live by death; All to my depths return and are no more. (Sri Aurobindo, Savitri, Book IX, Canto II, pp. 592-93) De quel nom te nommer, o fatale puissance ? Qu'on t'appelle Destin, Nature, Providence, Inconcevable loi, Qu'on tremble sous ta main, ou bien qu'on te blasphème, Soumis ou révolté", qu'on te craigne ou qu'on t'aime, Toujours, c'est toujours toi! (Lamartine, Medit. poetic, Le Désespoir)
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Jugal Kishore Mukherjee/English/The Destiny of the Body/The Mind-Consciousness Its Achievements and Failures.htm
Chapter VIII THE MIND-CONSIOUSNESS: ITS ACHIEVEMENTS AND FAILURES A black veil has been lifted; we have seen The mighty shadow of the omniscient Lord; But who has lifted up the veil of light And who has seen the body of the King ? (Sri Aurobindo, Savitri, Book III, Canto II, p. 311) It is certain that you won't be able to know the Atman through the mind. You have to go beyond the mind. As there is no instrument beyond the mind — for only the Atman exists there — there the object of knowledge becomes the same as the instrument of knowledge....It is therefore that the Shruti says,
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Jugal Kishore Mukherjee/English/The Destiny of the Body/The Ascending Scale of Energy.htm
Chapter XI THE ASCENDING SCALE OF ENERGY One thing one does not escape and that is the wasting of the material tissues of the body, its flesh and substance. Conceivably, if a practicable way and means could only be found, this last invincible obstacle too might be overcome and the body maintained by an interchange of its forces with the forces of material Nature, giving to her her need from the individual and taking from her directly the sustaining energies of her universal existence. Conceivably, one might rediscover and reestablish at the summit of the evolution of life the phenomenon we see at its base, the power to draw from all around i
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Jugal Kishore Mukherjee/English/The Destiny of the Body/The Misgiving and the Frown.htm
Chapter V THE MISGIVING AND THE FROWN All that is born must taste death too ... (Gita, II, 27) Life, indeed, ends in death. ( Dhammapada, 148) Will all beings die ? Buddha said: "Short, O monks, is the life of man ... it is impossible that what is born should not die." (Abhidharmakoṣavyākhyā) Dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return. (Genesis, III. 19) The impossible is the hint of what shall be, Mortal the door to immortality. (Sri Aurobindo, More Poems, p. 78) ODeath, thou speakest truth but Truth that slays, Ianswer to Thee with the Truth that saves. (Sri
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Jugal Kishore Mukherjee/English/The Destiny of the Body/The Conquest of Sleep.htm
Chapter IX THE CONQUEST OF SLEEP Thine is the shade in which visions are made; sped by thy hands from celestial lands come the souls that rejoice for ever. Into thy dream-worlds we pass or look in thy magic glass, then beyond thee we climb out of Space and Time to the peak of divine endeavour. (Sri Aurobindo, Collected Poems and Plays, Vol. II, p. 122) He has seen God's slumber shape these magic worlds. He has watched the dumb God fashioning Matter's frame, Dreaming the dreams of its unknowing sleep, And watched the unconscious Force that built the stars. He has learnt the Inconscient's workings a