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Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Sujata Nahar/English/Mother^s Chronicles Book Four/Steal the Boy.htm
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Steal the Boy
From Sri Aurobindo and Manmohan we have understood clearly enough their father's financial difficulties. Yet it is on record that from 1884, when Dr. Ghose was first posted at Khulna as the Chief Medical Officer of the District, he was drawing a salary of Rs.625. By 1890 (by then he was also officiating as an Honorary Magistrate of Khulna and Satkhira1), his monthly earnings had risen to Rs.775 —a considerable sum in those days when one paisa was enough for a man to satisfy his hunger. So what was the matter?
There was, naturally, the Doctor's own establishment at Khulna to keep up in the European style he favoured. Apart from the main hous
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Sujata Nahar/English/Mother^s Chronicles Book Four/King^s College.htm
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King's College
Sri Aurobindo was at Cambridge, "borne there by his own ability." Cambridge, "the nursery of blooming youth," as a poet saw it.
Following is the letter Sri Aurobindo wrote to his father when he went up to Cambridge in October 1890. "Last night I was invited to coffee with one of the dons and in his rooms I met the great O. B., otherwise Oscar Browning, who is the feature 'par excellence' of King's. He was extremely flattering, passing from the subject of cotillons to that of scholarship he said to me, 'I suppose you know you passed an extraordinarily high examination. I have examined papers at thirteen examinations and I have never duri
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Sujata Nahar/English/Mother^s Chronicles Book Four/Holiday Walks.htm
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Holiday Walks
What did the boys do during school holidays? From Manmohan's letters1 to his poet friend, Laurence Binyon, we gather that at least during the long summer breaks they went to some hill or seaside resort. Getting away from London must have been a relief.
The first letter, dated August 10, 1886, Tuesday, is from Keswick (c/o Miss Scott, Ambleside Road) where the brothers were holidaying that summer. The two friends were still students at St. Paul's.
"I am sorry you cannot come to the Lake District —but I quite understand your difficulties in the way of expense and luggage, for we have been feeling the same. And Derbyshire, I can tell you
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Sujata Nahar/English/Mother^s Chronicles Book Four/Rishi Rajnarain Bose Sri Aurobindo^s Grandfather.htm
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Rishi Rajnarain Bose
Sri Aurobindo's Grandfather
We find the roots of this Tree in Rajnarain's Bengali autobiography, Atmacharit.
"My great grandfather, SUKDEB BOSE, received in dream the formula of a medicine," writes Rajnarain. And, as is to be expected, Sukdeb never charged anybody anything for it. Nor did his descendants.
"My grandfather, RAMSUNDAR BOSE, was a most generous-hearted man. Every morning, an umbrella slung over his shoulder, he would visit every house in the village and inquire if they had food for the day. And if there was no food in somebody's house, he would send some from his own. Also
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Sujata Nahar/English/Mother^s Chronicles Book Four/The Stream.htm
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The Stream
Let us look again at our Lotus, Aurobindo. But that Lotus was not only a flower. He was a fruit. A fruition.
And what mighty Tree bore that Fruit? What seeds pushed forth that mighty Tree? How far-spread were its roots? Again, what soil nourished it, and sent the sap coursing through the Tree's mighty trunk and into its branches?
And in which jungle was that Tree to be found ?
The soil was the land known as India.
The jungle was the Indian society.
Shall we go into the jungle and explore? Who knows what we may stumble across!
*
* *
However, before we step into the jungle, let us be clear about one thing. F
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Sujata Nahar/English/Mother^s Chronicles Book Four/precontent.htm
MOTHER'S CHRONICLES
- BOOK FOUR -
Mother's Chronicles
book four
MIRRA
SRI AUROBINDO
On Her Way to Ancient Times
On His Way to Modern Times
SUJATA NAHAR
INSTITUT DE RECHERCHES EVOLUTIVES, Paris
& MIRA ADITI, Mysore
Already published in the series:
Book One: MIRRA
Book Two: MIRRA THE ARTIST
Book Three: MIRRA THE OCCULTIST
To be published:
Book Five: MIRRA MEETS THE REVOLUTIONARY
Book Six: MIRRA IN JAPAN
Book Seven: MIRRA THE MOTHER
Mother's Chronicles - B
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Sujata Nahar/English/Mother^s Chronicles Book Four/Hard Realities.htm
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Hard Realities
"But what strange ideas again I —that I was born with a supramental temperament and that I know nothing of hard realities!" Sri Aurobindo replied to Dilip's complaint ("it is after all we who suffer, not you ... so aloof from the hard world of fact," etc.). "Good God! My whole life has been a struggle with hard realities —from hardships, starvation in England and constant dangers and fierce difficulties to the far greater difficulties constantly cropping up here in Pondicherry, external and internal. My life has been a battle; the fact that I wage it now from a room upstairs and by spiritual means as well as others that are external makes no d
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Sujata Nahar/English/Mother^s Chronicles Book Four/Swarnalata Sri Aurobindo^s Mother.htm
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Swarnalata
Sri Aurobindo's Mother
In the middle of 1879 Dr. Krishna Dhan Ghose, now thirty-four, again left for England, but this time with his family. Wife Swarnalata was twenty-seven; sons Beno, Mono, Ara were respectively twelve, ten and going on seven ; daughter Saro was not even two. The Doctor had taken a 'Privilege Leave' for three months from 6 June.
This second trip was not for himself but for his three sons who, decided their father, should be educated in England. Another objective in view was Swarnalata: the 'Golden Creeper' was withering. The worm of hysteria was eating the Rose of Rangpur. Akroyd, barely a month
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Sujata Nahar/English/Mother^s Chronicles Book Four/Chronology.htm
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Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Sujata Nahar/English/Mother^s Chronicles Book Four/On Board the Kaga Maru.htm
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On Board the Kaga Maru
Mirra had now procured all her travel documents. A man helped her much in obtaining those papers, and Mirra never forgot it. So the gentleman's sister in Pondicherry basked lifelong in the sunshine of Mother's kindness. Talk of the divine quality of gratitude? Well, Mother certainly had it.
On 6 March 1914, Mirra and Paul Richard were in Geneva. Why did they go there? Mother speaks of 'suffering' and of 'grief.' "Certainly this sentimental and physical attachment which produces a wrench when the bodies separate, is childish from a certain point of view, when we contemplate the impermanence of outer forms and the reality of