Home
Find:


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/Prema Nandakumar, Dr./English/Savitri/'Epilogue- The Return to Earth'.htm
  SECTION E   'EPILOGUE: THE RETURN TO EARTH'   Savitri now awakes from out of the "abysmal trance" of her spirit; she espies the "green-clad branches" above, and peering through an "emerald lattice-window of leaves" notes the thinning day and the evening's peace. Satyavan's living body is by her side, and all her being rejoices in enfolding his:         Supine in musing bliss she lay awhile       Given to the wonder of a waking trance.94   But Satyavan is still asleep, "like an infant spirit unaware", reclining on her breast; presently awake, he finds her eyes waiting for his, he feels her hands, and embracing her and vaguely recollecting strange impossible h
Title: X          View All Highlighted Matches
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Prema Nandakumar, Dr./English/Savitri/Battles of the Soul.htm
   X         BATTLES OF THE SOUL   The third major ingredient of the epic, Savitri, is the prolonged trial of strength between Savitri and Death. In the original legend, Death (Yama) is no villain, no principle of primordial Evil, but a bright God, Dharma himself. In Sri Aurobindo's poem, he is referred to neither as Yama nor as Dharma, but only as Death. Savitri and Death meet by the side of prone Satyavan as antagonistic powers and personalities, and once the issue is joined, they struggle to the bitter end. A battle, whether symbolic or real, whether fought with material or other weapons, between the forces of Good and Evil can be as exciting as, perhaps even more exciting t
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Prema Nandakumar, Dr./English/Savitri/'The Birth and Childhood of the Flame'.htm
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Prema Nandakumar, Dr./English/Savitri/Introduction.htm
   PART III          SAVITRI:  SIGNIFICANCES         And thou reachest, O Savitri, to the three shining "worlds of heaven; and thou art made manifest       by the rays of the Sun;  and thou encirclest the Night upon either side; and thou becomest the Lord of Love by the law of thy actions, O God.                                                                                           Rig Veda        THE 'LEGEND' AND       THE 'SYMBOL         The face of Truth is hidden by a brilliant golden lid; that do thou remove, O fostering Sun,  for the Law
Title: V          View All Highlighted Matches
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Prema Nandakumar, Dr./English/Savitri/The Cantos.htm
 V       THE CANTOS   Apart from Whitman, whom Sri Aurobindo obviously admired, though with the necessary qualifications, he was doubtless also influenced as a practitioner of verse by the work of contemporaries like Yeats, Eliot and Ezra Pound. While the extent of the influence might not have been very appreciable, there can be no question about the reality of Sri Aurobindo's intelligent interest in contemporary English poetry. Passages from The Hollow Men are scanned in Sri Aurobindo's essay on quantitative metre as examples of the new 'ametric poetry', and once, in 1946, in defence of his use of the French word 'flasque' in Savitri, he said that he had done it "somewhat af
Title: XI          View All Highlighted Matches
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Prema Nandakumar, Dr./English/Savitri/Savitri and the Commedia.htm
 XI         SAVITRI AND THE COMMEDIA         Sri Aurobindo's Savitri, in its earliest version,106 must have approximated much closer to the 'legend' in the Mahabharata than to the present epic. The power of Savitri's radiant purity of purpose and fiery chastity confronts Yama; and Yama who is both the Lord of Death and the upholder of Dharma, being irresistibly awakened by her mere presence and the flow of apt speech from her to a realisation of his latter role, consents at last to release the 'soul' of Satyavan, and so the lovers return to their hermitage. It was during his early years at Pondicherry that Sri Aurobindo glimpsed clearly the possibility of the supramentalisation of ma
Title: IV          View All Highlighted Matches
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Prema Nandakumar, Dr./English/Savitri/Mystic Poetry and the Mantra.htm
IV         MYSTIC POETRY AND THE MANTRA         If overhead poetry is the high-ranging Himalayas, then the mantra is their ultimate peak, Everest itself. Rhythm, verbal form, thought-substance, thought's radiant soul-quality, all fuse in the mantra to produce the effect of an incantation. When a Vedic rishi articulates a mantra, it really surges with a potent inevitability from the depths of his soul, and presently sinks into the depths of the hearer's soul, leaping over or penetrating intervening barriers like the analytical intellect, the sensory faculties, the bodily sheaths. Sri Aurobindo himself describes the process thus:         Its message enters stirring the bl
Title: II          View All Highlighted Matches
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Prema Nandakumar, Dr./English/Savitri/'The Parable of the Search for the Soul'.htm
       II         'THE PARABLE OF THE SEARCH FOR THE SOUL'         Her nights are sleepless, for still she hears and sees "the dumb tread of Time and the approach of ever-nearing Fate". Then one night she is startled by a mighty voice invading her mortal life; she is jerked into a trance and becomes "a stone of God lit by an amethyst soul". What use Savitri—"O spirit, O immortal energy"!—coming to "this dumb deathbound earth" if it was merely to nurse a hopeless grief in a helpless heart? Not passive sufferance but positive action is expected of her:         Arise, O soul, and vanquish Time and Death.   Still in her tranced state, Savitri replies: How can she striv
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Prema Nandakumar, Dr./English/Savitri/The Basis of Savitri Sri Aurobindo^s Yoga.htm
  VIII         THE BASIS OF SAVITRI:         SRI AUROBINDO'S YOGA   What was it that Sri Aurobindo experienced, what was it that he saw, what was the nature of the realisations that he later tried to record in prose and in verse? It is usual to call these yogic experiences. The word 'yoga' evidently comes from the same root as jungo in Latin, to unite; and the aim of yoga is to effect the union between the one (the individual) and the many (the All). This sense of union can come in many ways. It may come as an experience of intimate partnership, father-son or lover-beloved relationship; it may come as the experience of a personal God, of an aspect of God (Peace, Power,
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Prema Nandakumar, Dr./English/Savitri/'The World-soul'.htm
      XIV         'THE WORLD-SOUL'         To the anxiously seeking eyes of Aswapati there now appears, "in a far-shimmering background of Mind-Space a glowing mouth...a luminous shaft...a recluse-gate...a veiled retreat...a tunnel of the depths of God."128 This is a way out, this is an escape from the icy stare of immaculate Silence!         As one drawn to his lost spiritual home...       Into a passage dim and tremulous       That clasped him in from day and night's pursuit,       He travelled led by a mysterious sound.129   He is lured on and on by murmurs, voices and harmonies untranslatable—reminiscent of the "jingling silver laugh of anklet b