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SECTION
Two
BANKIM CHANDRA CHATTERJI
On the passing away of Bankim Chandra Chatterji in
1894 Sri Aurobindo wrote a series of seven articles,
"Bankim Chandra Chatterji by a Bengali" in the Induprakash of Bombay from July 16, 1894 to August
27, 1894. These articles were signed "Zero".
ONE
His Youth and College Life
Bankim
Chandra Chattopadhyaya, the
creator and king of Bengali prose, was a high-caste Brahman
and the son of a distinguished official in Lower Bengal. Born
at Kantalpara on the 27th June 1838, dead at Calcutta on the
8th April 1894, his fifty-six years of laborious life were a parcel
of the most splendid epoch in Bengali history; yet among its
many noble names, his is the noblest. His life shows us three
faces, his academical career, his official labours and his literary
greatness; it will be here my endeavour to give some description
of each and all. The first picture we have of his childhood is his
mastering the alphabet at a single reading; and this is not only
the initial picture but an image and prophecy of the rest. Even
thus early men saw in him the three natural possessions of the
cultured Bengali, a boundless intellect, a frail constitution and
a temper mild to the point of passivity. And indeed Bankim
was not only our greatest: he was also our type and magnified
pattern. He was the image of all that is most finely characteristic
in the Bengali race. At Midnapur, the home of his childhood,
the magnificence of his intellect came so early into view, that his
name grew into a proverb. "You will soon be another Bankim",
— for a master to say that was the hyperbole of praise, and the
best reward of industry. He ascended the school by leaps and
bounds; so abnormal indeed was his swiftness that it put his
masters in fear for him. They grew nervous lest they should
spoil by over-instruction the delicate fibre of his originality, and
with a wise caution, they obstructed his entrance into the highest
class. Bankim had always an extraordinary luck. Just as at school his fine
promise was saved by the prudence of its guardians from the altar of High Education, the Moloch to whom we
stupidly sacrifice India's most hopeful sons, so it was saved at
Hugly College by his own distaste for hard work. At Hugly
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College quite as much as at Midnapur he had .the reputation of
an intellectual miracle. And indeed his ease and quickness in
study were hardly human. Prizes and distinctions cost him no
effort in the attaining. He won his honours with a magical carelessness and as if by accident while others toiled and failed.
But while unconquerably remiss in his duties, he bestowed wonderful pains on his caprices. He conceived at this time a passion
for Sanskrit and read with great perseverance at a Pandit's tol.
In a single year, he had gone through the Mugdhabodh, Raghuvansa, Bhatti and the Meghaduta. Advancing at this pace he
managed in something under four years to get a sense of mastery
in the ancient tongue and a feeling for its literary secrets which
gave him immense leverage in his work of creating a new prose.
Not that there is the least touch of pedantry in his Bengali style: rather it was he and Madhu Sudan Dutt who broke the tyranny
of the Sanskrit tradition: but one feels how immensely his labour
was simplified by a fine and original use of his Sanskrit knowledge. At the age of seventeen, being then a student of five
years standing, he cut short his attendance at Hugly College.
He left behind him a striking reputation, to which, except Dwarakanath Mitra, no student has ever come near. Yet he had done
positively nothing in the way of application or hard work. As
with most geniuses his intellectual habits were irregular. His
spirit needed larger bounds than a school routine could give it,
and refused, as every free mind does, to cripple itself and lose its
natural suppleness. It was his constant habit, a habit which grew
on with the lapse of time, to hide himself in a nook of the College Library and
indulge his wandering appetite in all sorts of reading. At the eleventh hour and with an examination impending,
he would catch up his prescribed books, hurry through them at
a canter, win a few prizes, and go back to his lotus-eating. I
believe this is a not uncommon habit with brilliant young men
in all countries and it saves them from the sterilising effects of
over-instruction; but it hardly strikes one as a safe policy for
slower minds. At the Presidency College, his next seat of instruction, he shaped his versatile intellect to the study of law. He had
then some project of qualifying as a High Court Pleader, but at
the right moment for literature the Calcutta University came into
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being and Bankim took literary honours instead of legal. The
Courts lost a distinguished pleader and India gained a great man.
Bankim, however, seems to have had some hankering after Law;
for he subsequently snatched time from hard official drudgery
and larger literary toil to appear with his usual distinguished
success for the B.L. But his chief pretension to academical
originality is perhaps that he was, together with Jodunath Bose,
our first B.A., even in this detail leading the way for his countrymen. His official appointment followed close on the heels of
his degree. At the age of twenty he was sent as Deputy Magistrate to Jessore.
I have drawn out, in a manner as little perfunctory as I
could manage, this skeleton of Bankim's academical life. In
any account of an eminent Hindu a dry sketch of this sort is a
form that must be gone through; for we are a scholastic people
and in our life examinations and degrees fill up half the book.
But examinations and degrees are a minor episode in the history
of a mind. An European writer has acutely observed that nothing which is worth knowing can be taught. That is a truth
which Dr. Bhandarkar, when he can spare time from his Carlyle,
might ponder over with profit. Not what a man learns, but
what he observes for himself in life and literature is the
formative agency in his existence, and the actual shape it will
take is much determined by the sort of social air he happens to
breathe at that critical moment when the mind is choosing
its road. All else is mere dead material useless without the
breath of a vivifying culture. If examinations and degrees are
the skeleton of university life, these are its soul and life-blood,
and where they exist poorly or not at all, education, except for
the one or two self-sufficing intellects, becomes mere wind and
dust. Among what sort of men did the student Bankim move ?
From what social surroundings did his adolescent personality
take its colour ? These are questions of a nearer interest than the
examinations he passed or the degrees he took; and to them I
shall give a larger answer.
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