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SEVEN
Our Hope in the Future
BUT
profound as have been its effects, this
revolution is yet in its infancy. Visible on every side, in the
waning influence of the Sadharan Brahmo Samaj, in the triumph
of the Bengali language, in the return to Hinduism, in the pride
of birth, the angry national feeling and the sensitiveness to insult,
which are growing more and more common among our young
men, it has nevertheless only begun its work and has many more
fields to conquer. Calcutta is yet a stronghold of the Philistines; officialdom is honey-combed with the antinational tradition: in
politics and social reform the workings of the new movement are
yet obscure. The Anglicised Babu sits in the high place and rules
the earth for a season. It is he who perorates on the Congress,
who frolics in the abysmal fatuity of interpellation on the Legislative Council, who mismanages civic affairs in the smile of the
City Corporation. He is the man of the present, but he is not the
man of the future. On his generation, a generation servilely English and swayed by Keshab Chandra Sen and Kristo Das Pal,
Bankim had little effect. Even now you will hear Anglicised
Bengalis tell you with a sort of triumph that the only people who
read Bengali books are the Bengali ladies. The sneer is a little
out-of-date, but a few years ago it would not have been so utterly
beside the mark. All honour then to the women of Bengal,
whose cultured appreciation kept Bengali literature alive! And
all honour to the noble few who, with only the women of Bengal
and a small class of cultured men to appreciate their efforts,
adhered to the language our forefathers spoke, and did not sell
themselves to the tongue of the foreigner! Their reward is the
heart-felt gratitude of a nation and an immortal renown. Yes,
the women of Bengal have always been lovers of literature and
may they always remain so; but it is no longer true that they are
its only readers. Already we see the embryo of a new generation
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soon to be with us, whose imagination Bankim has caught and
who care not for Keshab Chandra Sen and Kristo Das Pal, a
generation national to a fault, loving Bengal and her new glories,
and if not Hindus themselves, yet zealous for the honour of the
ancient religion and hating all that makes war on it. With that
generation the future lies and not with the Indian Unnational
Congress or the Sadharan Brahmo Samaj. Already its vanguard
is upon us. It has in it men of culture, men of talent, men of genius. Let it
only be true to itself and we shall do yet more marvellous things in the future than we have done in the past. A
Bengali may be pardoned who, looking back to a splendid beginning and on to a hopeful sequel, indulges in proud and grandiose
hopes.
Literature and learning are the provinces in which the
Bengali is fitted to have kingship, and of the two literature rather
than learning; but signs are not wanting that in other spheres
also he may win laurels only less splendid. In painting and
sculpture, in the plastic arts, the Hindu imagination has
had no gift. The favourite style is evidence of a debauched eye
and a perverted taste. Yet even in this alien sphere a Bengali
has been winning noble renown and that too in Italy, the native
land of painting, the land of Raphael, Da Vinci and Angelo,
and among Italians, with whom artistic taste is an instinct. In
religion too, the Bengali has the future in his hands. He was the
first to revolt against the shortcomings of Hinduism, and he is the
first who has attempted to give some shape to that New Hinduism, which is, one feels, his religious destiny. He has sojourned
for some time in the religious thought of the foreigner, but he is
now coming back to the creed of his fathers with strange and
precious gifts in his hands. In politics, he has always led and still
leads. The Congress in Bengal is dying of consumption; annually
its proportions shrink into greater insignificance; its leaders,
the Bonnerjis and Bannerjis and Lalmohan Ghoses have climbed
into the rarefied atmosphere of the Legislative Council and lost
all hold on the imagination of the young men. The desire for a
nobler and more inspiring patriotism is growing more intense;
and already in the Hindu revival and in the rise of an Indigenous
Trade Party we see the handwriting on the wall. This is an omen
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of good hope for the future; for what Bengal thinks tomorrow,
India will be thinking tomorrow week. Even towards commerce and science, spheres in which he has been painfully helpless,
the Bengali is casting wistful glances; but whether he will here as elsewhere ascend the ladder, can only be settled by experiment.
He is almost too imaginative, restless and swayed by his feelings for paths in which a cold eye or an untroubled brain is the one
thing needful. Nevertheless let Bengal only be true to her own soul, and there is no province in which she may not climb to
greatness. That this is so, is largely due to the awakening and stimulating influence of Bankim on the national mind. Young
Bengal gets its ideas, feelings and culture not from schools and colleges, but from Bankim's novels and Rabindranath Tagore's
poems; so true is it that language is the life of a nation.
Many are carrying on the great work in prose and poetry — Hemchandra, Nobin, Kamini Sen, Rabindranath and
Rabindranath's sister, that flower of feminine culture in Bengal, Swarna Kumari Devi, and many more whose names it would
take long to repeat; but another Bankim, another Madhusudan comes not again. Some are pointing to this as a sign of intellectual barrenness; but it is not so. Shakespeare and Milton came
within the limits of a century! Since then there have been Keats,
Wordsworth, Shelley, Tennyson, but not a second Shakespeare
or Milton. Dante and Boccaccio came successively: since then
there have been Berni, Boiardo, Alfieri, Tasso, but not a second
Dante or Boccaccio. Such men come rarely in the lapse of
centuries. Greece alone has presented the world an unbroken
succession of supreme geniuses. There is nothing to prevent us Hindus, a nation
created for thought and literature, from repeating that wonderful example. Greece is a high name, but what
man has once done, man may again strive to do. All we need
is not to tie ourselves down to a false ideal, not to load our brains
with the pedantry of a false education, but to keep like those first
builders a free intellect and a free soul. If we are careful to do
that, there is no reason why the creative impulse in Bengal should
for a moment die out. But whatever else may perish or endure,
Bankim's fame cannot die. Already it has overleaped the barrier
between East and West; translations of his works are already
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appearing in English and German, and wherever they are read,
they excite admiration, wonder and delight. O sage politicians,
and subtle economists, whose heads run on Simultaneous Examinations and whose vision is bounded by Legislative Councils,
what a lesson is here for you! Not in this way shall we exalt ourselves in the scale of nations, not in this way,
O sages of the
bench and sophists of the bar, but by things of which your legal
wisdom takes little cognizance, by noble thoughts, by high deeds,
by immortal writings. Bankim and Madhusudan have given
the world three noble things. They have given it Bengali literature, a literature whose princelier creations can bear comparison
with the proudest classics of modern Europe. They have given
it the Bengali language. The dialect of Bengal is no longer a
dialect, but has become the speech of Gods, a language
unfading and indestructible, which cannot die except with
the death of the Bengali nation and not even then. And
they have given it the Bengali nation; a people spirited, bold,
ingenious and imaginative, high among the most intellectual races
of the world, and if it can but get perseverance and physical
elasticity, one day to be high among the strongest. This is surely
a proud record. Of them it may be said in the largest sense that
they, being dead, yet live. And when Posterity comes to crown
with her praises the Makers of India, she will place her most
splendid laurel not on the sweating temples of a place-hunting
politician nor on the narrow forehead of a noisy social reformer
but on the serene brow of that gracious Bengali who never clamoured for place or for power, but did his work in silence for
love of his work, even as nature does, and just because he had
no aim but to give out the best that was in him, was able to create
a language, a literature and a nation.
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