Section Nine
SOME
EARLY LETTERS
This
Section consists of some letters written by Sri Aurobindo during the early
period of his stay at Pondicherry after his arrival there in 1910.
Part
I includes letters relating to his personal Sadhana written during 1911 to
1916.
Part
II contains two letters written in 1920 in reply to appeals to him from two
Indian nationalist leaders to come back to British India to resume leadership
of Indian politics.
Part
III contains three letters written in 1922 relating to the plan that he had
then conceived to extend his work outside after his long retirement in inner Sadhana.
SOME
EARLY LETTERS
I. EARLY SADHANA IN PONDICHERRY¹
I
need some place of refuge in which I can complete my Yoga unassailed and build
up other souls around me. It seems to me that Pondicherry is the place
appointed by those who are Beyond, but you know how much effort is needed to
establish the thing that is purposed upon the material plane....
I
am developing the necessary powers for bringing down the spiritual on the
material plane, and I am now able to put myself into men and change them,
removing the darkness and bringing light, giving them a new heart and a new
mind. This I can do with great swiftness and completeness with those who are
near me, but I have also succeeded with men hundreds of miles away. I have also
been given the power to read men's characters and hearts, even their thoughts,
but this power is not yet absolutely complete, nor can I use it always and in
all cases. The power of guiding action by the mere exercise of will is also
developing, but it is not so powerful as yet as the other. My communication
with the other world is yet of a troubled character, though I am certainly in
communication with some very great powers. But of all these things I will write
more when the final obstacles in my way are cleared from the path.
What
I perceive most clearly, is that the principal object of my Yoga is to remove
absolutely and entirely every possible source of error and ineffectiveness, of
error in order that the Truth I shall eventually show to men may be perfect,
and of ineffectiveness in order that the work of changing the world, so far as
I have to assist it, may be entirely victorious and irresistible. It is for
this reason that I have been going through so long a discipline and that the
more brilliant and mighty results of Yoga have been so long withheld. I have
been kept busy laying down the foundation, a work severe and painful. It is
only now that the
¹These letters, except the first two and the last, were written to the Mother.
Page – 423
edifice
is beginning to rise upon the sure and perfect foundation that has been laid.
12-7-1911
My
Yoga is proceeding with great rapidity, but I defer writing to you of the
results until certain experiments in which I am now engaged, have yielded fruit
sufficient to establish beyond dispute the theory and system of Yoga which I
have formed and which is giving great results not only to me, but to the young
men who are with me.... I expect these results within a month, if all goes
well.
20-9-1911
All
is always for the best, but it is sometimes from the external point of view an
awkward best....
The
whole earth is now under one law and answers to the same vibrations and I am
sceptical of finding any place where the clash of the struggle will not pursue
us. In any case, an effective retirement does not seem to be my destiny. I must
remain in touch with the world until I have either mastered adverse circumstances
or succumbed or carried on the struggle between the spiritual and physical so
far as I am destined to carry it on. This is how I have always seen things and
still see them. As for failure, difficulty and apparent impossibility I am too
much habituated to them to be much impressed by their constant
self-presentation except for passing moments....
One
needs to have a calm heart, a settled will, entire self-abnegation and the eyes
constantly fixed on the beyond to live undiscouraged in times like these which
are truly a period of universal decomposition. For myself, I follow the Voice
and look neither to right nor to left of me. The result is not mine and hardly
at all now even the labour.
6-5-1915
Heaven
we have possessed, but not the earth; but the fullness of
Page
– 424
the
Yoga is to make, in the formula of the Veda, "Heaven and Earth equal and
one".
20-5-1915
Everything
internal is ripe or ripening, but there is a sort of locked struggle in which
neither side can make a very appreciable advance (somewhat like the trench
warfare in Europe), the spiritual force insisting against the resistance of
the physical world, that resistance disputing every inch and making more or
less effective counter-attacks.... And if there were not the strength and Ananda
within, it would be harassing and disgusting work; but
the eye of knowledge looks beyond and sees that it is only a protracted
episode.
28-7-1915
Nothing
seems able to disturb the immobility of things and all that is active outside
our own selves is a sort of welter of dark and sombre confusion from which
nothing formed or luminous can emerge. It is a singular condition of the world,
the very definition of chaos with the superficial form of the old world resting
apparently intact on the surface. But a chaos of long disintegration or of some
early new birth? It is the thing that is being fought out from day to day, but
as yet without any approach to a decision.
16-9-1915
The
difficulties you find in the spiritual progress are common to us all. In this
Yoga the progress is always attended with these relapses into the ordinary
mentality until the whole being is so remoulded that it can no longer be
affected either by any downward tendency in our own nature or by the
impressions from the discordant world outside or even by the mental state of
those associated with us most closely in the Yoga. The ordinary Yoga is usually
concentrated on a single aim and therefore less exposed to such recoils; ours
is so complex and many-sided and
Page
– 425
embraces
such large aims that we cannot expect any smooth progress until we near the
completion of an effort, — especially as all the hostile forces in the
spiritual world are in a constant state of opposition and besiege our gains;
for the complete victory of a single one of us would mean a general downfall
among them. In fact by our own unaided effort we could not hope to succeed. It
is only in proportion as we come into a more and more universal communion with
the Highest that we can hope to overcome with any finality. For myself I have
had to come back so often from things that seemed to have been securely gained
that it is only relatively that I can say of any part of my Yoga, "It is
done." Still I have always found that when I recover from one of these
recoils, it is always with a new spiritual gain which might have been neglected
or missed if I had remained securely in my former state of partial
satisfaction. Especially, as I have long had the map of my advance sketched out
before me, I am able to measure my progress at each step and the particular
losses are compensated for by the clear consciousness of the general advance
that has been made. The final goal is far but the progress made in the face of
so constant and massive an opposition is the guarantee of its being gained in
the end. But the time is in other hands than ours. Therefore I have put
impatience and dissatisfaction far away from me.
An
absolute equality of the mind and heart and a clear purity and calm strength in
all the members of the being have long been the primary condition on which the
power working in me has insisted with an inexhaustible patience and an undeviating
constancy of will which rejects all the efforts of other powers to hasten
forward to the neglect of these first requisites. Wherever they are impaired it
returns upon them and works over and again over the weak points like a workman
patiently mending the defects of his work. These seem to me to be the
foundation and condition of all the rest. As they become firmer and more complete
the system is more able to hold consistently and vividly the settled perception
of the One in all things and beings, in all qualities, forces, happenings, in
all this world-consciousness and the play of its workings. That founds the
Unity and upon it the deep satisfaction and growing rapture of the Unity. It is
this
Page
– 426
to
which our nature is most recalcitrant. It persists in the division, in the
dualities, in the sorrow and unsatisfied passion and labour, it finds it
difficult to accustom itself to the divine largeness, joy and equipoise
—especially the vital and material parts of our nature; it is they that pull
down the mind which has accepted and even when it has long lived in the joy
and peace and oneness. That, I suppose, is why the religions and philosophies
have had so strong a leaning to the condemnation of Life and Matter and aimed
at an escape instead of a victory. But the victory has to be won; the
rebellious elements have to be redeemed and transformed, not rejected or
excised.
When
the Unity has been well founded, the static half of our work is done, but the
active half remains. It is then that in the One we must see the Master and His
Power, — Krishna and Kali as I name them using the terms of our Indian
religions; the Power occupying the whole of myself and my nature which becomes
Kali and ceases to be anything else, the Master using, directing, enjoying the
Power to his ends, not mine, with that which I call myself only as a centre of
his universal existence and responding to its workings as a soul to the Soul,
taking upon itself his image until there is nothing left but Krishna and Kali.
This is the stage I have reached in spite of all set-backs and recoils,
imperfectly indeed in the secureness and intensity of the state, but well
enough in the general type. When that has been done, then we may hope to found
securely the play in us of his divine Knowledge governing the action of his
divine Power. The rest is the full opening up of the different planes of his
world-play and the subjection of Matter and the body and the material world to
the law of the higher heavens of the Truth. To these things towards which in my
earlier ignorance I used to press forward impatiently before satisfying the first
conditions — the effort, however, was necessary and made the necessary
preparation of the material instruments — I can now only look forward as a
subsequent eventuality in a yet distant vista of things.
To
possess securely the Light and the Force of the supramental being, this is the
main object to which the power is now turning. But the remnant of the old
habits of intellectual thought and mental will come so obstinate in their
determination
Page
– 427
to
remain that the progress is hampered, uncertain and always falls back from the
little achievement already effected. They are no longer within me, they are
blind, stupid, mechanical, incorrigible even when they perceive their
incompetence, but they crowd round the mind and pour in their suggestions
whenever it tries to remain open only to the supramental Light and the higher
Command, so that the Knowledge and the Will reach the mind in a confused,
distorted and often misleading form. It is, however, only a question of time:
the siege will diminish in force and be finally dispelled.
26-6-1916
Page
– 428
II.
CALLS TO RETURN TO INDIAN POLITICS
Pondicherry
Jan. 5, 1920
Dear
Baptista,
Your
offer is a tempting one, but I regret that I cannot answer it in the
affirmative. It is due to you that I should state explicitly my reasons. In the
first place I am not prepared at present to return to British India. This is
quite apart from any political obstacle. I understand that up to last September
the Government of Bengal (and probably the Government of Madras also) were
opposed to my return to British India and that practically this opposition
meant that if I went back I should be interned or imprisoned under one or other
of the beneficent Acts which are apparently still to subsist as helps in
ushering in the new era of trust and cooperation. I do not suppose other
Governments would-be any more delighted by my appearance in their respective
provinces. Perhaps the King's Proclamation may make a difference, but that is
not certain since, as I read it, it does not mean an amnesty, but an act of
gracious concession and benevolence limited by the discretion of the Viceroy.
Now I have too much work on my hands to waste my time in the leisured ease of
an involuntary Government guest. But even if I were assured of an entirely free
action and movement, I should yet not go just now. I came to Pondicherry in
order to have freedom and tranquillity for a fixed object having nothing to do
1
About ten years after Sri Aurobindo withdrew from Indian political scene and
settled in Pondicherry, two prominent nationalist leaders wrote to him
appealing to him to come back to British India and to resume leadership of
Indian politics.
One
was Joseph Baptista who requested Sri Aurobindo to return to British India to
take up the editorship of an English daily paper which was proposed to be
brought out from Bombay as the organ of a new political party which Tilak and
others were intending to form at that time.
The
second was Dr. Munje who requested Sri Aurobindo to return to British India to
take up the Presidentship of the Indian National Congress. Dr. Munje was one of
the most prominent leaders of the Congress at Nagpur. He had also come to
Pondicherry in 1920 and had long talks on current Indian politics with Sri
Aurobindo.
Sri
Aurobindo's replies to both these appeals are reproduced here.
Page
– 429
with
present politics — in which I have taken no direct part since my coming here,
though what I could do for the country in my own way I have constantly done, —
and until it is accomplished, it is not possible for me to resume any kind of
public activity. But if I were in British India, I should be obliged to plunge
at once into action of different kinds. Pondicherry is my place of retreat, my
cave of tapasya, not of the ascetic kind, but of a brand of my own invention. I
must finish that, I must be internally armed and equipped for my work before I
leave it.
Next
in the matter of the work itself. I do not at all look down on politics or
political action or consider I have got above them. I have always laid a
dominant stress and I now lay an entire stress on the spiritual life, but my
idea of spirituality has nothing to do with ascetic withdrawal or contempt or
disgust of secular things. There is to me nothing secular, all human activity
is for me a thing to be included in a complete spiritual life, and the
importance of politics at the present time is very great. But my line and
intention of political activity would differ considerably from anything-now
current in the field. I entered into political action and continued it from
1903 to 1910 with one aim and one alone, to get into the mind of the people a
settled will for freedom and the necessity of a struggle to achieve it in place
of the futile ambling Congress methods till then in vogue. That is now done and
the Amritsar Congress is the seal upon it. The will is not as practical and
compact nor by any means as organised and sustained in action as it should be,
but there is the will and plenty of strong and able leaders to guide it. I
consider that in spite of the inadequacy of the Reforms, the will to
self-determination, if the country keeps its present temper, as I have no
doubt it will, is bound to prevail before long. What preoccupies me now is the
question what it is going to do with its self-determination, how will it use
its freedom, on what lines is it going to determine its future?
You
may ask why not come out and help, myself, so far as I can, in giving a lead ?
But my mind has a habit of running inconveniently ahead of the times, — some
might say, out of time altogether into the world of the ideal. Your party, you
say, is going to be a social democratic party. Now I believe in something
Page
– 430
which might be Called social democracy, but not in any of the forms now
current, and I am not altogether in love with the European kind, however great
an improvement it may be on the past. I hold that India having a spirit of her
own and a governing temperament proper to her own civilisation, should in
politics as in everything else strike out her own original path and not stumble
in the wake of Europe. But this is precisely what she will be obliged to do, if
she has to start on the road in her present chaotic and unprepared condition of
mind. No doubt people talk of India developing on her own lines, but nobody
seems to have very clear or sufficient ideas as to what those lines are to be.
In this matter I have formed ideals and certain definite ideas of my own, in
which at present very few are likely to follow me, — since they are governed by
an uncompromising spiritual idealism of an unconventional kind and would be
unintelligible to many and an offence and stumbling-block to a great number.
But I have not as yet any clear and full idea of the practical lines; I
have no formed programme. In a word, I am feeling my way in my mind and am not
ready for either propaganda or action. Even if I were, it would mean for some
time ploughing my lonely furrow or at least freedom to take my own way. As the
editor of your paper, I should be bound to voice the opinion of others and
reserve my own, and while I have full sympathy with the general ideas of the
advanced parties so far as concerns the action of the present moment and, if I
were in the field, would do all I could to help them, I am almost incapable by
nature of limiting myself in that way, at least to the extent that would be
requisite.
Excuse
the length of this screed. I thought it necessary to explain fully so as to
avoid giving you the impression that I declined your request from any
affectation or reality of spiritual aloofness or wish to shirk the call of the
country or want of sympathy with the work you and others are so admirably
doing. I repeat my regret that I am compelled to disappoint you.
Yours
sincerely,
Aurobindo
Ghose
Page
– 431
Pondicherry
Aug. 30,1920
Dear
Dr. Munje,
As
I have already wired to you, I find myself unable to accept your offer of the
Presidentship of the Nagpur Congress. There are reasons even within the
political field itself which in any case would have stood in my way. In the
first place I have never signed and would never care to sign as a personal
declaration of faith the Congress creed, as my own is of a different character.
In the next place since my retirement from British India I have developed an
outlook and views which have diverged a great deal from those I held at the
time and, as they are remote from present actualities and do not follow the
present stream of political action, I should find myself very much embarrassed
what to say to the Congress. I am entirely in sympathy with all that is being
done so far as its object is to secure liberty for India, but I should be
unable to identify myself with the programme of any of the parties. The President
of the Congress is really a mouthpiece of the Congress and to make from the
presidential chair a purely personal pronouncement miles away from what the
Congress is thinking and doing would be grotesquely out of place. Not only so,
but nowadays the President has a responsibility in connection with the All India
Congress Committee and the policy of the Congress during the year and other
emergencies that may arise which, apart from my constitutional objection and,
probably, incapacity to discharge official duties of any kind or to put on any
kind of harness, I should be unable to fulfil, since it is impossible for me to
throw over suddenly my fixed programme and settle at once in British India.
These reasons would in any case have come in the way of my accepting your
offer.
The
central reason however is this that I am no longer first and foremost a
politician, but have definitely commenced another kind of work with a spiritual
basis, a work of spiritual, social, cultural and economic reconstruction of an
almost revolutionary kind, and am even making or at least supervising a sort of
practical or laboratory experiment in that sense which needs all the attention
and energy that I can have to spare. It is impossible
Page
– 432
for
me to combine political work of the current kind and this at the beginning. I
should practically have to leave it aside, and this I cannot do, as I have
taken it up as my mission for the rest of my life. This is the true reason of
my inability to respond to your call.
I
may say that in any case I think you would be making a wrong choice in asking
me to take Tilak's place at your head. No one now alive in India, or at least
no one yet known, is capable of taking that place, but myself least of all. I
am an idealist to the marrow, and could only be useful when there is something
drastic to be done, a radical or revolutionary line to be taken, (I do not mean
revolutionary by violence) a movement with an ideal aim and direct method to be
inspired and organized. Tilak's policy of "responsive cooperation", continued
agitation and obstruction whenever needed — and that would be oftener than not
in the present circumstances — is, no doubt, the only alternative to some form
of non-cooperation or passive resistance. But it would need at its head a man
of his combined suppleness, skill and determination to make it effective. I
have not the suppleness and skill — at least of the kind needed — and could
only bring the determination, supposing I accepted the policy, which I could
not do practically, as, for any reasons of my own, nothing could induce me to
set my foot in the new Councils. On the other hand a gigantic movement of
non-cooperation merely to get some Punjab officials punished or to set up again
the Turkish Empire which is dead and gone, shocks my ideas both of proportion
and of common sense. I could only understand it as a means of
"embarrassing the Government" and seizing hold of immediate
grievances in order to launch an acute struggle for autonomy after the manner
of Egypt and Ireland, — though no doubt without the element of violence. All
the same, it could be only on a programme involving an entire change of the
creed, function and organisation and policy of the Congress, making it a centre
of national reconstruction and not merely of political agitation that I could —
if I had not the other reason I have spoken of— re-enter the political field.
Unfortunately the political mind and habits created by the past methods of the
Congress do not make that practicable at the moment. I think you will see
Page
– 433
that, holding these ideas, it is not possible
for me to intervene and least of all on the chair of the President.
Might
I suggest that the success of the Congress can hardly depend on the presence of
a single person and one who has long been in obscurity? The friends who call on
me are surely wrong in thinking that the Nagpur Congress will be uninspiring
without me. The national movement is surely strong enough now to be inspired
with its own idea especially at a time of stress like the present. I am sorry
to disappoint, but I have given the reasons that compel me and I cannot see how
it is avoidable.
Yours
sincerely,
Aurobindo
Ghose
Page
– 434
III.
EARLY PLANS TO TAKE UP EXTERNAL WORK
Arya
Office,
Pondicherry
The 18th November 1922
Dear
Barin,¹ .
I
understand from your letter that you need a written authority from me for the
work I have entrusted to you and a statement making your position clear to
those whom you have to approach in connection with it. You may show to anyone
you wish this letter as your authority and I hope it will be sufficient to
straighten things for you.
I
have been till now and shall be for some time longer withdrawn in the practice
of a Yoga destined to be a basis not for withdrawal from life, but for the
transformation of human life. It is a Yoga in which vast untried tracts of
inner experience and new paths of Sadhana had to be opened up and which,
therefore, needed retirement and long time for its completion. But the time is
approaching, though it has not yet come, when I shall have to take up a large
external work proceeding from the spiritual basis of this Yoga.
It
is, therefore, necessary to establish a number of centres small and few at
first but enlarging and increasing in number as I go on, for training in this
Sadhana, one under my direct supervision, others in immediate connection with
me. Those trained there will be hereafter my assistants in the work I shall
have to do, but for the present these centres will be not for external work but
for spiritual training and Tapasya.
The
first, which will be transferred to British India when I go there, already
exists at Pondicherry, but I need funds both to maintain and to enlarge it. The
second I am founding through you in Bengal. I hope to establish another in Gujerat
during the ensuing year.
Many
more desire and are fit to undertake this Sadhana than I can at present admit
and it is only by large means being placed
¹Barindra Kumar Ghose, Sri Aurobindo's younger brother.
Page
– 435
at
my disposal that I can carry on this work which is necessary as a preparation
for my own return to action.
I
have empowered you to act for me in the collection of funds and other
collateral matters. I have an entire confidence in you and I would request all
who wish me well to put in you the same confidence.
I
may add that this work of which I have spoken is both personally and in a
wider sense my own and it is not being done and cannot be done by any other for
me. It is separate and different from any other work that has been or is being
carried on by others under my name or with my approval. It can be done by
myself aided closely by those like you who are being or will in future be
trained directly under me in my spiritual discipline.
Aurobindo
Ghose
Arya
Office
Pondicherry,
the 18th Nov. 1922
Dear
Chitta,¹
It
is a long time, almost two years I think, since I have written a letter to
anyone. I have been so much retired and absorbed in my Sadhana that contact
with the outside world has till lately been reduced to minimum. Now that I am
looking outward again, I find that circumstances lead me to write first to you
— I say, circumstances because it is a need that makes me take up the pen after
so long a disuse.
The
need is in connection with the first outward work that I am undertaking after
this long inner retirement. Barin has gone to Bengal and will see you in
connection with it, but a word from me is perhaps necessary and therefore I
send you through Barin this letter. I am giving also a letter of authority from
which you will understand the immediate nature of the need for which I
¹Chittaranjan Das, one of Sri Aurobindo's Nationalist collaborators and a famous
lawyer. He had defended Sri Aurobindo in the Alipore Bomb Case.
Page
– 436
have
sent him to raise funds. But I may add something to make it more definite.
I
think you know my present idea and the attitude towards life and work to which
it has brought me. I have become confirmed in a perception which I had always,
less clearly and dynamically then, but which has now become more and more
evident to me, that the true basis of work and life is the spiritual, — that is
to say, a new consciousness to be developed only by Yoga. I see more and more
manifestly that man can never get out of the futile circle the race is always
treading until he has raised himself on to the new foundation. I believe also
that it is the mission of India to make this great victory for the world. But
what precisely was the nature of the dynamic power of this greater consciousness?
What was the condition of its effective truth? How could it be brought down, mobilised, organised, turned upon life ? How could our present instruments,
intellect, mind, life, body be made true and perfect channels for this great
transformation ? This was the problem I have been trying to work out in my own
experience and I have now a sure basis, a wide knowledge and some mastery of
the secret. Not yet its fullness and complete imperative presence — therefore
I have still to remain in retirement. For I am determined not to work in the
external field till I have the sure and complete possession of this new power
of action, — not to build except on a perfect foundation.
But
still I have gone far enough to be able to undertake one work on a larger scale
than before — the training of others to receive this Sadhana and prepare
themselves as I have done, for without that my future work cannot even be
begun. There are many who desire to come here and whom I can admit for the
purpose, there are a greater number who can be trained at a distance; but I am
unable to carry on unless I have sufficient funds to be able to maintain a
centre here and one or two at least outside. I need therefore much larger
resources than I at present command. I have thought that by your recommendation
and influence you may help Barin to gather them for me. May I hope that you
will do this for me ?
One
word to avoid a possible misunderstanding. Long ago I gave to Motilal Roy of Chandarnagar
the ideas and some
Page
– 437
principles
and lines of a new social and economical organisation and education and this
with my spiritual force behind him he has been trying to work out in his own
way in his Sangha. This is quite a separate thing from what I am now writing
about, — my own work which I must do myself and no one can do for me.
I
have been following with interest your political activities, specially your
present attempt to give a more flexible and practically effective turn to the
non-cooperation movement. I doubt whether you will succeed against such
contrary forces, but I wish you success in your endeavour. I am most interested
however in your indications about Swaraj; for I have been developing my own
ideas about the organisation of a true Indian Swaraj and I shall look forward
to see how far yours will fall in with mine.
Yours,
Aurobindo
Pondicherry
1st
December 1922
Dear
Barin,
I
waited for your letter in order to know precisely what portions Chittaranjan
wanted to publish and why. It turns out to be as I saw, but I wanted
confirmation. I must now make clear the reasons why I hesitated to sanction the
publication.
I
should have had no objection to the publication of the portion about the
spiritual basis of life or the last paragraph about Swaraj. But that about
non-cooperation would lead, I think, to a complete misunderstanding of my real
position. Some would take it to mean that I accept the Gandhi programme subject
to the modifications proposed by the committee. As you know, I do not believe
that the Mahatma's principle can be the true foundation or his programme the
true means of bringing out the genuine freedom and greatness of India, her Swarajya
and Samrajya. On the other hand others would think that I was sticking to the
school of Tilakite nationalism. That also is not the fact, as I hold that
school to be out of date. My own policy, if
Page
– 438
I
were in the field, would be radically different in principle and programme from
both, however it might coincide in certain points. But the country is not yet
ready to understand its principle or to execute its programme.
Because
I know this very well, I am content to work still on the spiritual and psychic
plane, preparing there the ideas and forces, which may afterwards at the right
moment and under the right conditions precipitate themselves into the vital and
material field, and I have been careful not to make any public pronouncement as
that might prejudice my possibilities of future action. What that will be will
depend on developments. The present trend of politics may end in abortive
unrest, but it may also stumble with the aid of external circumstances into
some kind of simulacrum of self-government. In either case the whole real work
will remain to be done. I wish to keep myself free for it in either case.
My
interest in Das's actions and utterances apart from all question of personal
friendship, arises first from the fact that the push he is giving, although I
do not think it likely to succeed at present, may yet help to break the narrow
and rigid cadre of the "Constructive" Bardoli programme which seems
to me to construct nothing and the fetish-worship of non-cooperation as an end
in itself rather than a means, and thereby to create conditions more
favourable for the wide and complex action necessary to prepare the true Swarajya.
Secondly, it arose from the rapidity with which he seems to be developing many
of the ideas which I have long put down in my mind as essentials of the future.
I have no objection to his making use privately of what I have written in the
letter. But I hope he will understand why the publication of it does not
recommend itself to me.
Aurobindo
Page
– 439
HOME
|