Sri Aurobindo
Letters of Sri Aurobindo
Letters
Fragment ID: 6457
(this fragment is largest or earliest found passage)
Sri Aurobindo — Ghose, Barindra Kumar
February 14, 1923
□ Hide link-numbers of differed places
To Barindra Kumar Ghose [9]
14th
February 1923.
“Arya” office
Pondicherry
My dear Barin,
I have received the Benares money and am sending an acknowledgement with this letter, which you can transmit to Das. Rajani’s 50 has not yet reached me.
I had already written to you about Akhil and on the 10th Manmohan telegraphed and wrote to Chittagong instructing him not to go to Bhowanipore but to collect the money and as soon as he had done this and sufficiently recovered from fever, to write and he would receive a call from here. It appears from your telegram today that he started before receiving Manmohan’s telegram. I can give no other instructions than those I have already given. Akhil must collect the money sufficient for his journey here and back either to Krishnagore or Chittagong and he must not come without the sum in his hand. I have arranged things here so as to have just sufficient to meet one year’s expenses under each head, just that and no more. Until I am assured of the next year’s expenses and more, I cannot meet unexpected charges or enlarge my expenditure. Therefore it will not do for him to come and then have to wait here indefinitely for the means of his return journey. An arrangement agreed upon ought to be observed, otherwise there is unnecessary inconvenience and confusion.
I infer from your letter and telegram taken together that Mohini is starting for Krishnagore in order to take back Krishnashashi. Of course in that case there is no need to wait further as was suggested in Moni’s letter. I have received no news about Krishnashashi for the last three days. This kind of disregard of instructions is not at all right. It puts me in considerable difficulty in trying to help Krishnashashi. Please ask Mohini to let me know often from Chittagong about Krishnashashi and his condition. Boroda Babu’s letter is very interesting but does not solve the difficulty I had as it gives me no fresh information of any importance. It had already been seen that the immediate cause of the collapse was partly sexual; for that was included in what I meant by the uprush from the vital being. Nor does it make much difference that the physico-vital force possessing him took the form or assumed the Pranic body of some dead friend. The situation remains as before. If the disorder is only psychic it will disappear in time. If there is some brain defect that has come up, the issue is more doubtful. The suggestion about the medicine may possibly be useful hereafter. Mohini had better be informed about it.
As to Rajani’s difficulties you might ask him to write to me himself stating them and the precise cause of his doubts. As far as I know about his Sadhana he was progressing in a steady and sound fashion, but for long I have no farther news of it. There is no reason why he should not succeed in the yoga if he keeps the right attitude and faith and perseverance. He will necessarily have difficulties with his vital nature and his physical mind which have a strong earth element, but that is the case also with several others. His development, if he perseveres, is likely to be rather through knowledge and will than any great richness of psychic experience; but he must not take the absence or paucity of the latter for an inability to develop the yoga.
The paragraph in one of your letters about the debts is very confused and I can make nothing precise out of it. What I want is to know first what were the heads and the exact sums actually met by the loan of two thousand, especially as this will give me some idea of what has fallen upon us on account of the press; secondly, the heads and exact sums still outstanding apart from this loan of two thousand. What, for instance, is the amount still due to the Kabirajas and what the amount of the small loans. It is very necessary for me, whether in determining what to write to Amar with regard to money matters or in trying to help you, to have an exact and clear idea of the whole transaction. Where there is only a confused, vague or general idea, the force I put out loses itself very largely in the void. Especially I shall have in future to try and act more and more from the Supramental and less and less from the mind. Now the first condition of the Supramental is exactness, clearness and order both in the total and the details and their relations. Therefore it is a great advantage if there are these elements in the data upon which I have to work and a great disadvantage if they are absent.
I shall await your report about Mohini. I gather from his letter that he wanted to remain some time with you for sadhana. My own idea is that already written by Manmohan to Chittagong, that it is better for most to practise first in its elements at least the synthetic Yoga of jnana, bhakti and karma and establish a basis of mental peace and samata before taking up the Yoga of complete and direct self-surrender. There will always be exceptions, but this is for most the safest course.
Aurobindo
1 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: these
2 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: for means
3 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: us
4 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: took from the
5 This sentence is absent in Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.
6 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: and physical
7 The last part of this sentence is absent in Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.
8 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: Specially
9 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: in the future
10 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: and great
11 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: me
12 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: that as already
13 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: Chittagong it is
14 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: the
15 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: establish peace
16 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: far