Sri Aurobindo
Letters on Poetry and Art
SABCL - Volume 27
Part 2. On His Own and Others’ Poetry
Section 2. On Poets and Poetry
Philosophers, Intellectuals, Novelists and Musicians
Bertrand Russell [1]
About Russell — I have never disputed his abilities or
his character,— I am concerned only with his opinions and there too only with
those opinions which touch upon my own province — that of spiritual Truth. In
all religions, the most narrow and stupid even, and in all non-religions also
there are great minds, great men, fine characters. I know little about Russell,
but I never dreamed of disputing the greatness of Lenin, for instance, merely
because he was an atheist — nobody would unless he was an imbecile. But the
greatness of Lenin does not debar me from refusing assent to the credal dogmas
of Bolshevism, and the beauty of character of an atheist does not prove that
spirituality is a lie of the imagination and
that there is no Divine. I may add that if you can find the utterances of famous
Yogis childish when they talk about marriage or on other mental matters, I
cannot be blamed for finding the ideas of Russell about spiritual experience, of
which he knows nothing, very much wanting in light and substance. You have not
named the Yogis in question, and till you do, I am afraid I shall cherish a
suspicion about either the height or the breadth of their spiritual experience.
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