When all over the world there was a
growing eagerness to know more and more about Sri Aurobindo and the interest in
his work was on the increase, he suddenly disappeared from the earth-scene.
Superficially, this is a terrible irony of fate. But a study of his life
suggests that more than once the utterly unexpected occurred as if by a choice
on his own part. One may say that such an occurrence is almost a regular
feature at each decisive turn of the upward spiral of his life. We see the
rising curve bending down of a sudden when he threw away the ICS career after a
brilliant success and retired into an unpretentious State job in
Again he disappeared one night and
passed into oblivion for a large number of years in
But why has he chosen to
withdraw through the last painful gate of human existence when, like other
Yogis, he could have discarded the mortal sheath by an act of will and for what
purpose? For Sri Aurobindo to do anything without a purpose and ultimate
advantage is in the last degree inconceivable. If he gave in at times to what
he called the Adversary, that was because, to quote his own words,
"retreat" (paļāyanam)
suited his purpose. One who had mastered the secrets of Life and the Spirit by
his tremendous sadhana, who had been acclaimed as the Yogeshwara by those who
had attained to the height of the Spirit, to him death could be neither a
terror nor a mystery nor an inevitable necessity. Paying the full price of
suffering he would pass through the "exit" of the common man, only if
he felt that otherwise his life, his own Yoga would lack completeness and that
to bear the human destiny on his God-like shoulders he must face, in its own
den as it were, the dark Power that rules over this destiny and somehow wrest
from it all its secrets. He would embrace the dire extremity not unless he
found it to be the one way to emerge finally victorious and say, "0 human
race, from the citadel of the dark King I have issued forth and brought what
promised to you, the golden seed of Immortality."
This supreme sacrifice whose total
significance will remain ungrasped by our limited intelligence, he accepted, as
the Mother has said in unmistakable terms, for us alone. To enter into its
history we have to go back two years in time when the first symptom that
completed the sacrifice appeared. It was like a tiny cloud on the horizon; nobody
attached any importance to it. But Sri Aurobindo wanted to know what it meant.
His disciple. Dr. P. Sanyal, F.R.C.S. (
As we expected, after a couple of
months or so, the symptoms cleared up altogether and when Dr. Sanyal came for
the next Darshan, Sri Aurobindo told him emphatically, "It is no more
troubling me; I have cured it." Our faith was confirmed.
The work on his epic poem Savitri went ahead with vigour and
enthusiasm. Book after Book was being revised and released for publication.
Some 400 to 500 lines he dictated in succession whose beauty and flow were a
delight for their sweep of cosmic vision and their magical language. At this rate,
Savitri, it seemed, would not
take long to finish. On everybody's lips was the eager question, "How far Savitri?"
But Savitri was not his sole occupation. Side by side went on
other multifarious and diverse activities all the facets of which he alone
could deal with by his tremendous grasp of intuitive power. The world
erroneously believes, or at least used to, that Sri Aurobindo had turned his
whole life inwards and that, a recluse from life, he was now engaged in his own
salvation and that of his disciples. How such a misunderstanding of a supreme
dynamic person like him could have arisen is most surprising. Let us recall
what his life had been, the major spiritual realisations he had attained in the
course of his. arduous political activities; let us recall what his Yoga stands
for and the epoch-making books he has written during his Yogic career. Apart
from Savitri which is a
monument by itself, the daily reading of papers, the perusal of numerous
journals, weeklies, fortnightlies, quarterlies edited by people connected with
the Ashram and of articles written in four or five languages, poems, essays,
letters, the dictating of replies to questions and to crown all, the
preparation of his own books and others', the attention to their manuscripts
and proofs etc—all these were his routine work. Add pressing demands from the
Press, blessings implored for help and guidance in material distress—and the
list should be enough to open a blind man's eyes. All this work had to be
despatched within about two hours a day! During the latter part a remarkable
faculty developed in him or was noticed for the first time. When I took some
article for reading, he used to say "Have you not read it before?"
"No." "Are you sure?" "How could I", I replied,
"I have received it to-day". "Very strange, I seemed to have
heard every word of it". That happened more than once. This labour any
mortal sight can attest; but to the vast network of his cosmic activity as a
Master Yogi, what vision can have access? One can have a dim penetration into
it through the unrolling verse of Savitri and through other books or when he
chose to let out a little inkling of it. We have played with him like Gopas in
Vrindavan, cracked many jokes like comrades, even quarrelled with him,
discussed many subjects ranging from Art down to the attractive subject of the
palate during the last few years of his companionship.
The tender expression that
dropped from his lips, the pointed flashes of his quick humour, the silent
unassuming distinction of his manner and above all, his vigilant and subtle
protection guarding us against all adverse forces—all these had been our
heritage, but could we ever reflect in our passing mirror even the slightest
shadow of his wide universal action? His detached greatness, disinterested
largeness, limitless compassion and sweetness, as if Shiva had come down to
earth to deliver the world from its roots of ignorance—where shall we see such
a parallel? Even when his disease had advanced, he did not fail to respond to
the call of the afflicted. To give an example: as he was engaged in the final
drafting of the last two cantos of Savitri, there came an urgent call for help
from a sadhika living outside. The lady was suffering from a mysterious
disease; some doctors said it was coronary thrombosis, some diagnosed cervical
rib and some others cancer and they all suggested different remedies. She, on
the verge of death, took refuge at the Guru's feet and wired to him that she
would rely on his force alone, even were she to die of it. News began to come
in daily, by letters or wires. Suddenly no news at all for two or three days!
Sri Aurobindo became worried and inquired again and again if any communication
had arrived. At last he remarked, rather vexed, "How am I to save her if I
don't get any news?" After this rude jerk news began to flow in and we are
happy to find her settled in the Ashram in sound health. Those who have
received this inner sweetness and solicitude, directly or indirectly, will ever
treasure it in their hearts as the very grace of Heaven.
Savitri alone which was the
preoccupation nearest to his heart will one day fire the imagination of the
world—by its sheer bulk and beauty of profound images, vivid words, felicitous
and daring expressions, every detail of which he took sculptor-like pains to
develop. The first Book itself went through ten revisions and had he been able
to maintain the same godlike labour throughout or had he not been compelled to
lean on the support of a weak and at times unwilling assistant required to keep
pace with his divine energy, Savitri
would have seen the light of day before his own life's light had withdrawn.
But, alas, that was not to be. About the middle of the last year, the symptoms
of the malady came back and along with it we noticed a change in his mood. He
was no more expansive, the gems of his speech became fewer and fewer. Days
passed at times without any exchange of words except what was needed for the
work. However much we tried to draw him out of this shell, it was a "yes",
or a "no", or at most a smile that crowned our efforts and ruses.
Naturally we began to speculate about the cause of this mysterious silence.
Sometimes we thought it must be the grave world-situation that engaged his
attention,—for at one time he remarked that the situation was very bad
indeed,—sometimes other possibilities crossed our fertile brain. Or could it be
the reappearance of the disease? That was another query. But all our efforts
were baffled, we could not penetrate that armour of remoteness. He was so near,
yet had gone far away!
That did not, however, affect his
daily work. Savitri had slowed down its pace. We were engaged in the revision
of the two big cantos; already 200 to 300 new lines had been added. What a
revision! Every word must be the mot
juste, every line perfect, even every sign of punctuation flawless.
One preposition was changed five times, to change a punctuation-sign one had
sometimes to read a whole section. All these opened a new sight in me, but for
his scribe to carry that burden of perfection on poor mortal shoulders was a
task too enormous to cope with in an entirely satisfactory. manner. That is why
perhaps the work had fallen at places from its height, missed its peak.
At this time the Press sent up a
demand for a new book. The Future Poetry was given the
preference and a chapter was actually written. But as some books on Modern
Poetry needed to be consulted, it was shoved aside. He said, "Let us go
bake to Savitri." Again the same two cantos. The symptoms of the disease
had not abated, though fortunately they had neither increased. There were
temporary improvements now and then. But the course of the disease did not seem
to disturb him at all in his work. His whole attention was now focused on Savitri for which we could but spare
about two hours at the most. So the progress had to be slow especially as he
had to dictate and depend on another's sight to be guided in his movement. Now
came the call from the Bulletin
for an article. That over, the correspondence and miscellaneous writings
swelled up to such an extent that he was at last obliged to remark, "I am
finding no time for my real work." Then the path got fairly clear and I
was wondering what would be the next choice when looking away he declared,
"Take up Savitri. I want to finish it soon." The last phrase was a
bombshell on my ear. "Finish it soon? What on earth..." I asked
myself. My bewildered glance met an impassive face. So again the labour with
these two cantos began. What surprised me still more was that he seemed actually
to hurry the pace which was quite against his characteristic nature. Always
habituated to slow and leisurely ways in his
moods and dealings as if the whole-of eternity were in his hand, he was the
very embodiment of the Divine in his unparalleled patience and poise, in
his" conquests and withdrawals, in his diggings and in his soars. Every
word he pronounced had a repose, every simple thing he ate was an one-ring,
every step he took was a gentle touching of the earth with his hallowed feet. When
his bureau was ransacked, it was found littered with copies and copies of
Savitri, no less than 4 or 5 versions of some cantos! Here, there, in note
books, in loose sheets, in small blocks, lines after lines written, scratched,
new lines added in between like packed sardines, the links and connections
shooting with arrow-marks up and down the epic battle field. A genius or a God
in labour? Such being the mode of procedure, it could not but come as a
surprise to hear from his mouth that he wanted to finish Savitri soon. Not only
that. There seemed to be no longer that unflagging will for perfection, not
that élan. On the contrary, close repetitions of ideas and words sounded like
obvious flaws in the comptact intensity of this massive structure. Those who
have carefully gone through these two cantos did not fail to notice this
defect. "What has happened? What has gone wrong? Why has he lost his
patience? Illness? Why is he also so grave?" were my brooding questions.
At last after many detours and ups and downs in the far-flung journey, the goal
was in sight. What a veritable rock of resistance these two cantos proved to
be! One who had poured strains upon strains packed with grandeur and beauty,
emotion and fervour, thought and vision in the dictated cantos on such subjects
as Nirvana, as if the very goddess Saraswati had settled in his throat, was
halted even by the pebbles of punctuation! As, at last the cantos were wound up
and the last full stop had been recorded, a smile of satisfaction burst upon
his lips and he said, "Ah, it is finished?" How well I remember that
smile, as if after a long strenuous journey in failing strength one had finally
reached one's station! And yet it was not the station, there were still many
milestones to cover! "What is left now?, was his second question.
"The Book of Death and the Epilogue." "Ah, that? We shall see
about that later on," he answered, in a calm and contented tone. But I was
not contented at all, for the many repetitions at the end which he seemed to
have hurriedly added jarred on my ear. But I decided that it was wiser to
reserve judgement and wait for the revision to take place. Surely these flaws
would not escape his eagle-vision. It was much later during the agonising
moments of night-enveloped consciousness that what struck me as flaws and
repetitions came forcefully with a new significance:
A day may come when she must stand unhelped
On a dangerous brink of the world's doom and hers…
In that tremendous silence lone and lost
Cry not to heaven, for she alone can help.
She only can save herself and save the world.
(Savitri, p. 461)
Are these not his last message, his
last injunction to us? The emptiness slowly melted away and in its place shone
his Right Hand, the dauntless boon-giver the Mother.
The expected revision never took
place, for, along with the close of these two cantos, came winter and there was
a sudden increase in the symptoms, urination became more frequent; with it,
discomfort. These symptoms had appeared from time to time, to be cleared up and
he had never for an instant stopped his work in spite of all inconveniences.
Many times I anticipated, almost hoped, that there would be a respite owing to
such relapses, but physical trouble would not hinder him. Even if there was
half an hour's time, he would utilise it. On many occasions When I told him,
"There is not much time today" and almost expected a postponement of
the work, he would come out, to my surprise, with "We will work a
little". That passionate devotion to work had brought its final reward:
Savitri was his last testament. As the disease progressed, we began to feel
concerned, though we knew perfectly well that we were nothing more than mere
spectators and whatever had to be done, he must be doing it. "How it is
then the disease is progressing?" was my occasional self-questioning. We
were dealing with a human body but not with a human patient; our means and
standards of action did not apply any more than the laws of our earth to the
being of other planets. We could only lay before his gaze the silent surreptitious
approach of various undercurrents that tried to assail and break down the
physical substratum, and depend upon his own Yogic Power to repulse the
attacks.
There were about ten days or so for
the Darshan. A surgeon-friend Satyavrata Sen F.R.C.S. (
Darshan was now at our door. On the
eve, a letter had arrived from an astrologer to the effect that Sri Aurobindo
would be subject to a grave malady which may even threaten his life. We simply
laughed out the idea, but he said, "Will you enquire what exactly he has
written? I feel that he has caught some truth." "What nonsense!"
was my immediate reaction. Sri Aurobindo had studied the subject of astrology
and held that astrology could very well disclose correctly the past of a
person, but he said that its readings of the future would not be inevitable,
especially in case of Yogis who can change their own and others' destiny. He
narrated the story of Narayan Jyotishi, a famous astrologer of Calcutta, whose
predictions about Sri Aurobindo had all come true except on one fact, that Sri
Aurobindo would be seriously ill at the age of 63 but he had also mentioned
that by his yogic action, Sri Aurobindo could overcome that danger and then he
would live up to a ripe old age. "So, you see, I am still alive", he
said smiling. He accepted nothing as predetermined and fixed in this world-field.
Everything, in his view, is a play of possibilities and a Yogi can change these
possibilities, even the destiny of others as well as his own. It being so, for
astrology to determine Sri Aurobindo's life and action was, we thought, sheer
folly. But his inquiry puzzled us. It was found, however, that the astrologer
had only hinted at some trivial malady. We enjoyed the fun, as on a similar
occasion mentioned by KD Sethna in his article The Passing of Sri Aurobindo. The Darshan was now on. A
vast crowd streamed forth with their offerings. At one time the question was
mooted if the Darshan should not be postponed, but considering the anxiety and
disappointment it would cause in the hearts of the devotees, the call was
responded to at the cost of discomfort and perhaps undue exertion. Everything
went on well—the silence, the calm reigned in the atmosphere pervaded by the
beatific Presence of the Mother and the Master. After about two hours, an
uneasy stir seized the throng and the rumour ran that Sri Aurobindo was not
well; people in rapid succession took their blessings and beyond the horizon of
their outward sight saw the Master beside the Mother in an everlasting
communion and kinship within. The restless thought was no more voiced forth.
But soon after the Darshan, the symptoms broke down another barrier, as it
were, and visibly marked a broad thrust in the advancement of the disease. The question
of passing the catheter could no more be left aside. It was agreed; a wire was
sent to Dr. Sanyal to come down at once. He had previously been warned to be
ready to start, in case there was an urgent necessity.
The instrument immediately relieved
the obstruction and we began to feel light-hearted. But our joy was
short-lived. For in the wake of the intruding instrument came its long shadow,
fever due to infection. A not uncommon feature, yet it gave us an unpleasant
shiver. Dr. Sanyal's arrival at this juncture was like warm sunshine and he
dissipated all our anxieties by his calm confidence. We apprised him of the
whole clinical development since he has last seen Sri Aurobindo. He wondered
how that small insignificant speck of cloud he had noticed in the early stage
could, from the perimeter of his consciousness, slowly, almost craftily,
enlarge, envelope and take possession of the whole physical being. He asked
himself, "How could this Adversary gain such an unbelievable dominance
against the puissant action of Sri Aurobindo's force? He had cured himself
once, what happened afterwards? Did he not take any step at all to prevent the
course of the disease? Otherwise I do not see why it should develop to such an
extent." To these questions no satisfactory answer could be given. What I
observed was that while our main concern had been the patient development of
the future glory of the human race in the language of the gods and in their
symbols, the disease simultaneously advanced at a slow pace; Sri Aurobindo did
not pay any particular heed to it, either because he had not sufficient time or
because he did not care; but it had been a mystery all through. One would say
that he had allowed it to advance, for reasons unknown to us, slowly and
gradually till the completion of Savitri, after which he stopped all his work
and withdrew the control on the disease. That is the only explanation reason
could supply to the rapid worsening of the condition after this stage. Whatever
it was. Dr. Sanyal
was yet optimistic and so were we of the final result. Our vigil went on, but
Sri Aurobindo seemed now to withdraw himself from his surroundings and the
release from the obstruction helped him towards that end. Evidently, he found
the deep plunge more useful for whatever purpose he had in view than caring
about the afflictions of the body. He appeared to have allowed the body to have
its own actions and reactions while he was engaged in a more inscrutable work
of world-significance. The body he had assumed had served him well, and, as the
Mother has said, it had suffered, endured, worked and achieved all for us. Now,
if it served as an impediment to the god-like sweep of his movements, why
should he not change it? As he did not allow the physical handicap to trouble
him in-his work and maintained throughout the same fire and passion, so, after
the accomplishment of the work, he did not allow the body's distress to swerve
him from his occult sublime purpose. Even of this dire disablement he took the
amplest advantage. His was not a nature to be cowed by circumstances, however
adverse they might be. If he had to give in on one front, he must gain the full
compensation on another. Even if he knew beforehand that defeat and failure
would be the result, that would not stop his working and fighting up to the
end. "Even if I knew that my mission would fail, I would go on working
till the last moment" were his words in a letter. Nishkama (disinterested) Karma of the
Gita was his motto. An interesting example of which can be cited with regard to
the Cripps Mission, now a matter of history. When the
A day may come when She must stand unhelped
On a dangerous brink of the world's doom and hers
Carrying the world's future on her lonely breast,
Carrying the human hope in a heart left sole
To conquer or fail on a last desperate verge…
In that tremendous silence lone and lost
Of a deciding hour in the world's fate...
Alone she must conquer or alone must fall…
Cry not to heaven, for she alone can save.
She only can save herself and save the world.
(Savitri, p. 461)
He was not in a hurry to finish the
Book of Death. His principal task had been completed and hence his calm and
contented smile when he reached the end of it. What was of supreme importance
he had been able to communicate and about what was not, he said in a leisurely
fashion, "We shall see about it afterwards," knowing very well
indeed, what he meant. Now, that momentous message imparted, slowly his
consciousness slipped inwards and he became more and more absorbed within.
Medical experts will say, "It was a simple uraemic coma." Well, I
shall quote Dr. Sanyal's own words: "A patient who comes out of that coma
every one or two hours, asks for a drink, enquires about time, his must be a
very strange type of coma. At least I have never come across such a type
throughout my medical experience."
Whatever might have been the type,
our problem became more difficult. We had solely relied on his Force, but the
result had not uplifted our hopes. We could go ahead with our costly tablets
and precious injections, but without the support of his spiritual Force, what
effect would they produce? Human as we are we can but think of our own
resources: good or bad we fall back on them in our need. But how to administer
such strong and powerful drugs to one who had been unaccustomed to any medicine
for more than half a century, was another question that vexed us. Any one who
had seen Sri Aurobindo at close quarters could never forget this Divine Child
with a body as supple, radiant and pure. His bare body, when he used to sit
before the table for writing, his shapely hands, his long delicate fingers, had
nothing of the crude mortal flesh in them; they were suffused, as it were, with
a white transparent light, une blancheur éclatante, that could like
the X-ray make one see through and through. How often have I not seen this
radiance, when he used to sit before the table for writing or for rest, or when
he was lying on the bed as if on the lap of the Divine Mother, with a half-bare
body, the hands held together behind the head, the lips smiling in a wakeful
dream! Every part of the body presented the picture of a god in human guise
that could not be tampered with in the ordinary human way. Tampering would be
nothing but a sacrilege. But, alas, human necessity knows no law, respects no
person. And we subjected him to all our instruments of torture with the previous
sanction obtained as a gracious gesture to satisfy our mortal ignorance. He
knew that the catheter would be of no avail and he emphatically ruled it out,
but as we had not the insight nor the proper appraisement of the value of words
when they are clothed in the common language we are habituated to use, we
insisted on the dangerous remedies in which we had faith and confidence. As the
disease was taking a bad turn we repeatedly asked him to use his spiritual
force to cure it, as we had been taught and made to experience that behind
every malady, as behind everything else, there are forces that help and hinder.
It is the proper adjustment—of these forces that brings in success. Those who
can consciously or unconsciously manipulate these forces achieve success in
their career. We knew that without the effective help of his Force all our
remedial measures would be palliatives of the surface manifestation of the
deep-rooted trouble. But each time we questioned him, we met with an enigmatic
silence. All the same, we had no positive reason to believe that he was
indifferent to the course of the malady or that he was engaged in a far more
serious struggle whose issue would have greater significance at that stage for
the human race than his own cure. So, as the disease was following in its
downward gravitation the typical picture, our duty pointed to us our own
responsibility. The advent of every dark sign and symptom was a pressing finger
on our perplexed mood. As a result, we adopted all the means of saving that were
available to us. But the Decree was otherwise!
At last arrived the School
Anniversary on the 1st and 2nd December, with its programme of athletics and
dramatics. The whole Ashram, busy and bustling, had its attention diverted
there and nobody ever suspected that another drama—a lofty tragedy—was being
enacted in those hours of Fate in the closed chambers of Sri Aurobindo. His
ailment had been veiled from the gaze of the disciples and the disease also was
of such a nature as to admit of being kept a guarded secret. But now the veil
was rent, for with the successful ending of the function, the symptoms took a
very grave turn, as if the violent tide deliberately checked until this day was
now allowed to break through. I say "as if", but there was no doubt
that it was so, for when he was informed on the 2nd night that the function had
terminated successfully, he remarked with a broad smile, "Ah, it is
finished?" Then only he allowed the Adversary who had been held at bay to
leap with fury and Sri Aurobindo plunged deeper within, snapping as it were,
the last link of his physical being with the need of earth-matter.
It was the memorable 4th December,
the date written for ever in letters of gold. Sri Aurobindo had totally emerged
from the depth and expressed a desire to Sit up. In spite of our objections, he
insisted. We noticed after a while that all the distressing symptoms had
magically vanished and he was once more a normal healthy person. Then he sat in
the chair. The change was so sudden and unexpected that we looked at each
other, in sheer joy and amazement. "At last, our prayer has been
heard!" This was the sentiment welling up in the silent heart of our
devotion. It could not be believed! Now we ventured to repeat our question:
"Are you not using your force to get rid of the disease?"
"No!" came the shocking reply. We could not believe our ears and to
get a confirmation of our disbelief we asked again. Now no ground was left to
harbour the illusion. What we heard was as plain and sharp as a sabreedge. Then
we put forth the bold query: "Why not? If you don't use the force, how is
the disease going to be cured?" To this he simply gave the cryptic reply:
"Can't explain; you won't understand."
Here at last was the key to the
mystery! That is why the disease had progressed step by step, marked by three
clear stages in its downward path: the completion of Savitri, Darshan and the
School Anniversary, each stage followed by a deeper and deeper in-drawn
condition. It was at one of the final stages that the Mother remarked,
"Whenever I was there, I used to see him pulling down the Supramental
Light." It was clear from this- statement what Sri Aurobindo was busy
with. He had shifted his gaze and concentration to something else which, to his
view, must have been much more important than minding the afflictions of the
body. But we had not the vision nor the comprehension, so we thought that the
descent of the Light would fulfil our heart's desire. Though on the one hand
his curt reply had taken the last plank away, this sudden transition instilled
faith and hope—"the gleaming shoulder of some god-like hope"¹that had
upbuoyed us all through. It was much later when the sun had crossed beyond our
horizon that these extraordinary incidents showed their true significance.
After an hour he came back to his
bed and along with his coming returned all the signs and symptoms with a
vengeance. The short respite seemed to have given him time for a further
grapple with the advancing Shadow that was trying to draw a premature veil upon
his work. Half an hour before the fatal moment, he drank some water and
bestowed on all a last glance of compassion and recognition for the services
rendered and took the plunge ultimate. Even then we had not the slightest
suspicion that
This was the day when Satyavan must die.
(Savitri, p.
10)
The news spread around in the early
hours of the morning. The reaction of the disciples can be better imagined than
described. Through the hush of night one by one they came and mounted up the
stairs of Heaven to see what nobody had seen before. It was not death they saw,
not a resurrection, nor a withdrawal into Nirvana but a grand repose, a death
that was pulsating with power, light and beauty in every limb as if death had
become immortal in the body of the King of kings. A vivid rendering of the
Truth into a touchstone of Matter, it was no longer the body, but the golden
lid which half-covered, half-revealed that Truth. Those who had the inner sight
had realised the Truth and those who had the inner ear had heard in the still
cave of their heart the piercing cry, "I am here, I am here!"
In that awakened consciousness we
are marching forward towards the Goal the Master had set before us, for which
he had worked to the last breath and has promised to do so till the Goal is
attained. The Mother, supreme creatrix and realiser of that Goal, is our Guide
and Goddess. Enriched with all his inexhaustible achievements, occult and
spiritual, and with the supramental Light that had automatically passed on to
her she is shaping us to the mould—and figure he had visioned as the future
type of humanity. Any one who has visited the Ashram after the great Event
could not but have been impressed by the will to victory that his sacrifice has
engendered in every breast. Out of his Samadhi a thousand flames seem to be
mounting up and, lodged in our soul, burning in an ever rejuvenating fire,
while His Presence enveloping and merging with. and radiating from the Mother's
being and body is pervading the whole atmosphere. One can see His Presence,
hear his footfalls, his rhythmic voice, ever vigilant, devoid of the
encumbrance of the physical body. One day the sacrifice will bear fruit, what
he had depicted in Savitri, will come
true. For, what is, after all, Savitri if not the inner life-episodes of the
Mother and the Master? What he had pictured in the great epic has been
faithfully enacted on the world-stage. The veil has fallen on the first part of
that wonderful Drama and the sequel is being played behind the screen. The
Fight with the last supreme Adversary has not ceased; if it has ended on the
earth's battlefield in an apparent failure, it is raging as fiercely in the
occult planes. When at the close of the Duel, the curtain will be lifted, we
shall hear the sonorous recital of the Book of Death, we shall see materialised
the Epilogue on the earth- stage, and throughout the world will echo and
re-echo the embodied passionate cry of Victory:
"I am here, I am here!"