THE HOUR OF GOD
SRI AUROBINDO
Contents
|
A Great Mind, a Great Wi11*
A GREAT mind, a great
will, a great and preeminent leader of men has passed away from the field of
his achievement and labour. To the mind of his country Lokamanya Tilak was much more, for he had become to it a
considerable part of itself, the embodiment of its past efforts and the head of
its present struggle for a free and greater life. His achievement and
personality have put him amidst the first rank of historic and significant
figures. He was one who built much rapidly out of little beginnings, a creator
of great things out of an unworked material. The
creations he left behind him were a new and strong and self-reliant national
spirit, the reawakened political mind and life of a people, a will to freedom
and action, a great national purpose. He brought to his work extraordinary
qualities, a calm, silent, unflinching courage, an unwavering purpose, a
flexible mind, a forward-casting vision of possibilities, an eye for the
occasion, a sense of actuality, a fine capacity of democratic leadership, a
diplomacy that never lost sight of its aim and pressed towards it even in the
most pliant turns of its movement, and guiding all, a single-minded patriotism
that cared for power and influence only as a means of service to the Motherland
and a lever for the work of her liberation. He sacrificed much for her and
suffered for her repeatedly and made no ostentation of his suffering and
sacrifices. His life was a constant offering at her altar and his death has
come in the midst of an unceasing service and labour.
* This article which first appeared in The Independent on August 5, 1920, was sent by Sri Aurobindo in the form of a telegram at the request of that journal's editor Bipin Chandra Pal on the occasion of Lokamanya Tilak's death on August 1 of that year. Page - 364
cease
or to fail, but must always throw up minds and capacities that will embody its
purpose. It will raise up others of his mould, if not of his stature, to meet
its needs, its demands, its call for ability and courage. He himself has only
passed behind the veil, for death and not life is the illusion. The strong
spirit that dwelt within him ranges now freed from our human and physical
limitations, and can still shed upon us, on those now at work, and those who
are coming, a more subtle, ample and irresistible influence; and even if this
were not so, an effective part of him is still with us. His will is left behind
in many to make more powerful and free from hesitations the national will he
did so much to create, the growing will whose strength and single wholeness are
the chief conditions of the success of the national effort. His courage is left
behind in numbers to fuse itself into and uplift and fortify the courage of his
people; his sacrifice and strength in suffering are left with us to enlarge
themselves, more even than in his life-time, and to heighten the fine and
steeled temper our people need for the difficult share that still lies before
their en- deavour. These things are his legacy to his
country, and it is in proportion as each man rises to the height of what they
signify that his life will be justified and assured of its recompense. Page - 365
spirit,
virtue and meaning of its future. In each event that confronts us there is a divine
significance, and the passing away at such a time of such a man, on whose
thought and decision thousands hung, should make more profoundly felt by the
people, by every man in the Nation, the great, the almost religious responsibility that lies upon him personally. Page - 366 |