|
Suprabhat: A Review
THE
paper Suprabhat, a Bengali monthly
edited by Kumari Kumudini Mitra, daughter of Sj. Krishna
Kumar Mitra, enters this month on its third year. The first issue
of the new year is before us. We notice a great advance in the
interest and variety of the articles, the calibre of the writers and
the quality of the writing. From the literary point of view the
chief ornament of the number is the brief poem Duhkhabhisar,
by Sj. Rabindranath Tagore. It is one of those poems in which
the peculiar inimitable quality of our greatest lyric poet comes
out with supreme force, beauty and sweetness. Rabindra Babu
has a legion of imitators and many have been very successful in
catching up his less valuable mannerisms of style and verse, as is
the manner of imitators all the world over. But the poignant
sweetness, passion and spiritual depth and mystery of a poem
like this, the haunting cadences subtle with a subtlety which is not
of technique but of the soul, and the honeyladen felicity of the
expression, these are the essential Rabindranath and cannot be
imitated, because they are things of the spirit and one must have
the same sweetness and depth of soul before one can hope to
catch any of these desirable qualities. We emphasise this inimitableness because the legion of imitators we mention are doing
harm to the progress of our poetry as well as to the reputation of
their model and we would suggest to them to study this poem and
realise the folly of their persistent attempt. One of the most
remarkable peculiarities of Rabindra Babu's genius is the happiness and originality with which he has absorbed the whole spirit
of Vaishnav poetry and turned it into something essentially the
same and yet new and modern. He has given the old sweet spirit of emotional and
passionate religion an expression of more delicate and complex richness voiceful of subtler and more penetratingly spiritual shades of feeling than the deep-hearted but simple
early age of Bengal could know. The old Vaishnav bhāva — there
is no English word for it, — was easily seizable, broad and strong.
Page
– 430
The bhāva of these poems is not translatable in any other language than that the poet has used, — a striking proof is the unsatisfactory attempt of the poet himself, recorded in another
article in this issue, to explain in prose his own poem, Sonar Tari.
But while the intellect tries in vain to find other intellectual
symbols for the poet's meaning, the poetry seizes on the heart
and convinces the imagination. These poems are of the essence
of poetry and refuse to be rendered in any prose equivalent.
Poetry is created not from the intellect or the outer imagination
but comes from a deeper source within to which men have no
means of access except when the divine part within seizes on the
brain and makes it a passive instrument for utterance the full
meaning of which the brain is unable at the moment to grasp.
This is the divine mania and enthusiasm which the subtle spiritual discernment of Plato discovered to be the real meaning of
what we call inspiration. And of this unattainable force the best
lyrics of Rabindranath are full to overflowing.
The article Shantiniketane Rabindranath by Sj. Jitendranath
Banerji is another feature of great interest. The writer has a good
descriptive gift and the passages which describe the Shantiniketan are admirable; but the chief interest naturally centres in
the conversation with the poet which is recorded with great fullness. The private talk of a rich and gifted nature with a power
of conversational expression is always suggestive and we await
with interest the future issue of this article. We hope Jitendra
Babu will give us a fuller view of the remarkable educational
experiment which this original mind is developing in the quiet
shades of Bolpur. The brief hints given of the moral training and
the method of education followed point to a system far in
advance of the National Council of Education which is still tyrannised over by a tradition and method not only European but
unprogressively European. A brief instalment of Sj. Aurobindo
Ghose's Karakahini is also given which describes the identification parades of the Bomb Case, gives some glimpses of the approver Noren Gossain and deals with the personal character of some
of the jail officials. Nanak Charit by Krishna Kumar Mitra, the
first instalment of which is given in this issue, commands interest
both by its subject and the name of its writer. The two chapters
Page
– 431
given are full of interesting details of Nanak's birth and childhood and promise an attractive biography of one of the greatest
names in religious history. An article of minor importance is the
continuation of Sj. Jadunath Chakrabarti's Ekannabarti Paribar
o Strishiksha, which is of considerable merit. The author has
seized on two of the great advantages of the joint family system,
its ideal of a wider brotherhood and unity and its ample training
in morale and capacity. Dainik Bal and the poem Bodhan seem
to us to be failures, but there is no other feature of this number
which is without merit or interest.
We have left to the last Dr. P. C. Ray's long article on "The
Bengali Brain and its Misuse". It is a long indictment of past
and present Bengal, covering sixteen pages of the magazine.
Dr. P. C. Ray is a name which is already a pride to the nation to
which he belongs and his deep scientific knowledge, original research and
creativeness are one of the most conspicuous instances of that strong, acute and capable Bengali intellect which
he admits to be inferior to none. Any article from his pen must
be of great interest and cannot be without value. But it is one of
the unfortunate results of the denationalising influence of our past education
that a mind like Dr. Ray's should be without intellectual sympathy for the old culture whose inherited tendencies
his own character, life and achievements illustrate in so distinguished a manner. If it had not been for the past which Dr. P.
C. Ray condemns, such noble types as the last fifty years of
Bengal teems with, would not have been possible. As to the
necessity of far-reaching changes in the future we do not greatly
differ with the writer. The immediate past has been a period of
contraction and the reservation of strength, the future will be
a period of expansion and the liberation and expenditure of
strength. The structure of the new age must necessarily differ
from that of the old. But the spirit of the article is narrow and
intolerant. It is couched in that general spirit of self-depreciation
and indiscriminate fault-finding which was a characteristic of
our people when national hope and energy were at their nadir.
There are all the stock denunciations with which we were familiar before the recent resurgence. Such writings void of the
note of hope, encouragement and energy, will not help a nation
Page
– 432
to rise but rather depress it and push it
back into the past. Moreover, Dr. Ray makes the same mistake which European writers
made when they condemned the Middle Ages wholesale because
they were a period of contraction and not of expansion. That
mistake has now been recognised in Europe and justice has been
done to that which was praiseworthy as well as to that which
was bad in the "Dark Ages". We in India are recovering from a
similar error and if there are those who go to the opposite extreme
and see nothing good outside the mediaeval Hindu culture and
forms, the same thing happened in Europe and for the same
reason, as a reaction from that very intolerance and sweeping
denunciation which are the spirit of Dr. Ray's article. It cannot
last any more than it lasted in Europe. Some of the strictures we
hold to be too much at secondhand; especially in his criticisms
of religion the writer seems to us to be wandering outside the
province in which he can speak with authority. After all one
must enter into the spirit of an age and civilisation before one
can profitably criticise it, otherwise we miss the meaning of
history and falsify its values. Nevertheless the article is ably
written and should be studied as a complete expression of the
Europeanised standpoint in looking at Indian problems. As to
the present, Dr. Ray lays too much stress on the survivals of the
end of the nineteenth century when the national consciousness
touched bottom and ignores the youthful strength and energy
which is preparing the twentieth.
Page
– 433
|