Sri Aurobindo
Letters of Sri Aurobindo
Volume 1
Letter ID: 337
Sri Aurobindo — Roy, Dilip Kumar
February 15, 1933
I don’t think Rs.75 is a bit too much to ask for. As for the Hindi affair, it is worth while trying but – . Well, I suppose you know Byron’s verdict on publishers?
Your experience about the meditation is common enough. I used to have it or analogous things hundreds of times. I suppose it is to teach us first that grace is more effective than tapasya and, secondly, that either equanimity or a cheerful spontaneous happy self-opening is as effective, to say the least, as the grimmest wrestling for a result. But it would be dangerous to assume from that that no tapasya and no endeavour is needful – for that might very well mean inertia. I have seen too that very often a long tapasya with doubtful results prepares the moment of grace and the spontaneous downflow. All which seem to be contradictions, but are not in a whole view of things.
Mother will see about the time to be fixed for the music.