Works of Sri Aurobindo

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-77_November 10_1962.htm

November 10, 1962

(Mother listens to Satprem read a chapter from his manuscript entitled “Under the Sign of the Gods, ” in which he speaks of the overmind’s inadequacy for attaining the plenitude of evolution, Afterwards, Mother tells what she saw while he was reading.)

There’s a kind of cadence….

(Mother “listens” for a long while)

Some people found it interesting, mon petit! First of all, Sri Aurobindo was there – it was like a large hall: a very large room with scarcely any walls, just enough so it didn’t seem wide open to everything. And then there was a kind of musical instrument, like a grand piano, but much bigger and higher, playing its own music: nobody was playing it. And its “own music” was the music of what you have written. It was taking the form of … something like luminous, colored sheets of paper, tinged with gold, with pink, which were scattering in the air and then very slowly falling onto a floor that was scarcely a floor, with an almost birdlike movement. They were falling, falling – almost square sheets of paper falling one upon another like feathers – nothing heavy about it. And then from the left a being like a god from the overmind entered the room; he was both like a Hindu deity with a tiara, and a kind of angel in a long robe (a combination of the two), and he moved so lightly, without touching the ground – he was all lightness. And with a very lovely and harmonious movement (everything was so harmonious!), he gathered up all the sheets: he took them in his arms and they stayed there – they were weightless, you see. He gathered them up, smiling all the while, with a young and very, very luminous and happy face – something very lovely. Then, when he had gathered them all up, he turned towards me (I was here; you were over there, the music was there and Sri Aurobindo was there), and said as he was leaving, “I am taking all this to give to them,” as if he were returning to the overmental world where they were greatly interested in it! (Mother laughs.)

But it was all so lovely, so very lovely! There was a rhythm; it was all unfolding rhythmically, a rhythm of the falling sheets of paper; and a rhythm moving along very slowly, not in a straight line, and undulating.

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It was very lovely. A most pleasant atmosphere. It’s very good.

That’s what I was beginning to see towards the end. It took form gradually, gradually, and it was all there by the time you finished reading. At the beginning my attention was divided between what you were reading and what was going on; afterwards it was entirely focused on what was happening: your sheets of paper falling and landing weightlessly, like birds, and spreading over a floor that wasn’t solid (it was there just to give the impression of a room, but you could see through it). And while you were reading, he was gathering them all up, with a long robe trailing behind him. This being was made of practically the same substance as the sheets coming out of the piano (it was a kind of piano, it was playing music, but it was the principle of what you have written). So he gathered up everything, and when he had a stack this big, he said, “I am going to take it and show it to them.”

It was really lovely.

But the gods may not be so pleased; after all, I say the overmind is inadequate!

Of course they will!

Oh, they’re not stupid! (Mother laughs.)

They certainly prefer this to the blind and stupefied worship most humans offer up to them.

Well, that’s all for today.

Next time is the 14th, Wednesday. Good. It’s remarkable, the impression your reading creates: a really pleasant and agreeable atmosphere.

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