The Old Year
THERE are periods in the history of the world when the unseen Power that guides its destinies seems to be filled with a consuming passion for change and a strong impatience of the old. The Great Mother, the Adya Shakti, has resolved to take the nations into Her hand and shape them anew. These are periods of rapid destruction and energetic creation, filled with the sound of cannon and the trampling of armies, the crash of great downfalls, and the turmoil of swift and violent revolutions; the world is thrown into the smelting pot and comes out in a new shape and with new features. They are periods when the wisdom of the wise is confounded and the prudence of the prudent turned into a laughing-stock; for it is the day of the prophet, the dreamer, the fanatic and the crusader, -- the time of divine revelation when Avatars are born and miracles happen. Such a period was the end of the eighteenth century and the beginning of the nineteenth; in such a period we find ourselves at the dawn of this twentieth century the years of whose infancy have witnessed such wonderful happenings. The result of the earlier disturbance was the birth of a new Europe and the modernisation of the Western world; we are assisting now at the birth of a new Asia and the modernisation of the East. The current started then from distant America but the centre of disturbance was Western and Central Europe. This time there have been three currents, -- insurgent nationalism starting from South Africa, Asiatic revival starting from Japan, Eastern democracy starting from Russia; and the centre of disturbance covers a huge zone, all Eastern, Southern and Western Asia, Northern or Asiaticised Africa and Russia which form the semi-Asiatic element in Europe. As the pace of the revolution grows swifter, each new year becomes more eventful than the last and marks a large advance to the final consummation. No year of the new century has been more full of events than 1906-07, our year 1313. If we look abroad, we find the whole affected zone in agita-
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tion and new births everywhere. In the Far East the year has not been marked by
astonishing events, but the total results have been immense. Within these twelve
months China has been educating, training and arming herself with a speed of
which the outside world has a
very meagre conception. She has sent out a Commission of Observation to the
West and decided to develop constitutional Government within the next ten
years. She has pushed forward the work of revolutionising her system of
education and bringing it into line with modern requirements. She has taken
resolutely in hand the task of liberating herself from the curse of opium which
has benumbed the energies of her people. She has sent her young men outside in
thousands, chiefly to Japan, to be trained for the great work of development.
With the help of Japanese instructors she is training herself quietly in war,
and science, has made an immense advance in the organisation of a disciplined
army, and is now busy laying the foundations of an effective navy. In spite of
the arrogant protests of British merchants, she has taken her enormous customs revenue into her own hands for
national purposes. By her successful diplomacy she has deprived England of the
fruits of the unscrupulous, piratical attack upon Tibet and is maintaining her
hold on that outpost of the Mongolian world.
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recovery
of complete independence. Siam has purchased release from
humiliating restrictions on her internal sovereignty at the heavy price of a
large cession of territory to intruding France; but she is beginning to pay
more attention to her naval and military development and it will be well if
this means that she has realised the only way to preserve her independence. At
present Siam is the one weak point in Mongolian Asia. Otherwise the events of
this year show that by the terrible blow she struck at Russia, Japan has
arrested the process of European absorption in the Far East.
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forces which must contend for the possession of India's future, -- the British
bureaucracy and the Indian people, -- have at last clashed
in actual conflict. Barisal meant passive, martyr-like endurance; Comilla means
active, courageous resistance. The fighting is at present only on the far
eastern fringe of this great country; but it must, as it grows in intensity,
spread westwards. Sparks of the growing conflagration will set fire to Western
Bengal, and India is now far too united for the bureaucracy to succeed long in
isolating the struggle.
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record for a single year. As was to be expected, most of these schools have
grown up in the great centre of Nationalism, East Bengal.
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prefer to call it want of straightforwardness and courage. The Indu thinks
that personal attacks and violent outbreaks of temper have no part in English
politics. This is indeed a holy simplicity; and it is not for nothing that the
Bombay journal calls itself Indu Prakash, "moonshine". It is
true, of course, that English politicians do not carry their political wranglings and acerbities into social life to anything like the extent that the
Continental peoples do or we do in India; and this is a most praiseworthy
feature of English public life. We do not agree with the Indu that the
differences which divide us are smaller than those which exist between English
parties; but small or great, we agree that they should not generate hatred, if
it can be avoided. But if the moderates are so anxious to avoid the acerbation
of feelings, why should they not set the example? Let them avoid autocracy and
caucus tactics, frankly recognise the Nationalists as a party whose opinions
must be consulted, be conciliatory and constitutional in their procedure;
and what the Indu misterms "Extremist rowdyism" will die a
natural death.
A Mouse in a Flutter
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Ghose that when we talk of his ruffled plumes, we are not thinking of him in
his capacity as a mouse at all. We are for a moment imagining him to be a
feathered biped -- say, a pelican solitary in the wilderness or else, if he
prefers it, a turtle-dove cooing to his newly-found mate in Colootola.
Page-265 Calcutta Hamlet, unlike the Shakespearian, cannot distinguish between a mouse and a rhododendron. A learned Government Professor assured us, however, that rhodon is Greek for a rose and that Mr. Ghose has found a new species of mouse that not only flutters but flowers, -- of which he believes himself to be the only surviving specimen. However that may be, we have learned our lesson and will never compare him to a "rhodent" again. A rose by another name will smell as sweet and a mouse by any other name will gnaw as hard.
Page-266 British Interests and British Conscience
Page-267 A critic who confounds the names of journals on which he sits in judgment, is a sight for Gods and men; and we congratulate our Swadesh friend on the testimonial secured from so high a quarter. But is it solicited or unsolicited? The seditious rags may now envy the distinction. But will they be tempted to mend their ways? We would suggest a kaisar-i-Hind for meritorious journals and recommend the Indian Mirror and the Indian Nation for the first two medals.
Bande Mataram, April 18, 1907
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