TRANSLATIONS

 

SRI AUROBINDO

 

Contents 

 

 

I. FROM SANSKRIT

   

 

 

 

BHAGAVAD GITA

 
 

Chapter One

 
 

Chapter Two

 
 

Chapter Three

 
 

Chapter Four

 
 

Chapter Five

 
 

Chapter Six

 

 

 

KALIDASA

 
 

The Birth of the War-God

 Canto One:

 
 

The Birth of the War-God, Canto Two

 
 

Malavica and the King

 
 

The Line of Raghu

 

 

 

 

Sankaracharya

 
 

Bhavani

 

 

 

 

III FROM TAMIL

 

 IV. FROM GREEK AND LATIN

 
 

The Kural

 

Odyssey

 
 

Nammalwar’s Hymn of the Golden Age

 

On A Satyr and Seeping Love

 
 

Love-Mad

 

A Rose of Women

 
 

Refuge

 

To Lesbia

 
 

To the Cuckoo

     
 

I Dreamed a Dream

     
 

Ye Others

     

 

 

BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NO TE

 

Sri Aurobindo, on his return to India, started steeping himself in Indian Culture and began learning the Indian languages — Sanskrit, Bengali, Gujarati, Marathi, etc. At the same time he commenced translating from Sanskrit and Bengali. We find in his manuscripts a few lists enumerating the work he had done, judging from which many translations seem to have been lost. The translation of Kalidasa's Meghaduta in terza rima, is, we know for certain, irretrievable.

Most of the translations from the Mahabharata, the Ramayana, the Gita, Kalidasa, Bhartrihari and the mediaeval poets Bidyapati, Chandidas, Horn Thakur, etc. were done during Sri Aurobindo's Baroda period, 1893-1905. But Kalidasa's Kumarasambhava bears the date January 15, 1918. The Book of the Assembly Hall from the Mahabharata bears the earliest known date, the 18th of March, 1893, indicating that it was started exactly a month after he had assumed office in Baroda State.

Vidula which appeared in Bande Mataram in 1907 was translated about the same time.

Kalidasa's Vikramorvasi and Bhartrihari's Century of Life were published in book-form in 1911 and 1923 and were included in Collected Poems and Plays in 1942. Vikramorvasi has been published in Volume 7 of the Centenary Series (Collected Plays).

The first thirteen chapters of Bankim Chandra Chatterjee's Ananda Math were translated and serialised in the Karmayogin in 1909. The national song, Bande Mataram, appears in this novel.

Songs of the Sea was translated at the request of the author, C. R. Das, and published in 1923 with his own prose translations. In 1942 it was included in Collected Poems and Plays.

The works of Tamil poets were translated with the help of Subramaniam Bharati and published in the Arya in 1914-1915.

Translations from the Greek belong to Sri Aurobindo's early period, while the poem from Catullus was done in Pondicherry.

During the 'thirties and 'forties Sri Aurobindo translated from Bengali a few poems of his disciples.

D. L. Roy's song Mother India was Englished in 1941.

The translations brought together in this volume are printed exactly as found in the manuscripts. Proper names are spelt as in the original copy.

Most of the translations here are of literary pieces. The translations of the Upanishads and Vedas are published in Volumes 10,-11, 12 of the present series.