Savitri
- Preface to the Third Edition
- Preface to the Second Edition
- Preface to the First Edition
- Introduction
- Life-Sketch
- Yoga
- Politics
- Philosophy
- Poetry
- Savitri
- 'The Symbol Dawn'
- 'The Issue'
- 'The Yoga of the King- The Yoga of the Soul's Release'
- 'The Secret Knowledge'
- 'The Yoga of the King- The Yoga of the Spirit's Freedom and Greatness'
- 'The World Stair'
- 'The Kingdom of Subtle Matter'
- 'The Glory and Fall of Life'
- 'The Kingdoms of the Little Life'
- 'The Godheads of the Little Life'
- 'The Kingdoms and Godheads of the Greater Life'
- 'The Descent into Night'
- 'The World of Falsehood, the Mother of Evil, and the Sons of Darkness'
- 'The Paradise of the Life-gods'
- 'The Kingdoms and the Godheads of the Little Mind'
- 'The Kingdoms and Godheads of the Greater Mind'
- 'The Heavens of the Ideal'
- 'In the Self of Mind'
- 'The World-soul'
- 'The Kingdoms of the Greater Knowledge'
- 'The Pursuit of the Unknowable'
- 'The Adoration of the Divine Mother'
- 'The House of the Spirit and the New Creation'
- 'The Vision and the Boon'
- 'The Birth and Childhood of the Flame'
- 'The Growth of the Flame'
- 'The Call to the Quest'
- 'The Quest'
- 'The Destined Meeting Place'
- 'Satyavan'
- 'Satyavan and Savitri'
- 'The Word of Fate'
- 'The Way of Fate and the Problem of Pain'
- 'The Joy of Union - the Ordeal of the Foreknowledge of Death and the Heart's Grief'
- 'The Parable of the Search for the Soul'
- 'The Entry into the Inner Countries'
- 'The Triple Soul- Forces'
- 'The Finding of the Sou'l
- 'Nirvana and the Discovery of the All-negating Absolute'
- 'Rose of God'
- The Two Missing Cantos
- 'Death in the Forest'
- 'Towards the Black Void'
- 'The Journey in Eternal Night and the Voice of the Darkness'
- 'The Dream Twilight of the Ideal'
- 'The Gospel of Death and the Vanity of the Ideal'
- 'The Debate of Love and Death'
- 'The Dream Twilight of the Earthly Real'
- 'The Eternal Day'
- 'The Soul's Choice'
- 'The Supreme Consummation'
- 'Epilogue- The Return to Earth'
- The Legend
- 'The Wonderful Poem'
- The Tale of the Epic- A Comparative Analysis
- New Dimensions
- Legends and Myths
- The Vedic Storehouse of Myth
- 'Symbols'
- 'Savitri' in the Veda
- Allegorical Interpretations of the Legend
- Symbolism in Savitri
- The Symbolism of the 'Sacrifice'
- The Problem
- The Overhead Planes of Conciousness
- Overhead Aesthesis
- Mystic Poetry and the Mantra
- 'Overhead' Poetry
- Overhead Influence in Sri Aurobindo's Yoga
- Savitri Five-Fold Aim Behind Its Composition
- The Basis of Savitri Sri Aurobindo's Yoga
- Planes of Consiousness Stair of Worlds
- Battles of the Soul
- 'Upanishadic and Kalidasian'
- Similes in Savitri
- 'Technique' and 'Inspiration' in Savitri
- 'Dawn' in Savitri
- Savitri Her Power and Personality
- Epics, Ancient and Modern
- Paradise Lost and Savitri
- Song of Myself and Savitri
- The Cantos
- The Odysseus Theme
- Kazantzakis' 'Modern Sequel'
- Sri Aurobindo and Kazantzakis
- 'A Triple Challenge'
- Dante and Sri Aurobindo
- Savitri and the Commedia
- Savitri and Aurobindo's Early Narrative Poems
- Savitri and Faust
- Savitri Its Architectural Design
- Savitri Its Symbolic Action in a Cosmic Background
- Savitri and the 'Sonnets'
- Advocatus Diaboli and Advocatus Dei
- Conclusion Towards a Greater Dawn
- References
- Select Bibliography
- Appendix
- Index

XIII
Savitri and Faust
A poem like Savitri that was, as we have seen, some fifty years a-growing, a poem that attempts to present at one and the same time a human and a cosmic drama, a poem besides that reveals some of the features of a tantalising palimpsest, must needs, as Sri Aurobindo himself has admitted, show traces of variations in tone and changes in style. In this respect, as also in others, Savitri challenges comparison with another great poetic masterpiece, Goethe's Faust,122 which was years a-growing. Sri Aurobindo greatly admired Goethe and once wrote to a disciple:
Yes, Goethe goes much deeper than Shakespeare; he had an
incomparably greater intellect than the English Poet and
sounded problems of life and thought Shakespeare had no means
of approaching even. But he was certainly not a greater poet;
I do not find myself very ready to admit either that he was
Shakespeare's equal. He wrote out of a high poetic intelligence
but his style and movement nowhere came near the poetic power,
the magic, the sovereign expression and profound or subtle rhythms
of Shakespeare... There is too a touch mostly wanting—the touch
of an absolute, an intensely inspired or revealing inevitability...123
Sri Aurobindo thus knew his Faust even as he knew the Commedia intimately, and he might even have seen—as Kuno Fischer and others have—resemblances between the two poems. In the earliest version dating from 1773, Goethe seems to have laid the stress on the heroine, Gretchen, while Faust was no more than the Faust of the old legend. It was almost twenty-five years later that—perhaps under the influence of Schiller—the characterisation of Faust acquired deeper symbolic hues and that he was raised to a higher philosophical plane. The Second Part, written during the last eight years of his life when he enjoyed the friendship of Eckermann, gave the play a further dimension and made the whole work a philosophical poem of imperishable value, though there will always be people who prefer the First to the Second Part. For example, A.C. Bradley says,
Goethe himself could never have told the world what he was
going to express in the First Part of Faust: the poem told him, and
it is one of the world's greatest. He knew too well what he was
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going to express in the Second Part and with all its wisdom and
beauty it is scarcely a great poem.124
As Faust added new dimensions in the Second Part, so did Savitri in its final revised form. These additions to Savitri and the new accent given to her character owe their origin, as already pointed out, partly to Sri Aurobindo's Yogic experiences and the philosophy that he outlined on their basis, and partly also to his association with the Mother during the last thirty years of his life. What Karl Breul says in his 'Introduction' to the Bohn's Series edition about Part II of Faust may also be said of Book II of Savitri: "...although sometimes difficult, yet by no means abstruse and incomprehensible, not a whit harder to understand in general motive and outline. "The Aurobindonian view that when right aspiration wells up from man's troubled or unsatisfied heart it is met by an answering response from Above, is also found enunciated towards the close of Goethe's poem at the climactic point of Faust's redemption:
Saved is this noble soul from ill,
Our spirit-peer. Who ever
Strives forward with unswerving will,—
Him can we aye deliver;
And if with him celestial love
Hath taken part,—to meet him
Come down the angels from above;
With cordial hail they greet him.125
Besides, it is worth noting that, before his death, Faust realises that permanent happiness could come only if man works, not for himself, but for humanity. This is paralleled by the Aurobindonian view that one should work only for the Divine, the Divine, of course, including humanity also. Further, it is a striking parallelism between the Commedia and Faust that even as it is Beatrice who conducts Dante through Paradise, it is Gretchen who finally comes forward to guide Faust to the higher spheres:
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To guide him, let-it be given to me;
Still dazzles him, the new-born day.126
In Sri Aurobindo's epic, likewise, it is Savitri who saves Satyavan ('the Soul of the World') from the death-trap and guides him back to the world of man to greet another Dawn. Whether in the Commedia, Faust or Savitri, Woman—the blessed feminine—is the ultimate Redeemer; she is Love, she is Wisdom, and she is Strength.
It will be clear, then, that the Faustian consciousness as presented by Goethe is verily an expanding and an evolving consciousness that tries to comprehend all ranges and gradation of human life; and it even extends, says Ronald Peacock, "to human experience over many centuries, since Goethe includes later in his play a deep vista of ancient culture and a sense of historical evolution.127 Just as Faust tries to go beyond books and magic to explore the deep perennial springs of human life, so also Savitri, by exploring the "inner countries of the mind and heart", covers the whole gamut of possible human experience and penetrates to the secret Self that includes all and transcends all.
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