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Sankharitola's Apologia
THE omniscient editor of
the Indian Nation exposed himself last week to a well-deserved
castigation at our hands by trespassing into history, of which he evidently
knows less than a fifth form schoolboy in an English public school. We gave him
his deserts, but were careful to couch our criticism, however deservedly severe,
in perfectly courteous language. We find, however, that the
courtesy was thrown away
on the most hysterically foul-mouthed
publicist in the whole Indian Press. The late Sambhunath Mukherji ironically
described Mr. N. N. Ghose as a thundering cataract of law: he might more aptly
have described him as a thundering cataract of billingsgate. He has attempted to
answer our criticism in this week's Indian Nation, but the answer is so
much befouled with an almost maniacal virulence of abuse that most of our
friends have advised us to ignore his frenzies and never again give him the
notoriety he desires by noticing him in our columns. It is true that the
Indian Nation addresses itself to a microscopic audience and expresses
the personal vanities, selfishness, jealousies of a single man, but so long as
it enjoys a false reputation for learning and wisdom even
with a limited circle or trades on that reputation to attack and discredit the
National movement, it is our duty to expose its pretensions, and we shall not be
deterred by any abuse, however foul. Mr. N. N. Ghose's
reply falls into three parts, of which one consists merely of rancorous
vituperation, another of a feeble attempt to wriggle out of the uncomfortable
position he has got into by his failure to consult a few historical primers
before writing, and the third
is a restatement of his opinions about nationality formulated this time in the
shape of general ideas without any basis either of historical fact or of
Metropolitan College fiction. As to the abuse we can only say that it might have
been more skilfully done. At least it might have been more coherent. The
aggrieved sage of Sankharitola picks out from all the
Bande
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Mataram writers
Srijut Aurobindo Ghose for the object of his wrath and among other elegant terms
of abuse calls him a prig and a Graeculus esuriens.
To those who may not be such accomplished Latin scholars as the Principal of the
Metropolitan College, we may explain that the last expression means a starving
and greedy scholar who is prepared to commit any vileness for the sake of
earning a livelihood. We will not stop to ask whether this description applies
to Srijut Aurobindo Ghose or to a Principal who daily exhorts his students to
subordinate honour, high feeling and patriotism to the supreme consideration of
bread and himself practises the lofty philosophy he preaches. We will only ask
Mr. Ghose whether a man can be at once a prig and an esurient Greekling.
Srijut Aurobindo Ghose may be one or the other or neither, but he can hardly
be both. Either Mr. N. N. Ghose's knowledge of Latin is as distinguished and
correct as his knowledge of history, or else he is so ignorant of English as to
be even ignorant what the word prig means. We can understand his being in a rage
at the merciless exposure of pretended scholarship, but that does not excuse his
incoherence; nor is it a sufficient reason for what was once a fair counterfeit
of a gentleman and a scholar turning himself into the image of a spitting and
swearing tom-cat. And with that we leave Mr. N. N. Ghose the fishwife and pass
on to Mr. N. N. Ghose the historian.
He does not try to justify his blunders, -- that would be hopeless -- but he
does try to excuse them. He practically admits that his Italian republics are a
blunder and that he was thinking of the Middle Ages when he was writing
of the nineteenth century. But he pleads that Burke uses the word commonwealth
in the sense of state and therefore Mr. N. N. Ghose can use the word republic in
the same sense. This is Metropolitan College logic and Metropolitan College
knowledge of English. Does Mr. Ghose really think that republic and commonwealth
mean the same thing precisely or that Burke would have talked of the Russian
republic when he meant the Russian monarchy? But, says Mr. Ghose, it does not
matter, as I was not talking about forms of government. But if Mr. Ghose
in his class was to talk about adjectives when he meant nouns, would it be an
excuse to say that he was not talking about the difference between various
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parts of speech? His defence of his other blunders is
still more amusing.
Says the Oracle: "To combat our proposition
about ancient Greece an academic commonplace is trotted out, namely, that the
people of Greece never developed a panhellenic sentiment." Really this is enough
to take one's breath away. Mr. Ghose told us last week that the Greeks became an
united nation under the pressure of the Persian invasion; this week he coolly
tells us that it is an academic commonplace that the Greeks never even developed
a panhellenic sentiment. We certainly never said anything of the sort. The
Greeks, as any tyro in history knows, did develop a panhellenic sentiment but it
was never strong enough
— and that was all we said
— to unite them into a nation. But Mr. Ghose flounders
still deeper into the mire in the next sentences. "What does it signify whether
they did or not? The whole question is, could the Greek states have been set
against one another? Athens and Sparta, for instance, against each other? And if
not, why not?" Really, Mr. Ghose, really now! Is it possible you do
not know that soon after the
Persian invasion which you say made Greece
an united nation, Athens and Sparta were at each other's throats and the whole
of the Greek world by land and sea turned into one vast battlefield on which the
Hellenic cities engaged in a murderous internecine strife? What would we think
of a "scholar" who pretended to know Indian history and yet asserted that the
Hindus became an united nation under the pressure of the Mahomedan invasion and
that it was impossible to set the Hindu states against each other, Mewar and
Amber for instance? Yet this is precisely the blunder Mr. Ghose has committed
with respect to Greek history. But he pleads bitterly that his facts are no
doubt all wrong, but the conclusions he bases on them are right. What do facts
matter? It is only Mr. N. N. Ghose's opinions which matter.
Mr. Ghose accuses us of incapacity to understand the substance of his
article. We quite admit that it is difficult to understand the mystic wisdom of
a sage who asserts that the soundness of his premises has nothing to do with the
soundness of his conclusions. Mr. Ghose stated certain facts as supporting a
conclusion otherwise unsupported. We have proved that his
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facts are all childish blunders. He must therefore
accept one of the two horns of a dilemma: either his facts had nothing to do
with his "truism" or his "truism" itself is an error. But we had another object
in view in exposing the pretentious sciolism of this arrogant publicist. Our
business with him is not so much to disprove his opinions as to convince the few
who still believe in him of the hollowness of his pretensions. It was for this
reason that we dwelt on his blunders last week and have done the same this week,
— in order to show that this gentleman who claims a monopoly of culture and
wisdom in India, is a half educated shallow man whose boasted mastery of the
English language even is imperfect and who in other subjects, such as history
and politics, is an ignoramus pretending to knowledge.
Bande Mataram,
August 24, 1907
Our False Friends
The Englishman has been warning us against our
false friends. We have been asked to avert our eyes from those Indian delegates
who have asked the socialistic Conference at Stuttgart to liberate one-fifth of
the human race from serfdom. The Englishman unblushingly calls these
Indian delegates our enemies and perhaps points to himself as our only friend,
guide and philosopher. With the Englishman for our friend, and the
Civil and Military Gazette for our ally and the rest of the Anglo-Indian
Press for our well-wishers it is no doubt sinful to long for a change for
the
paradise of
universal brotherhood. India is the freest of lands, retorts the Hare Street Journal to the misrepresentation
of our false friends in the above socialistic Conference. Here under British
rule the people enjoy religious freedom, they are allowed to stick to their
absurd social customs, they are not denied food, clothing and luxuries. What is
there wanting to their freedom the Englishman is at a loss to discover.
Does our contemporary seriously desire enlightenment on the point? Or is he
indulging in a bit of Hare Street humour at our expense? Is it owing to this
freedom of which we are the enviable possessors that he himself as well as his
prototype in Lahore enjoy the monopoly of pour-
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ing daily vile abuses on us with perfect safety and
immunity? Is it due to this freedom that we are threatened with imprisonment for
republishing the articles of the Yugantar and they are supported and
patronised for the very same offence? Is it for this enviable freedom that some
innocent men of Comilla were very near being hanged and transported without a
shred of evidence against them? Is it in consequence of this freedom that a
highly respectable accused at Rawalpindi is taking his trial on a sick bed? Is
it in the exercise of their rights as free citizens of the British Empire that Lala Lajpat Rai and Ajit Singh have been deported without even the mention of
the charge against them? This freedom is perhaps responsible for the banishment
of an Arya Samajist from his country though the trying magistrate has declared
him quite innocent of the charge brought against him. Is it a tangible
demonstration of our freedom that we cannot keep our food grains for our own use
even when there is a terrible famine in the land? Is it because we are free to
think and act that the Partition of Bengal has been carried out in the teeth of
an unanimous and protracted opposition? The disarming of a whole people is
another incontrovertible evidence of their freedom. They are not allowed the use
of arms because they are free. Their manhood is repressed because they are free.
They are converted into so many harmless cattle because their Mother-country is
the freest of all countries! If we had even a jot of freedom the Englishman
could not have flung in our face such a mocking statement. The world has
come to know of India's true condition, and these interested and shameless
perversions of truth can deceive nobody.
Bande Mataram,
August 26, 1907
Repression and Unity
One of the most encouraging signs of the present times
is the effect of repression in bringing together men of all views who have the
future welfare and greatness of their country at heart. At this time last year
the great fight between the old and new parties was just beginning to pass from
the stage of loose occasional
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skirmishes into a close and prolonged struggle. The
emergence of Nationalism as a self-conscious force determined to take shape and
fight for the domination of the national mind was indicated by the appearance of
the Bande Mataram as the first out and out Nationalist daily in the
English tongue published in India. For the first time a gospel of undiluted
Nationalism without any mitigating admixture of prudent concealment or
diplomatic reservation was poured daily into the ears of the educated class in
India. At first the Bande Mataram and the cause it came to champion had
to make a hard fight for existence and for a voice in the country, and in the
struggle which culminated in the last session of the Congress, many hard words
were used on both sides, strong animosities aroused and what seemed incurable
misunderstandings engendered. Those times are now fading into a half-remembered
past. The second year of the paper's existence has begun with a prosecution for
sedition, but circumstances have so changed that in its hour of trial it has the
sympathy of the whole of Bengal at its back. We note with satisfaction and
gratitude that all classes of men, rich and poor, all shades of opinion,
moderate or extremist, the purveyors of ready made loyalty alone excepted, have
given us a sympathy and support which is not merely emotional. This growing
unity is mainly due to the action of the bureaucracy in attempting to put down
by force a movement which has now taken possession of the nation's heart beyond
the possibility of dislodgment. This is the last and crowning blessing of
British rule.
Bande Mataram,
August 27, 1907
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