Sri Aurobindo
Autobiographical Notes
and Other Writings of Historical Interest
Part One. Autobiographical Notes
2. Sri Aurobindo’s corrections of statements in a proposed biography
Early Life in India and England. 1872–1893
Political Interests and Activities [4]
[Aurobindo formed a secret society while in England.]
This is not correct. The Indian students in London did
once meet to form a secret society called romantically the Lotus and Dagger in
which each member vowed to work for the liberation
of India generally and to take some special work in furtherance of that end.
Aurobindo did not form the society but he became a member along with his
brothers. But the society was still-born. This happened immediately before the
return to India and when he had finally left Cambridge. Indian politics at that
time was timid and moderate and this was the first attempt of the kind by Indian
students in England. In India itself Aurobindo’s maternal grandfather Raj
Narayan Bose formed once a secret society of which Tagore, then a very young
man, became a member, and also set up an institution for national and
revolutionary propaganda, but this finally came to nothing. Later on there was a
revolutionary spirit in Maharashtra and a secret society was started in Western
India with a Rajput noble as the head and this had a Council of Five in Bombay
with several prominent Mahratta politicians as its members. This society was
contacted and joined by Sri Aurobindo somewhere in 1902–3, sometime after he had
already started secret revolutionary work in Bengal on his own account. In
Bengal he found some very small secret societies recently started and acting
separately without any clear direction and tried to unite them with a common
programme. The union was never complete and did not last but the movement itself
grew and very soon received an enormous extension and became a formidable factor
in the general unrest in Bengal.