07 - Chapter 2
07 - Chapter 2
07 - Chapter 2
Gardiner
In all cases, it is the human interest that appealed him. He described not
only the effect upon, but also the illustration in human character. He has
aptly pointed out the irrelativity in the behaviour of the society he lived in
entirely upon one’s own sources, one discovers how dependent one is
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upon men and books for inspiration. Do We Buy Books ? He questions Deleted: ’
his readers and forces them to think about the necessity of having books.
Gardiner himself felt ashamed of his library, though in his life he had
their house beautiful and never gave a serious thought to books. For
people, it is not the contents of the books that matter, but the size. It is not
that one cannot afford to buy books. One spends two hundred million
sterlings a year on beer, and one doubts whether one spends two hundred
not the question of money. He repeated that books are the cheapest as
well as the best part of the equipment of a house. You can begin your
the reading habit for life. And that habit is there to compare with it? What
delight is there like the revelation of books, the sudden impact of a master
spirit, the sense of windows flung wide open to the universe? It is these
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adventures of the mind, the joy of which does not pass away, that give the
Gardiner disclosed the utility of reading books as they are rich and
possessed by the books as rich as the oozy bottom of the deep. He further
argued that people do not say that they have read books but they say that
they live in communion with these spirits. Books explore the needs and
the tastes of the writers. One does not know the reading tastes and needs
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of others. One can not get the idea of what kind of knowledge one wants
One may like to read novels while other may not like to read the same
and like history. One should read books on one’s history and religion,
according to Gardiner.
because for them it was not the contents of the books that mattered but
the size. He criticized people for making a show of the books in their
the average man. People according to him spend money on beer but
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hardly spend on literature. Many people can afford to buy motor-cars at
anything from two hundred pounds but are aghast at the idea of spending
a man cannot choose even a name without taking the help of the books.
Even a great journalist or a writer finds thousand words for his article but
hardly gets a title or name for it. Finding a title leads the writer to despair.
Even the men of genius suffer from this impoverishment. The great
ought not to lard one’s common speech or everyday letters with long
freshness can wear a distinction that gives them not only significance but
a strange and haunting beauty. S.T. Coleridge flashed on the mind all the
beauty and wonder of the tropic night. While John Milton and William
Wordsworth could use the grand words like William Shakespeare when
words for expression of the great things of life. In this regard the views of
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Gardiner are similar to the great American scholar Emerson who always
also faced the difficulty of choosing titles for his essays or collection of
find a name. Not that finding a name is easy in any circumstances. Every
one who lives by his pen knows the difficulty of the task ” ( 1916 : 8 ).
Formatted: Indent: First line: 0 pt,
Tabs: 81 pt, Left
This difficulty of Gardiner is solved by his friends by suggesting a
suitable title to his writings. He himself has never found a title for one
that he has written that has always come to him from his friends. This
quotation throws enough light on his sharp wit and indifferent way of
expressing himself.
admits that he knows very little about his own body, and finds it
everything about the human body. He does not know about the stars like
learned astronomer has only a little knowledge of the vast universe and
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does not know all its secrets. He confesses ignorance of how flowers are
born with all their beauty, out of the secretions of the Earth and Air. He
regarding trees and plants, by telling how he kept digging at some roots
without realizing that he was pulling out the roots of an ivy tree growing
at some distance, and thus causing damage. He realized his folly when an
various matters.
powers and possess only a tiny piece of land in the vast field of
stretch of the field of knowledge. Some people know even less than
ordinary people ; In fact, no one possesses all the knowledge about all
ordinary man may know more on a particular subject than the wisest men
like Caesar and Plato. Sir Thomas Browne and Abraham Lincoln knew
undergraduate ; but they were among the wisest and most active men.
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believes that all such efforts help one in acquiring only limited
knowledge. One should learn all he can about the planet on which he
they do not really want to die. In youth, he is full of enthusiasm and looks
the zenith he begins loosing his former zeal and vigour to enjoy life. In
tired of journeying on the long way of life, and does not like to undertake
finds life worth living and does not agree with the gloomy view of the
during different stages of life. Having had their dinner, they sat talking in
known clergyman and a journalist. They talked about various matters and
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then began to discuss the question whether they would like to live this life
except one man was ‘No’. The clergyman had also rejected the idea of
living once again in this world because he thought that one visit to the
theatre of life was enough and did not want to pay a second visit to it.
Thus, almost all the men present there were reluctant to have another life
employs a playful manner in dealing with it. It shows the same blend of
with the question whether we would like to live in this world again if we
could get a chance to do so. Like the group of men assembled in the
Gardiner’s views in that it is enough to have lived and enjoyed life once,
and the idea of having another life to live, is not palatable. People do
believe that their present life has been worth living and all the
and did not agree with the gloomy view of the pessimists who wish they
had never been born at all. The sense of uncertainty, adventure and
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curiosity makes life attractive and colourful. Gardiner advises one to take
away the uncertainty of life if he wanted to take away all its magic. Due
know his future. This reality makes life curious which leads it to go on
adventure, because they do not know how many runs they would be able
to make, or whether they would be able to make any runs at all. Similarly,
life is interesting only so long as one is not sure as to what the future
holds in store for him. It is the novelty of each experience that adds to the
zest for life. It is because every dawn breaks as full of wonder as the first
day of creation that life preserves the enchantment of a tale that is never
told. Gardiner looks worried about the personal as well as social problems
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was disinherited when science revealed the laws of the universe and put
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beneficent or sinister forces that he could neither control nor understand,
Sometimes the omens were right and sometimes they were wrong,
the killing of the great art of letter writing due to penny post and modern
hurry and the lack of expression. He blames telegraph, the telephone, and
the postcard for the destruction of the art of letter writing. He proves his
write a good letter one must approach the job in the lightest and most
casual way. One must be personal, not abstract. People with titles should
act like ordinary decent human beings. It is an insult to them, and it ought
He lashes out at the society for giving titles to wrong men because
they misuse the titles. He argues that greatness of man does not lie in
titles. In the essay On Thinking For One’s Self Gardiner argues that
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thinkers at all. Men are always dying for other people’s opinions,
prejudices they have inherited from somebody else, ideas they have
having had a genuine thought of their own on any subject of the mind. It
is that one is afraid to think. Even some of them who try to escape this
only succeeded in getting into other flocks. One is too timid to think
alone, too humble to trust his own feeling or his own judgment. One
and most people cease to think at all and follow the fashions of thought as
his children for making them like himself instead of teaching them to be
themselves and new incarnations of the human spirit, new prophets and
concerned about putting one’s thoughts into their heads than in drawing
their thoughts out and succeed in making them rich in knowledge but
poor in wealth.
advises to fight against fear and win this mental disease.He accused
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human health, and treatment given by doctors. He taught one to have
some feelings for his country because it is his duty towards the nation. He
attacks the British as well as their titles. In his opinion, greatness of a man
does not lie in titles but in one’s deeds. He felt sorry because in Britain
and France, inferior and wrong people were awarded with prestigious
the loyality of judges as well as the lawyers to the law. Lawyer’s weapon
is law, his object is not justice. He condemned them for their misconduct
“ Law has about the same relation to justice that grammar has to
Shakespeare. If Shakespeare were put in the dock and tried by the
grammarians he would be condemned as a rogue and vagabond, and,
similarly, justice is not infrequently hanged by the lawyers. We must
have law just as we must have grammar, but we have no love for either of
them. They are dry, bloodless sciences, and we look askance at those who
practice them ” ( Ibid : 120 ).
a ship without a rudder. Life is such a tumultuous and confused affair that
most of us get lost in the tangle and brushwood and get to the end of the
journey without ever having found a path and a sense of direction. But a
hobby hits the path at once. It may be ever so trivial a thing, but it
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supplies what the mind needs, a disinterested enthusiasm outside the mere
not drinking them in great coarse gulps, but moistening his lips and
man who wins is the man who keeps cool, whose effort is always
proportioned to his power, who gives the impression that there is more in
him than ever comes out. Youth should be encouraged to fashion its own
taste and discriminate for itself between the good and the best. When that
is done one can ‘skip’ as one likes, with an easy mind and a good
conscience. One has learned his path through the wilderness. One knows
where the hyacinths grow and where one can catch the smell of the wild
thyme, and the nightingale sings to the moon. And if with this liberty of
knowledge he ‘skips’ some of the high brows, and is found more often in
the company of Borrow than of Bacon-well, one has done one’s task-
work and is out to enjoy the sun and the wind on the heath.
one’s whole waking thoughts. One likes people who have many facades
know to keep them under control, airing them when they are in season
and putting them in cold storage when they are not of season. One likes
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them to think in many quantities, to let their thought range over the whole
them in turn to all the winds that blow. One ought not to be the slave of
one idea, but the master of legions which one should exercise and
life.
others. The great American scholar Emerson said that if one only saw it
once in a hundred years one should spend years in preparing for the
vision. It is hung out for one every night, and one hardly gives it a glance.
And yet it is well worth glancing at. It is the best corrective for this
agitated little mad-house in which one dwells and quarrels, fights and
dies. It gives one a new scale of measurement and a new order of ideas.
the man who talks to himself habitually never hears himself. His words
are only the echo of his thoughts, and they correspond so perfectly that,
like a chord in music, there is no dissonance. That was thus with the art
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would no longer be at the bottom of the well, but on the tip of every
man’s tongue. One should have all the rascals in prison and all the
longer play with the lives of men, for there would be no longer secrets.
vanish.
tongues that told their true thoughts in spite of theirs. Like the great
Nature poet William Wordsworth, every great man has blindness about
his own work. One needs to take a journey from his self-absorbed center
and see himself with a fresh eye and make an unprejudiced judgment.
successful in buying and selling bacon and butter for his own profit.
himself a great statesman just as the great grocer has to prove himself a
the joy of waking up in the morning. It also conveys his views on the
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up, Gardiner passes on to the discussion of the problem related to eternity
Pascal, Blunt and Austin. The essay reveals his close observation of
the pleasing excitement with which the turning up of the fiddles of the
orchestra affect all. It is like starting out for a new adventure, or coming
upon some author whom one has unaccountably missed and who goes to
your heart like a brother. In short, it is like anything that is sudden and
beautiful and full of promise. But waking up can never have been quite so
intoxicating a joy as it is now that peace has come back to the earth. It is
in the first burst of consciousness that one feels the full measure of the
great thing that has happened in the world. It is like waking from an
it was not true. The fact that the nightmare from which one has awakened
now was true does not diminish one’s happiness. It deepens it, extends it,
projects it into the future. There is no pleasure like eating which comes
three times a day and lasts an hour each time. But sleep lasts eight hours.
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delightful in throwing off the enchantment of sleep and seeing the sunlit
streaming in at the window and hearing the happy jangle of the birds, or
thorny and full of disappointment and disillusions as any that have gone
the spirit, the inexhaustible promise of the best that is still to come, the
joy of the new birth that experience cannot stale nor familiarity make
tame.
to show how, on growing old, a man loses interest in his birthdays and
young, and does not take any interest in the occasion. However, on
reaching the age of fifty, his feelings about birthday are different. The
usual span of life is said in the Bible to be seventy years. That means, the
writer has to live another twenty years. These twenty years constitute a
period of physical decay, but they are also a period of indulgence in the
beauty and joy of Nature. At the age of 50, twenty years seem to be only
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a short span but in childhood or youth, the age of 50 seemed to be very
Gardiner hated painting faces or dying hair as they are the acts of
important social subject, and deals with the issue related to the
observance of rules in daily life. It points out that rules are necessary for
smooth functioning of society, but not all rules are to be observed strictly.
Some of them, like the rule of the road, may demand strict observance,
because they involve the question of the physical safety of people. But
there are some rules like concerning the dog , that need not be necessarily
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all. They may be ignored if they tend to stand in the way of the smooth
flow of life and social activity. They should be tempered with goodwill
the events on the bus in a skilled manner, and uses crisp and racy
of the character of the bus-conductor and the young woman carrying the
dog. Thus, several elements of the short-story are found in this essay, that
make its reading delightful and absorbing. The events in the essay are
such as that of the dog blinking at the dim lights, of the driver ‘beating his
arms across his chest’, and of the three policemen standing ‘like a group
particular grievance against passengers who came and sat in his bus while
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he shivered at the door’, his sense of triumph over the passengers because
he has got his rules, and his desire to justify his conduct to the writer, are
finely presented. And then there is the moral related to the observance of
are meant for the guidance of people concerned, and are not to be strictly
element of moralizing in the essay, but the writer does not moralise with
occasion for conveying his views to the central figure of that drama, i.e.
the bus conductor. Without this moral, it would have been a plain
habits. In this essay, he takes the reader into his confidence and conveys
his personal experience in matters of habits, and also makes some general
observations in connection with them. He has pointed out the merits and
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demerits of habits in a humorous manner, illustrating his remarks by
Walter Scott to Rogers about his school days. He also gives his own
example on maintaining habits. He used to hang up his coat and hat in the
cloakroom of his club, at whatever place he could find vacant. But then
he forgot where he had put them and had to waste much time in searching
them. So he decided to hang his coat and hat on a certain peg or hook and
then it became his habit to do so, and he felt it quite easy to find out these
Gardiner is of the view that habits are good so far as they are
example of Mr. Balfour who was habituated of holding the lapel of his
was proposing a toast, he wore a coat that had no lapels. Balfour was
much perturbed while speaking, even though he was too skilled a speaker
the habit of writing with a pencil, Gardiner put aside the pen and took out
habit.
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He gives some examples of how habits can cause discomfiture to
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mankind.He also tells about how he managed to find out his hat and coat
deals with the subject of ignorance of the writer in particular and of all
individuals. Even the most learned people according to him, possess only
a fraction of the knowledge even of their own subject, and even of the
most unlearned man knows more about a particular subject than others.
several subjects and shows all humility in pointing out the littleness of his
reveals the writer’s own views about the state of his learning as well as
that of others. Talking in general terms, he exposes the falsity of the pride
human beings.
and that of all men. There is a touch of light humour in his description of
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the various occasions on which he has found his ignorance exposed and
his pride of knowing things debunked even by the most ordinary persons
like the old chaise driver or the woman feeding bees. He shows his
that even the most ordinary and unlearned man may know more about
certain things than wise man, and may add to our knowledge by
feeling and faith are more important for a happy life than knowledge and
learning. Thus, he reveals his didactic purpose in this essay, and seeks to
how polite speech and manner sweeten the atmosphere around, and how
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seen in the case of Chesterfield, than a violent attack as was restored to
character and personality. The essay had a moral to convey and served a
incessant work and devotion of duty from the bee. He condemned the
imposters both in the world of the bees and the human world who made
much noise but did little work even though pretending to be doing much.
something or the other. The principle of the ‘survival of the fittest’ which
who writes on even the most trivial subject in a serious and perceptive
out of the smiles of various persons. The smile of his friend was
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Gardiner described Llyod George’s smile as ‘the twinkling smile, so
‘to stretch across the Continent from the Atlantic to the Pacific.’
Archbishop Temple and Mrs. Barbauld. His remarks about these persons
brought against Pope by Professor Karl Pearson. In his opinion, Pope was
very perfectly keen, amazingly neat and tidy in his opinion. Great writers
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writings. He argues that the charge of plagiarism is only valid where the
new effects. Honest stealing may be defended but to steal and to degrade
is past forgiveness.
fear and about missing the train. He also deals with the psychological
condition of the man writing under a pen-name and the carefree manner
not the expected troubles that occur in life but quite unexpected and
people.
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and social liberty, between anarchy and socialism and between the rights
what one likes. One’s liberty and rights are conditioned and restrained by
those of others. While enjoying one’s personal liberty and rights, one
should be conscious of those of others and try not to overstep the bounds
of his liberty. Individual liberty should not stand in the way of social
liberty. The rule of the road is, according to Gardiner, an example of how
in preserving the liberty of all others, and how private liberty can best be
Gardiner selects six greatest English men. There are in it two poets, two
men of action, one scientist and one preacher. No artist has been included
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All these great figures are English in the strict sense that none of
Indians as soldiers in their armies. Indian villages were divided into two
groups one farmers and other soldiers. Whenever there were battles,
these soldiers were fighting it under the leadership of their Sardars. East
dismissed the ancestral right of many states and forcefully took them
were also treated likewise. Divided Hindu rulers were fighting among
themselves for pretty reasons. For the sake of revenge and vengence,
opportunity and provoked one Hindu king against the other. Internal
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conflicts prevented them to unite each other. So they became
divided them into four races which were Arya, Vaish, Kshtriya and
was the period dominated by the English educated intellectuals. It was the
age of prose and reason. It was the period of reformist didacticism and
Peshwa II and took over the political power of Marathas which totally
and incapable Indian rulers were dismissed by the mighty English Rule.
This proved to be the turning point in the history as well as the social life
of a big nation like India. The advent of British Rule was the beginning of
ruled for hundreds of years by Muslims, Dutchs and Portugese, the social
life in the country was unaffected. But the English culture challenged the
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social construction in Maharashtra. A dawn of English administration and
preferences and moods are mirrored in his essays. His essays project his
Indian society was totally orthodox and had absolute faith in their
Indian writer who boldly pointed out the futility of these laws and forced
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lifestyle, education, politics, economy etc. He forced them to be united as
regions etc. Due to which they lost the spirit of equality and national
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allowed them to change their caste systems. Orthodox faiths and beliefs
Lokhitwadi spent his entire life stressing the need for revival and
to get rid of the outdated traditions, beliefs and superstitions. His courage
English rule, culture and literature awoke the learned and aspirant
They abondoned the old ideas and customs which embarrassed them
gave birth to a new era in Marathi literature. Justice Ranade, was the
reformers.
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Lokhitwadi tried to improve ethics and morals of the people
English were educating the natives though not with great enthusiasm.
two thousand years ago, with the addition of vain and empty subtitles
and science among the natives of India and that all the funds appropriated
anatomy, with other useful sciences which may be accomplished with the
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educated in Europe, and providing a college furnished with the necessary
Hindustancha Prachin Itihaas Kaa Naahi ? ( Why India does not have its
ancient history ? ) He felt sorry for the lack of writing the history of a vast
were thought to be the history at that time. Before the advent of Muslim
Bengal, Karnataka, South India and other parts of the country was
available. Ignorant Hindus did not write the history of their kings. Due to
division, Hindus had not felt the need to write their history. Writers also
thought that it was a mere wastage of time. Well known poets like
throughout their life but did not write history of Maharashtra. Peshwas,
though ruled for more than hundred years, had not written the history of
Writers like Rangnath, Ramdas, Jairam also had not felt to write the
historians Farista, Abu Fazal wrote about Moghal regime. After Muslims,
British invaded India who wrote the genuine history of India. Both
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Muslim and English historians confessed that they could win and rule
Indians because the people of this country were divided into castes, sub-
possessed the art of writing. But being royal patronages, they did not dare
to write the history of India. Apart from this, decline of Sanskrit language
and continuous disputes, riots and battles among Hindu rulers disturbed
pointed out that Sanskrit scholars did not become popular in practice,
politics and wars. Nana Fadnavis, Sakharam Bapu, Naro Shankar, Vitthal
pursued the Governor, Sir George Clark and the then Collector of Pune to
one thousand five hundred. Unfortunately majority of the people did not
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As it is said : “ Books can overcome ignorance but unfortunately, people
( www.answer.com/topic/marathi ).
to Lokhitwadi, women easily fell victim to the tyrrany of men. They were
equal rights to men and women. Unless and until people will not accept
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the equality of men and women, India cannot become a progressive
country.
He rightly said that education shapes the future of a man. Not only
Everyone who had been to school was not wise but wise were widely
honoured and paid by the society. He warned the parents not to marry
contemporary world.
Brahmins, the superiors and the strongest people in the past kept
be the only pedantic and denied the right to education to others. The caste
system stratified the society into Brahmin, Kshtriya, Vaishay and Shudra.
religion.
good things to be brought into practice. They also tell numerous invain
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Ignorant Hindus were the blind followers of Arya. Arya were
were other curricular activities which meant for the pleasure of listening,
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knowledge. In Lokhitwadi’s opinion, Indians can be made knowledgeable
beneficial to mankind. But Indians did not know how to travel by water,
their scriptures were the oldest books on Earth. Therefore, English books
could be the only source to fulfill this thirst for current universal
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Everybody’s profession was fixed according his caste. Dr. Babasaheb
Brahmins studied Vedas and scriptures. Naavi’s, (a barber) job was to cut
domestic responsibilities people got them married with a girl at the tender
On the early death of husband, the girls who became widows had
Lokhitwadi’s view, re-marriages are must for the welfare of the society
though they were thought to be against the scriptures. This social reform
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Realizing the need of history, Lokhitwadi not only contemplated but
wrote Indian history in the essays like Patra Number 112 Nizamachay
Number 145 Char Yuge, Patra Number 148 Rajakiya Vichar Yurop
Aani Asia etc. In this respect a well known Marathi critic Nirmalkumar
( 1973 : 162 ).
into a new mode of thought that would be useful even today to solve the
problems and clear the doubts in the minds of the present generation.
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and moral development of the society by eradicating orthodoxy and blind
Shastri, Pandit, Vaidic bards were appointed by the Hindu and Muslim
kings as their courtiers. Their courts were full of such scholarly men.
These highly learned persons got royal patronage in order to educate the
people. They were granted immense privileges by their kings. They were
highly paid and given the right to collect yearly revenues from a few
villages, though they were very selfish and lazy. At home, they were
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times Hindus were very brave and adventurous. In course of time, due to
blind faith, they lost their legacies which brought in misery. They were
able to read and write which made them overconfident. They never
foreign rulers to enter who easily took possession of the country under the
pretext of trade and then ruled India. They took advantage of the
made them slaves for five hundred years and English for one hundred and
fifty years. At first, Muslims came to India from Iran, Arabia and Turkey
and settled to rule the natives. While English from England, spread their
trade through East India Company and again ruled over India. The
defenceless Hindus lost their freedom and became slaves in their own
land. Many outsiders ruled India for hundreds of years. They left their
write letters like British people in order to open up their hearts as well as
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develop the art of writing and printing. But there was no freedom of
speech in the reign of old kings. People were not allowed to discuss polity
and religion. Tongue and hands were cut off on its violation. For example
during the Peshwa’s reign. The ‘Subhedar’ tied a woolf to that woman’s
body and burnt her alive for such a trifling offence. In another case, a
clerk was thrown from a castle for disclosing official matters in Bajirao
Peshwa’s reign.
these absurd traditions. These traditions were laid down by the Brahmins
unquestionable. The society was divided into haves and have nots. Poor
could learn to earn their living. They had to follow old traditions without
welcomed while girls were hated. A widow was not allowed to remarry.
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knowledge of law. Theology tells how to behave in this world. Practically
excessive writing over the society. In fact, both things are quite different
British Laws. It is the duty of the scholars to amend the religious theories
and eating meat because these two habits kill the conscience of mankind.
right and wrong. Apart from this they were fatalistic than attemptive.
They did not try to become literate and indulged in pleasure, becoming
slaves of rich to earn their bread and butter. They were insincere,
kept them away from the realization of Truth. Man being the crown of
creation has been rewarded with power of speech and knowledge. It is his
duty to develop and update various fields of knowledge around him. But
His action is devilish. Hence, the English rightly called the Hindus
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‘Semi-Barbarous’ because they were ignorant, gullible, eccentric and
from time to time as per the social needs. He suggested the Hindus to
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3) Except Munj, Marriage, Funeral, (these three) all remaining rites
caste
11) Everybody should gain respect on the strength of his qualities and not
15) Everyone should tread the path of truth, nobody should contempt
anyone, one should enjoy the freedom to get knowledge, research should
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In ancient times, the art of Reading and Writing was not developed.
Recitation was the only way to acquire knowledge. For the convenience
of the learners, Maharshi Ved Vyas divided Vedas into four parts :
earth, air, fire, water, ether. Six aspects of Vedas were broadly brought
impartially attacked his own community for its orthodoxy. In this regard
Nana Fadnavis, Sakharam Bapu, Naro Shankar, Vitthal Shivdev for their
which was the only utility of Sanskrit language. These scholars never got
perfection in handling court, polity, war etc. Their knowledge was very
limited. Sanskrit scholars did not spread its knowledge abroad, therefore,
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Maharashtrians were scattered in South and North Indian regions
was wiedly spoken in all these regions. Aryans were Brahmins, Kshtriya
the masters of this language. They were widely praised and blindly
scholars while Marathi was used for day to day communication which
resulted in code mixing. Apart from this, many words were added to
poems in Prakrut. But the major impact on Marathi was that of Sanskrit.
and periodicals were published in Marathi with the help of Sanskrit and
on, books were written on the basis of English because English books
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lacking in authentic knowledge of religions, castes, races, traditions,
medicines, chemistry, botany, games and sports, new and old laws,
idea about the different countries in the world. Even the words like
were unknown to the Sanskrit scholars. They were acquainted only with
the characters of Hindu epics the Ramayana and the Mahabharata. They
As food feeds the body, knowledge feeds the mind. Knowledge makes
scholars to read newspapers as it was the only source and the easiest way
to acquire knowledge.
autobiography Arunodya.
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Unfortunately people were reluctant to accept the views of
their goals, they focused on the inevitability and utility of books for
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reading which provides knowledge and wisdom to human beings. They
Gardiner expects smooth, light and playful behaviour in the society while
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