CHAPTER FIVE
AT SCHOOL (2)
It is strange how your opinion of yourself can be influ-
 enced by what others think of you. In January, 1909, when I 
 joined the Ravenshaw Collegiate School, Cuttack, a sudden 
 change came over me. Among European and Anglo-Indian 
 boys my parentage had counted for nothing, but among 
 our own people it was different. Further, my knowledge of 
 English was above the ordinary level and that gave me an 
 added estimation in the eyes of my new class-mates. Even 
 the teachers treated me with undue consideration, because 
 they expected me to stand first, and in an Indian school 
 studies, and not sports, brought credit and reward. At the 
 first quarterly examination I did justify the hopes placed in 
 mc. The new atmosphere in which I lived and moved forced 
 me to think better of myself that I was worth something 
 and was not an insignificant creature. It was not a feeling of 
 pride that crept into me but of self—confidence, which till 
 then had been lacking and which is the sine qua non of all 
 success in life.
 This time it was not the infant class which I joined 
 but the fourth1
  class——so I did not have to look up all
the time. Boys of the fourth class considered themselves 
as belonging to one of the higher classes and moved about 
with an air of importance. So did I. But in one respect I 
was seriously handicapped in spite of all the other advan-
tages I enjoyed. I had read hardly a word of Bengali—my 
mother—tongue——before I joined ’this school, while the 
other boys had already reached a high standard. I remem-
ber that the first day I had to write an essay on ‘Cow’ (or 
was it ‘Horse’?), I was made the laughing-stock of all my 
class—mates. I knew nothing of grammar and precious 
little of spelling and when the teacher read out my compo-
sition to the whole class with running comments, punctu-
ated with laughter, flowing in from all sides, I felt humbled 
to the dust. I had never had this experience before—to be 
laughed at for deficiency in studies—and on top of it, I had 
lately developed a species of self-consciousness which had 
made me ultrasensitive. For weeks and months the Bengali 
lessons would give me the creeps. But for the time being, 
however acute the mental torture, there was nothing I could 
do but put up with the humiliation and secretly resolve to 
make good. Slowly and steadily I began to gain ground and 
at the annual examination I had the satisfaction of getting 
the highest marks in that subject.
I enjoyed my new surroundings, the more so as I had 
longed for the change. At the other school, though I had 
been there for seven years, I had not left behind any friends. 
Here it looked as if I would enter into lasting friendship 
with at least some of my classmates. My friends were not 
of the sporting type because I did not take kindly to sports 
and only the drill lessons interested mc. Apart from my own 
lukewarmness, there was another obstacle to my taking
  to sports enthusiastically. It was customary for the boys to 
return home after school—hours, have a light tiffin, and 
then go out for games. My parents did not like us to do 
that. Either they thought that sports would interfere with 
our studies or they did not regard the atmosphere of the 
playground as congenial to our mental health. Possibly the 
latter consideration weighed more with them. Be that as it 
may, the domestic situation was such that if we wanted to go 
out for games, we had to do it on the sly. Some of my broth-
ers and uncles did do so and occasionally, when they were 
caught, were given a talking-to. But, knowing my parents’ 
habits, it was generally possible to dodge them, especially as 
they were in the habit of going out for a drive and walk. If 
I had had a strong desire like the others, I could easily have 
joined them at the games. But I did not. Moreover, I was 
then of a goody-goody nature and was busy devouring ethi-
cal verses in Sanskrit. Some of these verses taught that the 
highest virtue consisted in obeying one’s father -that when 
one’s father was satisfied all the gods were satisfied2
-—that 
one’s mother was even greater than one’s father etc., etc. I 
therefore thought it better not to do what would displease 
my parents. So I would take to gardening along with those 
who did not go out for games. We had a fairly big kitchen 
and flower garden adjoining our house and in company 
with the gardener we would water and tend the plants or do 
some digging or help lay out the beds. Gardening I found 
absorbingly interesting. It served, among other things, 
to open my eyes to the beauties of nature, about which I 
shall have something to say later on. Besides gardening, we 
would also go in for physical exercise and gymnastics for 
which there were arrangements at home.
  Looking back on my past life I feel inclined to think 
that I should not have neglected sports. By doing so, I prob-
ably developed precoeity and accentuated my introvert ten-
dencies. To ripen too early is not good, either for a tree or 
for a human being andOne has to pay for it in the long run. 
There is nothing to beat nature’s law of gradual develop-
ment, and however much prodigies may interest us at first 
they generally fail to fulfil their early promise.
For two years life rolled on in much the same way. 
Among the teachers and students there were both Bengalees 
and Oriyas and the relations between them were quite 
cordial. One did not hear in those days--at least we students 
did not hear-——of any ill-feeling or misunderstanding 
between the people of the two sister provinces. So far as 
the members of our family were concerned, we could never 
think or feel in terms of narrow parochialism or provincial-
ism. For that we have to thank our parents. My father had 
extensive contacts with the people of Orissa, and intimate 
personal relations with many distinguished Oriya families. 
His outlook was consequently broad and his sympathies 
wide and they unconsciously influenced the rest of his fam-
ily. I cannot remember ever to have heard from his lips one 
single disparaging remark about the people of Orissa—or 
for the matter of that about the people of any other prov-
ince. Though he was never effusive in his emotions and was 
inclined to be reserved, he could endear himself to all those 
who came into contact with him wherever he happened to 
be at the time. Such parental influences work unobtrusively 
and only in later life can the children discover by a process 
of analysis what helped to mould their character or give 
their life a definite direction.
Of the teachers there was one who left a permanent
  impression on my youthful mind. That was our headmaster, 
Babu Beni Madhav Das. The very first day I saw him taking 
his rounds-—and I was then just over twelve-—I felt what I 
should now call an irresistible moral appeal in his person-
ality. Up till then I had never experienced what it was to 
respect a man. But for me, to see Beni Madhav Das was to 
adore him. I was not old enough then to realise what it was 
that I adored. I could only feel that here was a man who was 
not an ordinary teacher, who stood apart from, and above, 
the rest of his tribe. And I secretly said to myself that I 
wanted an ideal for my life, it should be to emulate him.
Talking of an ideal, I am reminded of an expericncc 
I had when I was at the P.E. School. I was then about ten. 
Our teacher asked us to write an essay on what we would 
like to be when we would like to be when we were grown-
up. My eldest brother was in the habit of giving us talks on 
the respective virtues of a judge, magistrate, commissioner, 
barrister, doctor, engineer, and so forth, and I had picked up 
odd things from what I had heard him say. I jumbled up as 
many of these as I still remembered and wound up by say-
ing that I would be a magistrate. The teacher remarked that 
to be a magistrate after being a commissioner would be an 
anti-climax, but I was too young to understand the status of 
the different professions and designations. After that I had 
no occasion to be worried by the thought of what I should 
aspire to be in later life. I only remember hearing in talks 
within the family circle that the highest position one could 
get to was the Indian Civil Service3
 The headmaster did not 
usually give any regular lessons till the boys reached the sec-
ond class. So I began to long for the day when I would reach 
the second class and be entitled to listen to his lectures. That
  day did arrive4
, but my good fortune did not last long. After 
a few months orders for his transfer came. However, before 
he left us he had succeeded in rousing in me a vague per-
ception of moral values—an inchoate feeling that in human 
life moral values should count more than anything else. In 
other words he had made me feel the truth of what we had 
read in our Poetry•Book-—
“The rank is but the guinea’s stamp
The man is the gold for all that.”
And it was well that he had, for about this time the 
usual mental Changes—best described in scientific termi-
nology as sex-consciousness——which are incidental to 
approaching puberty, began to overtake me.
I remember vividly the parting scene when headmas-
ter Beni Madhav took leave of his devoted and admiring 
pupils. He entered the class-room visibly moved and, in a 
voice ringing with emotion, said, “I have nothing more to 
say but invoke the blessings of God on you .... “ I could not 
listen any more. Tears rushed to my eyes and I cried out 
within myself. But a hundred eyes were on the alert and I 
managed to restrain myself. The classes were then dismissed 
and the boys began to file off. Passing near his room I sud-
denly saw him standing in the verandah watching the boys 
depart. Our eyes met. The tears which I had managed to 
restrain within the class-room now began to flow. He saw 
them and was also moved. I stood paralysed for a moment 
and he came up to say that we would meet again. This was, 
I believe, the first time in my life that I had to weep at the 
time of parting and the first time I realised that only when 
we are forced to part do we discover how much we love.5
  The next day there was a public meeting organized by 
the staff and students to accord him a farewell. I was one of 
those who had to speak. How I got through my part I do not 
know, for internally I was all in tears. I was, however, pain-
fully surprised to find that there were many among the staff 
and the students who did not realise at all what a sorrowful 
event it was. When the headmaster spoke in reply, his words 
seemed to pierce through my soul. I could hear only his 
opening words saying that he had never expected, when he 
first came to Cuttack, that there would be so much affection 
in store for him. Then I ceased to listen but continued to 
gaze at his impassioned countenance, which spoke volumes 
to me. There was an expression, a glow, therein-which I 
had seen in the portraits of Keshav Chandra Sen. And no 
wonder, since he was Keshav Chandra’s ardent disciple and 
devotee.6
It was now a different school altogether———so 
dull, uninteresting, and uninspiring——for a light that had 
hitherto shone there had vanished. But there was no help, 
the classes had to be attended, the lessons learnt, and the 
examinations taken. The wheel of life grinds on regard-
less of our joys and sorrows. It is interesting how you can 
sometimes come nearer to a person when you have parted 
from him. This happened in the present ease. I started a 
correspondence with Headmaster Beni Madhav which went 
on for some years. One thing I now learnt from him-how to 
love nature and be inspired by her, not merely aesthetically, 
but ethically as well. Following his instructions, I took to 
what, in the absence of anything better, might be described 
as a species of nature-worship. I would choose a beauty-spot 
on the river-bank or on a hill or in a lonely meadow in the,midst of an enchanting sunset-glow, and practise contem-
plation. ‘Surrender yourself completely to nature’, he would 
write, ‘and let nature speak to you through her Protean 
mask’. This sort of contemplation had given him peace of 
mind, joy, and strength of will.
How far I profited ethically from this effort I cannot 
say. But it certainly opened my eyes to the hidden and ne-
glected beauties of nature and also helped me to concentrate 
my mind. In the garden, among flowers, sprouting leaves 
and growing plants, I would find an indescribable joy and 
I would love to ramble. alone or in the company of friends, 
amid the wild beauties of nature with which the countryside 
was so plentifully supplied. I could realise the truth of what 
the poet had said——
“A primrose by the river’s brim,
A yellow primrose is to him.
And it is something more.”
wordsworth’s poems now had an added significance 
for me and I would simply revel in the descriptions of natu-
ral scenery in Kalidas’s7
 poetry and in the Mahabharata8
which, thanks to my Pundit, I could enjoy in the original 
Sanskrit.
I was at this time entering on one of the stormiest 
periods in my psyehieal life which was to last for five or 
six years. It was a period of acute mental conflict causing 
untold suffering and agony, which could not be shared by 
any friends and was not visible to any outsider. I doubt if a 
growing boy normally goes through this expericnce——at
  
 
       
    
 
 
 
 
  
 
                   
               
              
                    
       
 
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