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He lived a life of extreme self-denial. He became a symbol of plain
living. Mahatma Gandhi said: “It is difficult to believe that the
man in simple Indian dress wearing simple manners could possibly
be the great scientist and professor.” He lived in a single room
at the University College of Science. Its furniture consisted of
an iron bedstead, a small table, a smaller chair and an almirah
with shelves full of books, most of which were English classics.
Ray was a voracious reader of literature, history
and biography. He could read half-a-dozen languages. He once claimed
that he ‘became a chemist almost by mistake.’
There is no better document to know about Ray and
his thoughts and accomplishments than his autobiography entitled
Life and Experiences of a Bengali Chemist in two volumes. Besides
giving his life-sketch, it gives glimpses of the intellectual history
of Bengal in particular and India in general. “It is, in fact, a
history of intellectual renaissance in Bengal as part of the larger
enlightenment of India in the nineteenth century and in the early
decades of the twentieth century.” In the preface to his autobiography
Ray wrote: “While a student at Edinburgh I found to my regret that
every civilized country including Japan was adding to the world’s
stock of knowledge but that unhappy India was lagging behind. I
dreamt a dream that, God willing, a time would come when she too
would contribute her quota.
Half-a-century has since then rolled by. My dream
I have now the gratification of finding fairly materialized. A new
era has evidently dawned upon India. Her sons have taken kindly
to the zealous pursuit of different branches of science. May the
torch thus kindled burn with greater brilliance from generation
to generation.”
Prafulla Chandra Ray was born on August 2, 1861
in a village in the district of Jessore (subsequently of Khulna),
now in Bangladesh. About his village Ray, in his autobiography,
wrote: “My native village is Raruli, in the district of Jessore
(at present Khulna). It is situated on the banks of the river Kapotakshi,
which follows a meandering course for forty miles (only 16 miles
as the crow flies) till it reaches Sagardari, the birth place of
our great poet Madhusudan Datta. And higher up lies the village
of Polua-Magura known of late years as Amritabazaar, the birth place
of Sisir Kumar Ghosh, the veteran journalist. The village adjoining
Raruli on the north is Katipara, the residence of the Zemindars
of the Ghosh family, from which came the mother of Madhusudan. These
two villages are often hyphened together and called Raruli-Katipara.”
Ray was It says in the Upanishads that the Supreme One wanted to
be many. The urge for self-dispersal is at the root of this creation.
It was through this kind of creative urge that Prafulla Chandra
became many in the minds of his pupils by diffusing and thereby
reactivating himself in many younger minds. But this would hardly
have been possible unless he had the capacity to give himself away
fully to others. Rabindranath Tagore (Quoted in P. C. Ray by J.
Sen Gupta, National Book Trust, 1972) As pioneer of chemical education,
chemical research and chemical industries in India, and more possibly
as a self-denying and dedicated worker for the uplift and emancipation
of the country, and last but not least as a man of austere habits
and sterling character with dynamic sympathy for the poor and down-trodden,
ever alert to the call of humanity,Prafulla Chandra Ray occupied
a unique position in India in his days. P. Ray in Biographical Memoirs
of Fellows of the National Institute of Sciences of India (1966)
Acharya Ray was one of the giants of old, and more particularly,
he was a shining light in the field of science. His frail figure,
his ardent patriotism, his scholarship and his simplicity impressed
me greatly in my youth. Jawaharlal Nehru P.C. Ray “A greatly influenced
by his parents. His father Harish Chandra Ray, a scion of a local
zemindar, was a man of taste, learning and liberal views. He was
an accomplished violin player. He was proficient in Persian and
English languages and he had also workable knowledge of Sanskrit
and Arabic. Harish Chandra was closely associated with the cultural
and intellectual leaders of those days in Bengal. For his liberal
views Harish Chandra was branded a mlechcha (foreign heretic) by
his fellow villagers. Ray’s mother, Bhubanmohini Devi was also an
accomplished lady of enlightened views.
The decade of 1860-69 the nineteenth century was
very important in India’s history. Thus, Animesh Chakraborty, a
well-known inorganic chemist, wrote : “It was the best of times
– the second half of the nineteenth century. The decade of 1860-69
alone saw the birth of Rabindranath Tagore, Motilal Nehru Swami
Vivekananda, Madan Mohan Malaviya, Asutosh Mookerjee,Lala Lajpat
Rai, Srinivasa Sastri and Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi. And of Prafulla
Chandra Ray.A season of light and hope was descending on a languishing
India.”
Ray’s early education was in his village school,
founded by his father. However, he made very little progress in
this school as he used to be frequently absent from the school.
In 1870 his father permanently shifted to Kolkata (then Calcutta)
mainly for proper education of his children. Describing his first
impression of Kolkata, Ray, in his autobiography, wrote: “In August
1870, I came to Calcutta for the first time…I spent the month of
August in Calcutta, to my great joy, almost every day seeing new
sights. I caught glimpses of a new world. A panorama of gorgeous
vistas was opened to me. The new water-works had just been completed
and the town enjoyed the blessings of a liberal supply of filtered
drinking water; the orthodox Hindu still hesitated to make use of
it as being impure; but the superior quality of water carried its
own recommendation; by slow degrees, reason and convenience triumphed
over prejudice, and its use became almost universal. The construction
of underground drains had just been taken in hand.”
In 1871, Ray and his elder brother Nalinikanta,
were admitted into the Hare School, founded by David Hare, then
located in the onestory building. The school was shifted to its
present location in 1872. David Hare was also associated with the
establishment of Hindu College. David Hare himself was not educated.
He was neither a Government servant nor a Christian missionary.
However, he played a very important role in spreading western education
in Bengal. S. K. Dey in an article entitled ‘The Hindu College and
the Reforming Young Bengal’ in Acharya Ray 70th Birthday Commemoration
Volume wrote: “The facts of David Hare’s life are very few and can
be told very briefly. Son of a watchmaker in London, who had married
an Aberdeen lady, Hare came out to Calcutta in 1800 at the age of
twentyfive as a watchmaker; and, after following that profession
for several years he made over his concern (before 1816) to his
friend, one Mr. Grey, under whose roof he led his bachelor life
till his death on June 1, 1842 at the age of sixty-seven. Instead
of returning to his native country, like the rest of his countrymen,
with the competence he had acquired, he adopted for his own the
country of his sojourn, and cheerfully devoted the remainder of
his life to the one object dear to himself, namely, the spread of
Western education, for which he spared neither personal trouble,
nor money, nor influence.”
From his autobiography we know that he used to
be ridiculed by his classmates in Hare School. To quote Ray: “When
my class-mates came to know that I hailed from the district of Jessore,
I at once became their laughing-stock and the butt of ridicule.
I was nick-named Bangal and various faults of omission ascribed
to the unfortunate people of East Bengal began to be laid at my
door. A Scotch rustic or a Yorkshire lad with his peculiar brogue
and queer manners, when he suddenly found himself in the midst of
cockney youngsters, a century ago, was I suppose somewhat in a similar
predicament. At that time even the very germs of what is known as
the national awakening did not exist, and a very few people cared
to know that my native district had begotten and sheltered in its
bossom two great warriors (Raja Protapaditya and Raja Sitaram Ray),
who had raised the standard of revolt against the Great Moghul,
or his Viceroy….” In fact two other luminaries namely Madhusudan
Datta, the great poet (regarded as Milton of Bengal) and Dinabandhu
Mitra the then greatest living dramatist hailed from his district.
It is important to take note of Ray’s observation because even today
in India people of one region are ignorant of historical and cultural
background of the other regions. This kind of ignorance is a stumbling
block in the way of national integration. Ray did not stay long
in this school. A violent attack of dysentery not only forced him
to leave the school but made him to interrupt his regular study
for two years. However, he fully utilized this time by reading English
classics and the literary and historical writings in Bengali. During
this period Inner quadrangle of P.C. Ray’s ancestral house he also
learnt Latin and Greek. Ray was a voracious reader. To quote him:
“The prescribed text-books never satisfied my craving. I was a voracious
devourer of books and, when I was barely 12 years old, I sometimes
used to get up at 3 or 4 o’clock in the morning so that I might
pore over the contents of a favourite author without disturbance…History
and biography have even now a fascination for me. I read Chambers’
Biography right through several times. The lives of Newton, Galileo—although
at that time I did not understand or realize the value of their
contributions—interested me much. Sir Wm. Jones, John Leyden and
their linguistic attainments deeply impressed me as also the life
of Franklin. The answer of Jones’ mother to his interrogations “read
and you will know” also was not lost upon me. Benjamin Franklin
has been my special favourite ever since my boyhood…The career of
this great Pennsylvanian—how he began his life as an ill-paid compositor
and by sheer perseverance and indomitable energy rose to be a leading
man in his country—has ever been an object-lesson to me.”
In 1874 Ray resumed his regular study but not in
Hare School. He joined the Albert School of Keshab Chandra Sen the
founder of Brahmo Samaj. In 1879 he passed the Entrance Examination
from Albert School. He took admission in the First Arts (FA) Class
of the Metropolitan College (now named Vidyasagar College), founded
by Pandit Iswarchandra Vidyasagar. One of the reasons for taking
admission in this colleges was the low tuition fees. Because by
that time Ray’s father’s financial situation had considerably deteriorated.
In fact he had to close down his Calcutta establishment and return
to his native village and his sons started living in lodges. But
then the financial situation was not the only consideration. In
the Metropolitan College, Ray came under the influence of Surendra
Nath Banerjee, widely regarded as the father of Indian nationalism.
Surendra Nath, who used to be regarded as an ‘idol’ by the students
of Bengal, taught English literature in the Metropolitan College.
Ray, while explaining the reasons for taking admission in this college,
wrote: “I took my admission into the Metropolitan Institution of
Pandit Iswarchandra Vidyasagar, the college department of which
had recently been opened. This was the first bold experiment in
India of making high education as cheap as secondary education.
The fee in the college was same as in the school, namely three rupees.
More than one reason determined my choice of Vidyasagar’s College.
In the first place the Metropolitan Institution was a national institution
and something we could look upon as our own; in the second place
Surendranath Bannerjee, who was almost the god of our idolatry,
was Professor of English prose literature and Prasanta Kumar Lahiri,
a distinguished pupil of Tawney (of the Presidency College, a learned
Shakesperean scholar) was Professor of poetry. I took care, however,
to attend lectures on Chemistry in the First Arts Course and both
Chemistry and Physics in the Bachelor of Arts Course in the Presidency
College as an external student. Chemistry was then a compulsory
branch in the F.A. Course. Mr. (afterwards Sir Alexander) Pedler
was a first-rate hand in experiments; his manipulative skill was
of a high order. I began almost unconsciously to be attracted to
this branch of science.” Ray even tried to perform some experiments
himself. Thus he wrote in his autobiography: “Not content with merely
seeing the experiments performed in theclass-room, myself and a
fellow student set up a miniature laboratory in the lodgings of
the latter and we took delight in reproducing some of them. Once
we improved an oxyhydrogen blow-pipe out of an ordinary thin tinned
sheet of iron with the aid of a tinker. With such crude apparatus
the leakage of oxygen into the hydrogen tube could not be prevented
and a terrible explosion took place when the mixture was lighted.
Fortunately, we escaped unhurt. Although Roscoe’s Elementary Lessons
was the text, I took care to have about me and go through as many
works on Chemistry as I lay my hands on.”
Ray’s father Harish Chandra used to harbour an
ambition to send at least one of his sons to England for higher
education. As his economic situation deteriorated he had no scope
to realize his dreams. However, Prafulla Chandra knew about his
father’s dreams and decided to prepare for the Gilchrist Scholarship
— a scholarship awarded by the Edinburgh University, which was open
to students all over the world. While the examination for the scholarship
was equivalent to the Matriculation standard of the London University,
it required knowledge of at least four languages. It is said that
though being ridiculed by his classmates, Ray continued with the
preparation for the examination. Ray came out successfully in the
competition. He was one of the two winners of the Scholarship from
India. The other candidate was one Bahadurjee from Mumbai. They
were the first Gilchrist Scholars from India. Ray’s parents were
too glad to give their consent for his going to England. And so
armed with the Scholarship Ray sailed for England by S.S. California
in the middle of 1882. Ray was received in England by Jagadis Chandra
Bose, who had already been a student of the Cambridge University
for about couple of years. Cambridge was expensive and it was meant
for the elite. Both Bose and Ray became great friends for the rest
of their lives. In England he joined the University of Edinburgh
as a student in the BSc class. He was taught by Alexander Crum Brown
(1838-1922).
While a student in BSc Ray decided to take part
in the essay competition announced by the Lord Rector of the Edinburgh
University. The title of the essay to be written was “India before
and after the Mutiny”. The essay was very critical of the British
Rule in India. In those days it required a lot of conviction and
courage to write such an essay. It demonstrated Ray’s patriotic
vigour. Ray did not get the prize. In his autobiography he wrote:
“The prize was awarded to a rival competitor, but my essay as well
another’s was bracketed together as proxime accesserunt (nearest
approach to the best).”
In his essay Ray wrote: “…The English people has
yet to be roused to an adequate sense of importance of events which
are now taking place in India. Thoughts and ideas which pervade
the upper strata of society, are now percolating through the lower;
even the masses are now beginning to be moved and influenced. The
latter element, it would no longer do to treat as une quantite negligeable.
England unfortunately now refuses to recognize the hard and irrestible
logic of facts and does her best to strangle and smother the nascent
aspiration of a rising nationality… Between the ideal and actual,
he (i.e. an Indian) sees a gulf intervening; he finds it difficult
to reconcile the practice of British statesmen with their profession…Compromises,
half-measures and halting policies have been tried elsewhere with
signal failure. Fifty years of concession to Ireland have only served
to embitter her feelings against Great Britain. Will the lesson
which the sister island has taught us be lost upon India?”
Ray distributed copies of his printed essay among
the University students and the general public. The October 28,
1886 issue of The Scotsman remarked: “It is most interesting little
volume and we do not profess to wonder in the least that it has
earned a considerable amount of popularity. It contains information
in reference to India which will not be found elsewhere, and it
is deserving of the utmost notice.” Ray also sent a copy of his
Essay to John Bright, the great parliamentarian. Bright not only
acknowledged the receipt but also stated that he agreed with the
views expressed by Ray in his essay. A summary of Bright’s letter
flashed by Reuter is quoted below: “I regret with you and condemn
the course of Lord Dufferin in Burma. It is a renewal of the old
system of crime and guilt, which we had hoped, had been for ever
abandoned. There is an ignorance on the part of public in this country
and great selfishness here and in India as to our true interests
in India. The departures from morality and true statesmanship will
bring about calamity and perhaps ruin, which our children may witness
and deplore.” It was published in all the leading newspapers of
England under the head-line “John Bright’s letter to an Indian Student”.
The letter was hotly debated in the political circle of England.
In 1886 Ray published his “Essay on India” in the form of a booklet.
In 1885 Ray obtained his BSc degree and in 1887
he was awarded the DSc degree of the University of Edinburgh in
recognition of his work on “Conjugated (gepaarte) Sulphates of the
Copper-magnesium Group: A Study of Isomorphous Mixtures and Molecular
Combinations.” He was awarded the Hope Prize Scholarship which enabled
him to stay one more year in England. He was also elected Vice President
of the Chemical Society of the Edinburgh University.
After spending about 6 years Ray returned to India
in 1888. His aim was to pursue his researches in chemistry and share
his knowledge with others, to be in a chemistry class or a laboratory.
But in those days Indian science was at its infancy. In chemistry
there was not much career prospects. Moreover it was extremely difficult
for an Indian to secure a berth in the Educational Service. The
situation was aptly described by Ray himself. Ray in his autobiography
wrote: “Chemistry was obtaining slow recognition as an important
branch of study in our colleges; but the Presidency College was
the only institution where systematic courses of lectures illustrated
with experiments were given. Private colleges were few in number
and their resources being limited could not afford to open Science
Departments. Students from these colleges were, however, allowed
to attend the lectures at the Presidency College on payment of nominal
fees. The Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science, founded
by Dr. Mahendralal Sircar in 1876, also made arrangements for courses
of lecture in Chemistry and Physics and as these were open to public,
Dr. Sircar, I believe, made a representation to the Government requesting
it to discontinue allowing students from private colleges to attend
lectures at the Presidency College as otherwise the Science Association
lecture benches could be more or less empty. This is no reflection
on the Science Association but rather on the mentality of the average
Indian youth; unless a subject is prescribed for examination no
one would care to have anything to do with it. The Government also
would have compelled to adopt this course on its own initiative
as admissions where getting larger year to year and B. Course (science)
growing to be popular. In the eighties of the last century chemistry
had made gigantic strides and it was realized that the mere delivery
of elementary courses of lecture would not be adequate to cope with
the requirements and that special arrangements must be made for
practical and laboratory teaching. Peddler had on these grounds
written to the Director of Public Instruction to move the Bengal
Government for the sanction of an additional Professor. It was at
this psychological moment that I returned from Edinburgh as an applicant
for a post.”
Whatever opportunities were available in the educational
institutions were mostly for Britishers. The existing situation
was described by Ray in the following words: “Indians of approved
merit and sometimes aristocratic `noodles’, were drafted into the
Civil Service who would draw two-thirds the pay of the grade. The
competitive examination in England was to be thrown open only to
Britons (including of course the Irish). These regulations also
permeated the Educational Service. Jagadis Chandra Bose, who had
returned home three years before me, after a brilliant career at
Cambridge and London, and who had to encounter untold hardships
in entering the Higher Service in the land of his birth, was only
allowed to cross its threshold on condition that he should waive
his claim to the full pay of the grade and draw on the two-thirds
scale. It was only in rare cases that the children of the soil were
admitted to the Higher services, which made darkness more visible.
As a rule Indians of even approved merit could only enter the subordinate
branch of the service. Agitation in India as also in the British
Parliament by friends of India against the virtual exclusion of
Indians could no longer be ignored. The government of Lord Dufferin
under instructions from the Secretary of State appointed the “Public
Service Commission” with a view to devise means for finding extended
employments for Indians. The recommendations of the Commission were
of the nature of a compromise; whatever might be done to satisfy
he aspirations of the Indians, every care must be taken to safeguard
the interests and privileges of the dominant race. Two distinct
services were created—one the Imperial and the other the Provincial.
The former was meant to be reserved for Britishers and the latter
for the Indians; in the former again the average emoluments worked
out to nearly double that of the latter.”
Under the circumstances described above Ray could
not think of a bright prospect. From England he had brought a letter
of recommendation from his teacher Crum Brown. He had also obtained
assurance of assistance from Sir Charles Bernard, Member, Indian
Council, in securing a position. Sir Bernard also introduced Ray
to B. H. Tawney, the Principal of Presidency College, the premier
college of Kolkata, who was on leave in London. Tawney, who happened
to be a relation of Sir Bernard, wrote to Sir Alfred Croft, the
Director of Public Instruction, recommending the case of Ray. Tawney
wrote: “I am sure Dr. Ray would prove a valuable acquisition to
the Department if he could be taken in.” After coming to Kolkata
Ray met Alfred Croft, Tawney and Sir Alexander Pedler, the then
Professor of Chemistry in the Presidency College. He also tried
to get an audience with the then Governor of Bengal, Sir Stewart
Bayley. Finally he was given a temporary appointment as Assistant
Professor of Chemistry at the Presidency College on a monthly salary
of Rs.250/- under the Provincial Educational Service. Unlike his
friend Jagadis Chandra Bose, Ray accepted the appointment and took
up his duties at the Presidency College in July 1889.
So for about a year that is from August 1888 to
June 1889 Ray was without any occupation. To know how he spent the
time we quote Ray: “During this period I was mostly under the hospitable
roof of Dr. and Mrs. Jagadis Chandra Bose and I spent the time in
reading chemical literature and in botanising. I collected and identified
several specimens of plants round about Calcutta with the aid of
Roxburgh’s Flora Indica and Hokker’s Genera Plantarum.” Ray retired
from the Presidency College in 1916 as Professor and Head of the
Department of Chemistry.
After retiring from the Presidency College Ray
joined the University College of Science. As early as in 1912 Asutosh
Mookerjee had invited Ray to join the University College of Science
as the first University Professor. In his invitation letter, Mookerjee
wrote: “It may be in your recollection that on the 24th February
last, when the question of the establishment of University Professorships
was before the Senate you expressed your regret that no provision
was made for a Chair of Science. I assured you, on the spur of the
moment, that a Chair of Science might come sooner than you expected.
You will be pleased to hear that my prophecy has been literary fulfilled
and that what was your ambition and my ambition has been realized.
We have founded two Professorships, one of Chemistry, the other
of Physics. We have also decided to establish—at once a University
Research Laboratory. All this we are able to do by reason of the
munificence of Mr. Palit, supplemented by a grant of two and a half
lacs from our Reserve Fund. The whole position is explained in the
statement I made before the Senate last Saturday; a copy is enclosed
herewith. I have now great pleasure in inviting you to be the first
University Professor of Chemistry, and I feel confident that you
will accept my offer. I need hardly add that I shall arrange matters
in such a way that you be not a loser from a pecuniary point of
view. As soon as you return, we shall, with your assistance, prepare
plans for the proposed laboratory and begin to build as early and
as quickly as practicable. It would be an advantage, if before your
return, you could make time to see some of the best laboratories
in Great Britain or on the Continent.” Ray received the letter in
England, where he had gone as delegate of the Calcutta University
to the Congress of the Universities of the British Empire and also
to the 250th anniversary of the Royal Society. In response to Asutosh
Mookerjee’s letter Ray wrote to the following effect: “I look upon
the proposed College of Science as the realization of the dream
of my life and it will not only be my duty but a source of gratification
to me to join it and place my humble service at its disposal.”
In 1936 Ray retired from his service in the University
College of Science but he continued as Emeritus Professor of Chemistry
till his death.
Ray was a staunch patriot. In many ways he was
connected with the movement for India’s independence. Being a Government
servant he could not directly participate in politics. He subscribed
whole-heartedly to the policy of constructive work formulated by
the Indian National Congress during the Non-cooperation Movement.
He was in regular contact with the top leaders of the Indian National
Congress, which was spearheading the freedom struggle. It was Ray
who took initiative to bring Mahatma Gandhi for the first time to
Kolkata. Here we quote Ray on his association with Gopal Krishna
Gokhale and Mahatma Gandhi. Ray wrote: “Sometimes in 1901 Gopal
Kirshna Gokhale came to Calcutta to attend the session of the viceregal
council. One fine morning Dr. Nilratan Sarkar called on me and asked
me to be at once ready to accompany him to the Howrah station to
receive the eminent statesman. Gokhale used now and then to see
me in my little retreat at premises No. 91Upper Circular Road in
which was also located the office and factory of the Bengal Chemical
and Pharmaceutical Works then in its infancy. He took particular
delight in calling me a “scientific recluse.”…Gokhale was several
years junior to me in age and I naturally in accordance with oriental
ideas used to take liberties with him.” Ray’s patriotism reflected
in his saying: “Science can wait but Swaraj cannot.”
On his association with Mahatma Gandhi Ray wrote:
“I was thus in a manner responsible for Mr. Gandhi’s first appearance
on a Calcutta platform…The frequent conversations which I used to
have with Mr. Gandhi made a deep and lasting impression on me. He
was earning as a barrister several thousand rupees a month but he
was utterly regardless of worldliness — ’I always make it a point
to travel third class in my railway journeys, so that I might be
in close personal touch with the masses—my own countrymen—and get
to know their sorrows and sufferings.’ ”Even after the lapse of
thirty years, these words still ring in my years. Truth lived is
a far greater force than truth merely spoken” Ray published about
120 research papers mostly in research journals of international
repute. Ray conducted systematic chemical analysis of a number of
rare Indian minerals with the object of discovering in them some
of the missing elements in Mendeleev’s Periodic Table. In this process
he isolated mercurous nitrite in 1896, which brought him international
recognition, as it was a compound, which as not known then. Describing
this event Ray wrote in his autobiography : “the discovery of mercurous
nitrite opened a new chapter in my life.” The discovery of mercurous
nitrite was an accidental one. Ray wanted to prepare water soluble
mercurous nitrate as an intermediate for the synthesis of calomel,
Hg2C l2. Ray first published his findings in the Journal of Asiatic
Society of Bengal and which immediately noticed by Nature, the famous
international science journal. This discovery of mercurous nitrite
led to many significant publications. Another notable contribution
made by Ray was the synthesis of ammonium nitrite in pure form.
Before Ray’s synthesis it used to be believed that ammonium nitrite
(NH4NO2) undergoes fast thermal decomposition yielding nitrogen
(N2) and water (H2O). Ray presented his findings in a meeting of
the Chemical Society of London. William Ramsay was greatly impressed
by Ray’s findings. Commenting on Ray’s scientific achievements Professor
W. E. Armstrong wrote: “In type of Sir Prafulla Ray is perhaps more
like a Frenchman than an Englishman in his receptive habit of mind
: the nearest comparison I can make is to contrast him with Berthelot,
not only a many-sided chemist but also an agronomist, man of letters
and politician. Let me say frankly, Ray is not great as a chemical
specialist nor was Berthelot: he has been occupied in too many directions,
too much kept aloof from the field of chemical discovery and its
masters, to have lost himself in the contemplation of the maze of
chemical experience to the extent necessary to be entirely overcome
by the magic and immunity of its problems. None the less, he is
the founder of the Indian chemical school.” Similar sentiments,
were voiced by Priyadaranjan Ray: “one must not, however, lose sight
of the important fact that Ray’s real contribution to the development
of chemical research in India rests not so much on his own personal
research publication as on his inspiring and initiating a generation
of young workers, who, dedicating themselves to a scientific career
succeeded in building up what is now known as the Indian School
of Chemistry.”
The first volume of Ray’s celebrated work, The
History of Hindu Chemistry, was published in 1902. The second volume
was published in 1908. It was Marcellin Pierre Eugene Berthelot
(1827-1907), who inspired Ray to undertake this monumental work.
In the preface to the first edition Ray wrote:” …I was brought into
communication with M. Berthelot some five years ago – a circumstance
which has proved to be a turning point, if I may so say, in my career
as a student of the history of chemistry. The illustrious French
savant, the Doyen of the chemical world, who has done more than
any other persons to clear up the sources and trace the progress
of chemical science in the West, expressed a strong desire to know
all about the contribution of the Hindus, even went the length of
making a personal appeal to me to help him with information on the
subject. In response to his sacred call I submitted to him, in 1898,
a short monograph on Indian alchemy; it was based chiefly on Rasendra
Samgraha, a work which I have since then found to be a minor importance
and not calculated to throw much light on the vexed question as
to the origin of the Hindu Chemistry. M. Berthelot not only did
me the honour of reviewing it at length but very kindly presented
me with a complete set of his monumental work, in three volumes,
on the chemistry of the Middle Ages, dealing chiefly with the Arabian
and Syrian contributions on the subject, the very existence of which
I was not till then aware of. On perusing the contents of these
works I was filled with the ambition of supplementing them with
one on Hindu chemistry.” Ray’s Hindu Chemistry was immediately recognized
as a unique contribution in annals of history of science. Berthelot
himself wrote a 15-page review in Journal des Savant in its issue
of January 1903. Renowned international journals like Nature and
Knowledge wrote very highly of the book. In 1912 the Vice Chancellor
of Durham University, while conferring the Honorary DSc degree on
Prafulla Chandra Ray, noted: “…his fame chiefly rests on his monumental
History of Hindu Chemistry, a work of which both the scientific
and linguistic attainments are equally remarkable, and of which,
if on any book, we may pronounce that it is definitive.”
Ray started his Bengal Chemical and Pharmaceutical
Works Ltd. (or Bengal Chemical as it is popularly known) in 1892
with a view, that it would create jobs for the unemployed youth.
To establish it, he had to work under the most adverse circumstances.
But he worked hard. To quote him: “Every afternoon on returning
from the college (4:30 pm) I used to go through the previous day’s
orders and to see that they were executed promptly. The migration
from my college laboratory to the pharmacy laboratory was to me
a recreation and a change of occupation. I would at once throw myself
into my new `job’ and work at a stretch from 4:30 pm to 7 pm and
clear the file. When work is coupled with a keen sense of enjoyment
it does not tell upon your health; the very idea of locally manufacturing
pharmaceutical preparation, which hitherto had to be imported, acted
like a tonic.”
Sir John Cumming in Review of the Industrial Position
and Prospects in Bengal in 1908 observed: “The Bengal Chemical &
Pharmaceutical Works Ltd., is one of the most go-ahead young enterprises
in Bengal. Dr. Prafulla Chandra Ray, D.Sc., FCS., started it as
a small private concern in Upper Circular Road about 15 years ago
and made drugs from indigenous materials. About six years ago it
was made into a limited liability company, with a capital of two
lakhs. Many of the leading chemists are share-holders. It has now
a well-thought out and well-managed factory with about 70 workmen,
at 90 Maniktala Main Road. Babu Rajshekhar Bose, the Manager, is
an M.A. in Chemistry. The variety of manufacturers of laboratory
apparatus, which requires skilled craftsmen in wood and metal, has
been taken up. The latest development is in perfumes. The enterprise
shows signs of resourcefulness and business capacity, which should
be an object lesson to capitalists of this province.”
Ray had great fascination for rural life and he
had a deep concern for the people living in rural areas. He used
to frequently visit the houses of poor peasants and took interest
in their agricultural pursuits. He wrote: “Although I instinctively
avoided the society of those who used to frequent my father’s drawing
room, I threw off reserve when in the company of unsophisticated
rural folk. I often would visit them in their thatched homes. In
those days there were scarcely any grocer’s shops in the village,
Sago, arrow-root, and sugar candy which have so largely entered
into the dietary of the sick could not be had for love or money
and I always took particular pleasure in distributing these and
laying my mother’s stores under heavy contribution, but she gladly
used to second me in my ministration.” Ray is remembered for his
part in the Bengal famine of 1922. A correspondent for Mancnester
Guardian wrote: “In these circumstances, a professor of chemistry,
Sir P. C. Ray, stepped forward and called upon his countrymen to
make good the Government’s omission. His call was answered with
enthusiasm. The public of Bengal, in one month gave three lakhs
of rupees, rich women giving their silk and ornaments and the poor
giving their garments. Hundreds of young men volunteered to go down
and carry out the distribution of relief to the villages, a task
which involved a considerable amount of hard work and bodily discomfort
in a malarious country. The enthusiasms of the response to Shri
P. C. Ray’s appeal was due partly to the Bengal’s natural desire
to scare off the foreign Government, partly to genuine sympathy
for the sufferers, but very largely to Sir P. C. Ray’s remarkable
personality and position. He is a real organiser and a real teacher.
I heard a European saying: `If Mr. Gandhi had been able to create
two more Sir P. C. Ray, he would have succeeded in getting Swaraj
within this year.”
Ray wrote extensively on a variety of subjects
both in English and Bengali. He wrote a book on Zoology titled Simple
Zoology in 1893. For writing this book he not only studied many
authoritative books on zoology but also visited museums and zoos.
It has been reported that he even went to the extent of dissecting
a few carcasses with the help of Nilratan Sarkar, the famous physician.
Ray wrote a series of scholarly articles on Shakespeare in Calcutta
Review during 1939-41. Ray frequently contributed article in many
Bengali periodicals like Basumati, Bharatbarsha, Bangabani, Banglarbani,
Prabashi, Anandabazar Patrika, Manashi etc.
Ray gave away most of his earnings in charity.
According to one estimate Ray spent nine-tenths of his income on
charity. In 1922 he made an endowment of Rs.10,000 for an annual
prize in chemistry, named after the great Indian alchemist Nagarjuna.
He also made an endowment of Rs.10,000 in 1936 for a research prize
in zoology and botany named after Asutosh Mookerjee. He supported
many poor students. At the time of his retirement Ray donated Rs.180,000
to the Calcutta University for the extension and development of
the Chemistry Department. He did not accept any salary from Bengal
Chemicals, which he donated for the welfare of the workers. Ray
died on June 16, 1942 in his living room in the University College
of Science of the Calcutta University surrounded by his students
(whom he loved most), friends and admirers. Ray’s philosophy of
life was beautifully summed up by Professor F. G. Donnan of the
University College of Science, London on the occasion of Ray’s 70th
birthday. Donnan wrote: “Sir P. C. Ray, however, has been throughout
his life no narrow laboratory specialist…His ideals have always
been hard work and practical good in service of his country. Though
devoted to the cause of pure science, he has never been unpractical
dreamer in the clouds. But he has never asked much for himself,
living always a life of Spartan simplicity and frugality—Saint Francis
of Indian Science. I hope that future ages will cherish his name
as one band of self-denying and devoted men who received and handed
on the flame that once burnt so brightly in India, the search for
truth and hidden mysteries of things.”
| We would
like to end this article by quoting Ray : “I have no sense
of success on any large scale in things achieved…but have
the sense of having worked and having found happiness in doing
so.” |
For Further Reading
- Life and Experiences of a Bengali Chemist (Vol. 1 & 2)
by P. C. Ray, The Asiatic Society, Kolkata, 1996 (first published
in 1932)
- Prafulla Chandra Ray by P. Ray in Biographical Memoirs of Fellows
of the National Institute of Sciences of India (Vol.1), New Delhi,
1966.
- P. C. Ray by J Sen Gupta, National Book Trust, India, New Delhi,
1972.
- A History of Hindu Chemistry (Vol. 1 & 2) by P. C. Ray,
Kolkata (The first volume was published in 1902 and the second
volume in 1909. A new revised edition was published by Priyadaranjan
Ray in 1956)
- Acharya Ray 70th Birthday Commemoration Volume, Calcutta Orient
Press, Kolkata, 1932.
- Acharya Prafulla Chnadra Ray : Birth Centenary Souvenir volume,
Calcutta University, 1962.
- Acharya Prafulla Chandra at the College of Science, by Gurunath
Mukherjee, Resonance, January 2001.
- Chemical Research of Sir Prafulla Chandra Ray by Sreebrata
Goswami and Samaresh Bhattacharya, Resonance, January 2001.
- Prafulla Chandra Ray by Animesh Chakravorty, Resonance, January
2001.
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