Frances Yeats-Brown
“Ninetween years as an offiocer in India (the British Army) with unusual opportunites for the study, observation and practice of East-India lore have enabled me to contact no such man as Pierre Bernard (Shastri) who I believe to be the best qualified of all living examples in the theory and practice of the Veda or Brahmanical Yoga culture. Close personal observation and many long discussions of things Indian, in addtion to attendancee upon fifty or more of his lectures of two hours duration each, form the basis of the opinion here given.
Bernard’s true insight into the the true meaning of the ancient Sanskrit texts is that of a master; his exposition of them a delight. During my stay in India I studied phliosophy with many pandits, yogis and philosophers, but it was only when I met Dr. Bernard that I realized how much more there was for me to learn.
His work will be remembered long after the labors of mere formalist scholars, who delve in theories they do not practice; for Bernard, although a scholar with the best Sanskritists, possesses also the living tradtion as handed down for centuries in India.” — (Major) Francis Yeat-Brown
** Yeats-Brown was a member of the Clarkstown Country Club and a frequent lecturer.
Francis Yeats-Brown (1886-1944)
British soldier, author, and early popularizer of yoga in Western countries. He was born at Genoa, Italy, August 15, 1886, the son of the British consul-general in that city. He was educated at Harrow-on-the-Hill and Sandhurst, England. He was second lieutenant in the king’s Royal Rifle Corps at Bareilly, India, in 1906; posted to 17th Cavalry, Indian Army in 1907; and adjutant in 1913. He served in France with 5th Lancers and in Mesopotamia with the Royal Flying Corps (DFC). He was imprisoned in Turkey in November 1915 but escaped in 1918. He retired on pension in 1925. From 1926 to 1928 he was editor of the British journal The Spectator.
He published several books, the most famous of which was Bengal Lancer (1930), based on his nineteen years in India and his intense interest in yoga. The book became a best-seller and was translated into Italian, Spanish, German, Danish, Norwegian, Swedish, and Romanian. It attracted worldwide interest in the subject of yoga. A film version of the book under the title “Lives of a Bengal Lancer” was produced in 1935, starring Gary Cooper, Franchot Tone, and Richard Cromwell.
Yeats-Brown also published Yoga Explained (1937), a pioneering yoga text. In spite of his great interest in yoga philosophy he remained a Christian throughout his life. His other books include Caught by the Turks (1919), Golden Horn (1932), Escape: A Book of Escapes of All Kinds (1933), Dogs of War (1934), Lancer at Large (1937), European Jungle (1939), Indian Pageant (1942), and Martial India (1945).
During the 1930s, Yeats-Brown was a news correspondent in Germany and expressed admiration for Hitler, whom he compared with Gandhi and T. E. Lawrence. It seems likely that this unfortunate judgment stemmed from Yeats-Brown’s enthusiasm for German physical fitness and military precision and that he never really understood the real implications of Nazi philosophy and ambitions.
From 1943 to 1944 Yeats-Brown served in the British Army, touring the Indian and Burmese war fronts.
He died in London, December 19, 1944.
