Chapter
10
THE MASTER WITH THE
BRAHMO DEVOTEES (II)
April 22, 1883
Master's visit to Brahmo festival
SRI RAMAKRISHNA paid a visit to Benimadhav Pal's
garden house at Sinthi, near Calcutta, on the occasion of the semi-annual
festival of the Brahmo Samaj. Many devotees of the Samaj were present and
sat around the Master. Now and then some of them asked him questions.
Love and prayer
A BRAHMO DEVOTEE: "Sir, what is the way?"
MASTER: "Attachment to God, or, in
other words, love for Him. And secondly, prayer."
BRAHMO DEVOTEE:
"Which one is the way-love or prayer?"
MASTER: "First
love, and then prayer."
The
Master sang:
Cry to your Mother Syama with a real cry, O mind!
And how can She hold Herself from you?
How can Syama stay away? . . .
And how can She hold Herself from you?
How can Syama stay away? . . .
Continuing, the Master said:
"And one must always chant the name and glories of God and pray to
Him. An old metal pot must be scrubbed every day. What is the use
of cleaning it only once? Further, one must practise discrimination and
renunciation; one must be conscious of the unreality of the world."
BRAHMO: "Is it good to renounce the world?"
MASTER: "Not
for all. Those who have not yet come to the end of their enjoyments
should not renounce the world. Can one get drunk on two ānnās'
worth of wine?"
How to lead a householder's life
BRAHMO:
"Then should they lead a worldly life?"
MASTER: "Yes, they should try to
perform their duties in a detached way. Before you break the jack-fruit
open, rub your hands with oil, so that the sticky milk will not smear
them. The maidservant in a rich man's house performs all her duties, but
her mind dwells on her home in the country. This is an example of doing
duty in a detached way. You should renounce the world only in mind.
But a sannyasi should renounce the world both inwardly and outwardly."
BRAHMO: "What is the meaning of the 'end of enjoyments'?"
MASTER: "I mean the enjoyment of
'woman and gold'. It is risky to put a typhoid patient in a room where
pitchers of water and jugs of pickled tamarind are kept. Most people
don't feel any longing for God unless they have once passed through the
experience of wealth, name, fame, creature comforts, and the like, that is to
say, unless they have seen through these enjoyments."
BRAHMO: "Who is really bad, man or woman?"
MASTER: "As there are women endowed
with vidyaŚakti, so also there are women with avidyaŚakti. A woman
endowed with spiritual attributes leads a man to God, but a woman who is the
embodiment of delusion makes him forget God and drowns him in the ocean of
worldliness.
"This universe is created by the Mahamaya of God.
Mahamaya contains both Vidyā-māyā, the illusion of knowledge, and Avidyā-māyā,
the illusion of ignorance. Through the help of Vidyā-māyā one cultivates
such virtues as the taste for holy company, knowledge, devotion, love, and
renunciation. Avidyā-māyā consists of the five elements and the objects
of the five senses-form, flavour, smell, touch, and sound. These make one
forget God."
Why there is evil in the world
BRAHMO:
"If the power of avidyā is the cause of ignorance, then why has God
created it?"
MASTER: "That is His play. The
glory of light cannot be appreciated without darkness. Happiness cannot
be understood without misery. Knowledge of good is possible because of
knowledge of evil.
"Further, the mango grows and ripens on account of the
covering skin. You throwaway the skin when the mango is fully ripe and
ready to be eaten. It is possible for a man to attain gradually to the
Knowledge of Brahman because of the covering skin of maya. Maya in its
aspects of vidyā and avidyā may be likened to the skin of the mango. Both
are necessary."
BRAHMO: "Sir, is it good to worship God with form, an image of
the Deity made of clay?"
MASTER: "You do not accept God with form.
That is all right. The image is not meant for you. For you it is
good to deepen your feeling toward your own Ideal. From the worshippers
of the Personal God you should learn their yearning-for instance, Sri Krishna's
attraction for Radha. You should learn from the worshippers of the
Personal God their love for their Chosen Ideal. When the believers in the
Personal God worship the images of Kāli and Durga, with what feeling they cry
from the depths of their souls, 'Mother! O Mother!' How much they love the
Deity! You should accept that feeling. You don't have to accept the
image."
BRAHMO: "How does one cultivate the spirit of dispassion? Why don't all attain it?"
MASTER: "Dispassion is not possible unless there is satiety through enjoyment. You can easily cajole a small child with candies or toys. But after eating the candies and finishing its play, it cries, 'I want to go to my mother.' Unless you take the child to its mother, it will throw away the toy and scream at the top of its voice."
The members of the Brahmo Samaj are opposed to the traditional guru system of orthodox Hinduism. Therefore the Brahmo devotee asked the Master about it.
The need of a guru
BRAHMO:
"Is spiritual knowledge impossible without a guru?"
MASTER: "Satchidananda alone is the
Guru. If a man in the form of a guru awakens spiritual consciousness in
you, then know for certain that it is God the Absolute who has assumed that
human form for your sake. The guru is like a companion who leads you by
the hand. After the realization of God, one loses the distinction between
the guru and the disciple. 'That creates a very difficult situation;
there the guru and the disciple do not see each other.' It was for this reason
that Janaka said to Sukadeva, 'Give me first my teacher's fee if you want me to
initiate you into the Knowledge of Brahman.' For the distinction between the
teacher and the disciple ceases to exist after the disciple attains to
Brahman. The relationship between them remains as long as the disciple
does not see God."
It was dusk. Some of the Brahmo devotees said to the
Master, "Perhaps it is time for your evening devotions."
MASTER: "No, it isn't exactly
that. One should pass through these disciplines in the beginning.
Later one doesn't need the rituals of formal worship or to follow the
injunctions."
After dusk the preacher of the Brahmo Samaj conducted the
service from the pulpit. The service was interspersed with recitations
from the Upanishads and the singing of Brahmo songs.
After the service the Master and the preacher conversed.
Personal God and formless Deity
MASTER: "Well, it seems to me that
both the formless Deity and God with form are real. What do you
say?"
PREACHER:
"Sir, I compare the formless God to the electric current, which is not
seen with the eyes but can be felt."
MASTER: "Yes, both are true. God
with form is as real as God without form. Do you know what describing God
as being formless only is like? It is like a man's playing only a monotone on
his flute, though it has seven holes. But on the same instrument another
man plays different melodies. Likewise, in how many ways the believers in
a Personal God enjoy Him! They enjoy Him through many different attitudes: the
serene attitude, the attitude of a servant, a friend, a mother, a husband, or a
lover.
"You see, the thing is somehow or other to get into the
Lake of the Nectar of Immortality. Suppose one person gets into It by
propitiating the Deity with hymns and worship, and you are pushed into
It. The result will be the same. Both of you will certainly become
immortal.
"I give the Brahmos the illustration of water and
ice. Satchidananda is like an endless expanse of water. The water
of the great ocean in cold regions freezes into blocks of ice. Similarly,
through the cooling influence of divine love, Satchidananda assumes forms for
the sake of the bhaktas. The rishis had the vision of the supersensuous
Spirit-form and talked with It. But devotees acquire a 'love body', and
with its help they see the Spirit-form of the Absolute.
"It is also said in the Vedas that Brahman is beyond
mind and words. The heat of the sun of Knowledge melts the ice-like form
of the Personal God. On attaining the Knowledge of Brahman and communing
with It in nirvikalpa samādhi, one realizes Brahman, the Infinite, without form
or shape and beyond mind and words.
God's true nature cannot be described
"The
nature of Brahman cannot be described. About It one remains silent.
Who can explain the Infinite in words? However high a bird may soar, there are
regions higher still. What do you say?"
PREACHER: "Yes, sir, it is so stated in the Vedanta philosophy."
MASTER: "Once a salt doll went to the
ocean to measure its depth. But it could not come back to give a
report. According to one school of thought, sages like Sukadeva saw and
touched the Ocean of Brahman, but did not plunge into It.
"Once I said to Vidyasagar, 'Everything else but
Brahman has been polluted, as it were, like food touched by the tongue.' In
other words, no one has been able to describe what Brahman is. A thing
once uttered by the tongue becomes polluted. Vidyasagar, great pundit
though he was, was highly pleased with my remarks.
"It is said that there are places near Kedār that are
covered with eternal snow; he who climbs too high cannot come back. Those
who have tried to find out what there is in the higher regions, or what one
feels there, have not come back to tell us about it.
"After having the vision of God man is overpowered with bliss. He becomes silent. Who will speak? Who will explain?
"The king lives beyond seven gates. At each gate sits a man endowed with great power and glory. At each gate the visitor asks, 'Is this the king?' The gate-keeper answers, 'No. Not this, not this.' The visitor passes through the seventh gate and. becomes overpowered with joy. He is speechless. This time he doesn't have to ask, 'Is this the king?' The mere sight of him removes all doubts."
PREACHER: "Yes, sir, it is so described in Vedanta."
MASTER: "When the Godhead is thought
of as creating, preserving, and destroying, It is known as the Personal God,
Saguna Brahman, or the Primal Energy, Ādyāśakti. Again, when It is
thought of as beyond the three gunas, then It is called the Attributeless
Reality, Nirguna Brahman, beyond speech and thought; this is the Supreme
Brahman, Parabrahman.
The three gunas
"Under
the spell of God's maya man forgets his true nature. He forgets that he
is heir to the infinite glories of his Father. This divine maya is made
up of three gunas. And all three are robbers; for they rob man of all his
treasures and make him forget his true nature. The three gunas are
sattva, rajas, and tamas. Of these, sattva alone points the way to
God. But even sattva cannot take a man to God.
Parable of the three robbers
"Let
me tell you a story. Once a rich man was passing through a forest, when
three robbers surrounded him and robbed him of all his wealth. After
snatching all his possessions from him, one of the robbers said: 'What's the
good of keeping the man alive? Kill him.' Saying this, he was about to strike
their victim with his sword, when the second robber interrupted and said:
'There's no use in killing him. Let us bind him fast and leave him here.
Then he won't be able to tell the police.' Accordingly the robbers tied him
with a rope, left him, and went away.
"After a while the third robber returned to the rich
man and said: 'Ah! You're badly hurt, aren't you? Come, I'm going to release
you.' The third robber set the man free and led him out of the forest.
When .they came near the highway, the robber said, 'Follow this road and you
will reach home easily.' 'But you must come with me too', said the man.
'You have done so much for me. We shall all be happy to see you at our
home.' 'No,' said the robber, 'it is not possible for me to go there. The
police will arrest me.' So saying, he left the rich man after pointing out his
way.
"Now, the first robber, who said: 'What's the good of
keeping the man alive? Kill him', is tamas. It destroys. The second
robber is rajas, which binds a man to the world and entangles him in a variety
of activities. Rajas makes him forget God. Sattva alone shows the
way to God. It produces virtues like compassion, righteousness, and
devotion. Again, sattva is like the last step of the stairs. Next
to it is the roof. The Supreme Brahman is man's own abode. One
cannot attain the Knowledge of Brahman unless one transcends the three
gunas."
PREACHER: "You have given us a fine talk, sir."
MASTER (with a smile): "Do you know
the nature of devotees? When one devotee meets another, he says, 'Let me speak
and you listen; and when you speak I shall listen.' You are a preacher and
teach so many people! You are a steamship, and I am a mere fishing-boat.' (All
laugh.)
Wednesday, May 2, 1883
About
five o'clock in the afternoon SRI RAMAKRISHNA arrived at the temple of the
Brahmo Samaj in Nandanbagan, accompanied by M., Rakhal, and a few other
devotees. At first the Master sat in the drawing-room on the ground
floor, where the Brahmo devotees gradually assembled. Rabindranath Tagore
and a few other members of the Tagore family were present on this occasion.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA was asked to go to the worship hall
on the second floor. A dais had been built on the eastern side of the
room. There were a few chairs and a piano in the hall. The Brahmo
worship was to begin at dusk.
Why temples are holy
As
soon as the Master entered the worship hall he bowed low before the dais.
Having taken his seat, he said to M. and the other devotees, "Narendra
once asked me, 'What good is there in bowing before the Brahmo Samaj temple?'
The sight of the temple recalls to my mind God alone; then God-Consciousness is
kindled in my mind. God is present where people talk about Him. One
feels there the presence of all the holy places. Places of worship recall
God alone to my mind.
"Once a devotee was overwhelmed with ecstasy at the
sight of a babla-tree. The idea flashed in his mind that the handle of
the axe used in the garden of the temple of Radhakanta was made from the wood
of the babla. Another devotee had such devotion for his guru that he
would be overwhelmed with divine feeling at the sight of his guru's
neighbours. Krishna-consciousness would be kindled in Radha's mind at the
sight of a cloud, a blue dress, or a painting of Krishna. She would
become restless and cry like a mad person, 'Krishna, where art Thou?' "
GHOSAL: "But madness is not desirable."
MASTER: "What do you mean? Was Radha's
madness the madness that comes from brooding over worldly objects and makes one
unconscious? One attains that madness by meditating on God. Haven't you
heard of love-madness and knowledge-madness?"
A BRAHMO DEVOTEE: "How can one realize God?"
A BRAHMO DEVOTEE: "How can one realize God?"
MASTER: "By directing your love to Him
and constantly reasoning that God alone is real and the world illusory.
The Aśwattha tree alone is permanent; its fruit is transitory."
How to spiritualize the passions
BRAHMO:
"We have passions like anger and lust. What shall we do with
these?"
MASTER: "Direct the six passions to God. The impulse of lust should be turned into the desire to have intercourse with Ātman. Feel angry at those who stand in your way to God. Feel greedy for Him. If you must have the feeling of I and Mine, then associate it with God. Say, for instance, 'My Rama, my Krishna.' If you must have pride, then feel like Bibhishana, who said, 'I have touched the feet of Rama with my head; I will not bow this head before anyone else.'"
Responsibility for sins
BRAHMO:
"If it is God that makes me do everything, then I am not responsible for
my sins."
MASTER (with a smile): "Yes,
Duryodhana also said that. 'O Krishna, I do what Thou, seated in my
heart, makest me do.' If a man has the firm conviction that God alone is the
Doer and he is His instrument, then he cannot do anything sinful. He who
has learnt to dance correctly never makes a false step. One cannot even
believe in the existence of God until one's heart becomes pure."
SRI RAMAKRISHNA looked at the devotees assembled in the worship hall and said: "It is very good to gather in this way, now and then, and think of God and sing His name and glories. But the worldly man's yearning for God is momentary. It lasts as long as a drop of water on a red-hot frying-pan."
Brahmo worship
The
worship was about to begin, and the big hall was filled with Brahmo
devotees. Some of the Brahmo ladies sat on chairs, with music books in
their hands. The songs of the Brahmo Samaj were sung to the accompaniment
of harmonium and piano. Sri Ramakrishna's joy was unbounded. The
invocation was followed by a prayer, and then the worship began. The
acharyas, seated on the platform, recited from the Vedas:
Om. Thou art our Father. Give us right
knowledge; do not destroy us! We bow to Thee.
The Brahmo devotees chanted in chorus with the
acharyas:
Om. Brahman is Truth, Knowledge, Infinity.
It shines as Bliss and Immortality.
Brahman is Peace, Blessedness, and the One without a Second;
It is pure and unstained by sin.
Om. Brahman is Truth, Knowledge, Infinity.
It shines as Bliss and Immortality.
Brahman is Peace, Blessedness, and the One without a Second;
It is pure and unstained by sin.
The
acharyas chanted in praise of God:
Om. O Reality, Cause of the Universe, we bow
to Thee!
Then
the acharyas chanted their prayer together:
From the unreal lead us to the Real;
From darkness lead us to Light;
From death lead us to Immortality.
Reach us through and through,
O Rudra, and protect us evermore with Thy Compassionate Face.
From darkness lead us to Light;
From death lead us to Immortality.
Reach us through and through,
O Rudra, and protect us evermore with Thy Compassionate Face.
As SRI RAMAKRISHNA heard these hymns, he went
into a spiritual mood. After this an Āchārya read a paper.
The worship was over. Most of the devotees went
downstairs or to the courtyard for fresh air while the refreshments were being
made ready. It was about nine o'clock in the evening. The hosts
were so engrossed with the other invited guests that they forgot to pay any
attention to Sri
Ramakrishna.
MASTER (to Rakhal and the other devotees):
"What's the matter? Nobody is paying any attention to us!"
RAKHAL (angrily): "Sir, Let us leave here and go to
Dakshineswar."
MASTER (with a smile): "Keep quiet!
The carriage hire is three rupees and two ānnās. Who will pay
that? Stubbornness won't get us anywhere. You haven't a penny, and you
are making these empty threats! Besides, where shall we find food at this late
hour of the night?"
After a long time dinner was announced. The devotees
were asked to take their seats. The Master, with Rakhal and the others,
followed the crowd to the second floor. No room could be found for him
inside the hall. Finally, with great difficulty, a place was found for
him in a dusty corner. A brahmin woman served some curry, but SRI RAMAKRISHNA could
not eat it. He ate luchi with salt and took some sweets.
There was no limit to the Master's kindness. The hosts were mere youngsters; how could he be displeased with them, even though they did not show him proper respect? Further, it would have been inauspicious for the hollsehold if a holy man had left the place without taking food. Finally the feast had been prepared in the name of God.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA got into a carriage: but who was to
pay the hire? The hosts could not be found. Referring to this incident
afterwards, the Master said to the devotees, jokingly: "The boys went to
our hosts for the carriage hire. First they were put out, but at last
they managed to get together three rupees. Our hosts refused to pay the
extra two ānnās and said, 'No, that will do.' "
Sunday, May 13, 1883
The
Master paid a visit to the Hari-Bhakti-Pradayini-Sabha of Kansharipara, in
Calcutta, on the anniversary day of that religious society. Kirtan and
other forms of devotional music had been arranged for the occasion. The
songs centred round the Vrindāvan episode of Sri Krishna's life. The
theme was Radha's pique because of Sri Krishna's having visited Chandravali,
another of the gopis of Vrindāvan. Radha's friends tried to console her
and said to her: "Why are you piqued? It seems you are not thinking of
Krishna's happiness, but only of your own." Radha said to them: "I am
not angry at His going to Chandravali's grove. But why should He go
there? She doesn't know how to take care of Him."
May 20,1883
The
following Sunday a kirtan was arranged at the house of Ram, one of the Master's
householder devotees. SRI RAMAKRISHNA graced the occasion with his
presence. The musicians sang about Radha's pangs at her separation from
Krishna:
Radha said to her friends: "I have loved to see Krishna
from my childhood. My finger-nails are worn off from counting the days on
them till I shall see Him. Once He gave me a garland. Look, it has
withered, but I have not yet thrown it away. Alas! Where has the Moon of
Krishna risen now? Has that Moon gone away from my firmament, afraid of the
Rahu of my pique? Alas! Shall I ever see Krishna again? O my beloved Krishna, I
have never been able to look at You to my heart's complete satisfaction.
I have only one pair of eyes; they blink and so hinder my vision. And
further, on account of streams of tears I could not see enough of my
Beloved. The peacock feather on the crown of His head shines like
arrested lightning. The peacocks, seeing Krishna's dark-cloud complexion,
would dance in joy, spreading their tails. O friends, I shall not be able
to keep my life-breath. After my death, place my body on a branch of the
dark tamala tree and inscribe on my body Krishna's sweet name."
The Master said: "God and His name are identical; that
is the reason Radha said that. There is no difference between Rama and
His holy name."
May 27, 1883
SRI RAMAKRISHNA was in his room at Dakshineswar,
conversing with the devotees. It was about nine o'clock in the morning.
Religious quarrels condemned
MASTER (to M. and the other devotees):
"It is not good to harbour malice. The Saktas, the Vaishnavas, and
the Vedantists quarrel among themselves. That is not wise.
Padmalochan was court pundit of the Maharaja of Burdwan. Once at a
meeting the pundits were discussing whether Śiva was superior to Brahma, or
Brahma to Śiva. Padmalochan gave an appropriate reply. 'I don't
know anything about it', said he. 'I haven't talked either to Śiva or to
Brahma.'
Single-minded devotion
"If
people feel sincere longing, they will find that all paths lead to God.
But one should have nishtha, single-minded devotion. It is also described
as chaste and unswerving devotion to God. It is like a tree with only one
trunk shooting straight up. Promiscuous devotion is like a tree with five
branches.
Such was the single-minded devotion of the gopis to Krishna that they didn't care to look at anyone but the Krishna they had seen at Vrindāvan-the Shepherd Krishna, bedecked with a garland of yellow wild-flowers and wearing a peacock feather on His crest. At the sight of Krishna at Mathura with a turban on His head and dressed in royal robes, the gopis pulled down their veils. They would not look at His face. 'Who is this man?' they said. 'Should we violate our chaste love for Krishna by talking to him?'
"The devotion of the wife to her husband is also an
instance of unswerving love. She feeds her brothers-in-law as well, and
looks after their comforts, but she has a special relationship with her
husband. Likewise, one may have that single-minded devotion to one's own
religion; but one should not on that account hate other faiths. On the
contrary, one should have a friendly attitude, toward them."
The Master bathed in the Ganges and then went to the Kāli
temple with M. He sat before the image and offered flowers at the feet of the
Divine Mother. Now and then he put flowers on his own head and meditated.
After a long time he stood up. He was in a spiritual mood and danced before the image, chanting the name of Kāli. Now and again he said: "O Mother! O Destroyer of suffering! O Remover of grief and agony!" Was he teaching people thus to pray to the Mother of the Universe with a yearning heart, in order to get rid of the suffering inevitable in physical life?
SRI RAMAKRISHNA returned to his room and sat on the
west porch. Rakhal, M., Nakur Vaishnav, and other devotees were with
him. Nakur had been known to the Master for about twenty-five
years. He was a devotee of Gauranga and had a small shop which SRI RAMAKRISHNA had
often visited when he first came to Calcutta from Kamarpukur.
Still overpowered with divine ecstasy, the Master sang:
O Kāli, my Mother full of Bliss! Enchantress of
the almighty Śiva!
In Thy delirious joy Thou dancest, clapping Thy hands together!
Eternal One! Thou great First Cause, clothed in the form of the Void
Thou wearest the moon upon Thy brow,
Where didst Thou find Thy garland of heads before the universe was made?
Thou art the Mover of all that move, and we are but Thy helpless toys;
We move alone as Thou movest us and speak as through us Thou speakest.
But worthless Kamalakanta says, fondly berating Thee:
Confoundress! With Thy flashing sword
Thoughtlessly Thou hast put to death my virtue and my sin alike!
In Thy delirious joy Thou dancest, clapping Thy hands together!
Eternal One! Thou great First Cause, clothed in the form of the Void
Thou wearest the moon upon Thy brow,
Where didst Thou find Thy garland of heads before the universe was made?
Thou art the Mover of all that move, and we are but Thy helpless toys;
We move alone as Thou movest us and speak as through us Thou speakest.
But worthless Kamalakanta says, fondly berating Thee:
Confoundress! With Thy flashing sword
Thoughtlessly Thou hast put to death my virtue and my sin alike!
He
sang again:
Mother, Thou art our sole Redeemer,
Thou the Support of the three gunas,
Higher than the most high.
Thou art compassionate, I know,
Who takest away our bitter grief.
Sandhya art Thou, and Gayatri;
Thou dost sustain this universe.
Mother, the Help art Thou
Of those that have no help but Thee,
O Eternal Beloved of Śiva!
Thou the Support of the three gunas,
Higher than the most high.
Thou art compassionate, I know,
Who takest away our bitter grief.
Sandhya art Thou, and Gayatri;
Thou dost sustain this universe.
Mother, the Help art Thou
Of those that have no help but Thee,
O Eternal Beloved of Śiva!
Thou art in earth, in water Thou;
Thou liest at the root of all.
In me, in every creature,
Thou hast Thy home; though clothed with form,
Yet art Thou formless Reality.
Thou liest at the root of all.
In me, in every creature,
Thou hast Thy home; though clothed with form,
Yet art Thou formless Reality.
The Master sang a few more songs in praise of the Divine Mother. Then he said to the devotees: "It is not always best to tell householders about the sorrows of life. They want bliss. Those who suffer from chronic poverty can go without food for a day or two. But it is not wise to talk about the sorrows and miseries of life to those who suffer if their food is delayed a few minutes. Vaishnavcharan used to say: 'Why should one constantly dwell on sin? Be merry!' "
While the Master was resting after his midday meal, Manohor
Goswami, a singer of kirtan, arrived. He sang about the ecstatic love of
Gauranga and the divine episode of Vrindāvan. The Master was absorbed in
a deep spiritual mood. He tore off his shirt and said, to the melody of
the kirtan, assuming the attitude of Radha: "O Krishna, my Beloved! O
friends, bring Krishna to me. Then you will be real friends. Or take
me to Him, and I will be your slave for ever."
The musician sat spellbound at Sri Ramakrishna's ecstasy; then he said with folded hands, "Won't you please rid me of my worldliness?"
MASTER: "You are like the holy man who
went about the city after first finding a lodging. You are a sweet person
and express many sweet ideas."
MUSICIAN: "Sir, I am like the bullock that only carries the bag
of sugar but cannot taste it. Alas, I myself do not enjoy the sweetness
of divine bliss."
The melodious music went on, and all were filled with joy.
Saturday, June 2, 1883
SRI RAMAKRISHNA had
been invited to visit the homes of his devotees Balaram, Adhar, and Ram in
Calcutta. Devotional music had been arranged by Adhar and Ram. The
Master was accompanied in the carriage by Rakhal, M., and others.
As they drove along, SRI RAMAKRISHNA said to the devotees: "You
see, sin flies away when love of God grows in a man's heart, even as the water
of the reservoir dug in a meadow dries up under the heat of the sun. But
one cannot love God if one feels attracted to worldly things, to 'woman and
gold'. Merely taking the vow of monastic life will not help a man if he
is attached to the world. It is like swallowing your own spittle after
spitting it out on the ground."
After a few minutes the Master continued: 'The members of
the Brahmo Samaj do not accept God with form. Narendra says that God with
form is a mere idol. He says further: 'What? He still goes to the Kāli
temple!'"
SRI RAMAKRISHNA and his party arrived at Balaram's
house. Yajnanath of Nandanbagan came to invite the Master to his house at
four o'clock in the afternoon. SRI RAMAKRISHNA agreed to go if he felt
well. After Yajnanath's departure the Master went into an ecstatic
mood. He said to the Divine Mother: "Mother, what is all this? Stop!
What are these things Thou art showing to me? What is it that Thou dost reveal
to me through Rakhal and others? The form is disappearing. But, Mother,
what people call 'man' is only a pillow-case, nothing but a pillow-case.
Consciousness is Thine alone.
"The modern Brahmajnanis have not tasted Thy sweet
bliss. Their eyes look dry and so do their faces. They won't
achieve anything without ecstatic love of God.
"Mother, once I asked Thee to give me a companion just
like myself. Is that why Thou hast given me Rakhal?"
The Master went to Adhar's house, where arrangements were
being made for the kirtan. Many devotees and neighbours had gathered in
Adhar's drawing-room, anxious to listen to the Master's words.
Spiritual inspiration comes from God
MASTER (to the devotees): "Both
worldliness and liberation depend on God's will. It is God alone who has
kept man in the world in a state of ignorance; and man will be free when God,
of His own sweet will, calls him to Himself. It is like the mother
calling the child at meal-time, when he is out playing. When the time
comes for setting a man free, God makes him seek the company of holy men.
Further, it is God who makes him restless for spiritual life."
A NEIGIHBOUR: "What kind of restlessness, sir?"
MASTER: "Like the restlessness of a
clerk who has lost his job. He makes the round of the offices daily and
asks whether there is any vacancy. When that restlessness comes, man
longs for God. A fop, seated comfortably with one leg over the other,
chewing betel-leaf and twirling his moustaches-a carefree dandy-, cannot attain
God."
NEIGHBOUR: "Can one get this longing for God through frequenting
the company of holy men?"
MASTER: "Yes, it is possible. But not for a confirmed scoundrel. A sannyasi's kamandalu, made of bitter gourd, travels with him to the four great places of pilgrimage but still does not lose its bitterness."
The kirtan began. The musician sang of Sri Krishna's
life in Vrindāvan:
RADHA: "Friend, I am about to die. Give me back my
Krishna."
FRIEND: "But, Radha; the cloud of Krishna was ready to burst
into rain. It was yourself who blew it away with the strong wind of your
pique. You are certainly not happy to see Krishna happy; or why were you
piqued?"
RADHA: "But this pride was not mine. My pride has gone
away with Him who made me proud."
After the music SRI RAMAKRISHNA conversed with the devotees.
MASTER: "The gopis worshipped
Katyayani in order to be united with Sri Krishna. Everyone is under the
authority of the Divine Mother, Mahamaya, the Primal Energy. Even the
Incarnations of God accept the help of maya to fulfil their mission on
earth. Therefore they worship the Primal Energy. Don't you see how
bitterly Rama wept for Sita? 'Brahman weeps, ensnared in the meshes of maya.'
"Vishnu incarnated Himself as a sow in order to kill
the demon Hiranyaksha. After killing the demon, the sow remained quite
happy with her young ones. Forgetting her real nature, she was suckling
them very contentedly. The gods in heaven could not persuade Vishnu to
relinquish His sow's body and return to the celestial regions. He was
absorbed in the happiness of His beast form. After consulting among
themselves, the gods sent Śiva to the sow. Śiva asked the sow, 'Why have
you forgotten yourself?' Vishnu replied through the sow's body, 'Why, I am
quite happy here.' Thereupon with a stroke of his trident Śiva destroyed the
sow's body, and Vishnu went back to heaven."
Ramchandra Dutta
From
Adhar's house SRI
RAMAKRISHNA went to Ram's house. Ramchandra Dutta, one of the
chief householder disciples of the Master, lived in Calcutta. He had been
one of the first to announce the Master as an Incarnation of God. The
Master had visited his house a number of times and unstintingly praised the
devotion and generosity of this beloved disciple. A few of the Master's
disciples made Ram's house virtually their own dwelling-place.
Ram had arranged a special festival to celebrate the
Master's visit. The small courtyard was nicely decorated. A kathak,
seated on a raised platform, was reciting from the Bhagavata when the Master
arrived. Ram greeted him respectfully and seated him near the
reader. The disciple was extremely happy. The kathak was in the
midst of the story of King Harischandra.
Story of Harishchandra
The
great King Harischandra of the Purana was the embodiment of generosity.
No one ever went away from him empty-handed. Now, the sage Viswamitra,
wanting to test the extent of the king's charity, extracted from him a promise
to grant any boon that he might ask. Then the sage asked for the gift of
the sea-girt world, of which Harischandra was king. Without the slightest
hesitation the king gave away his kingdom. Then Viswamitra demanded the
auxiliary fee, which alone makes charity valid and meritorious. The
kathak continued his recitation:
Viswamitra said to the king: "O King, you have given
away the entire world, which was your kingdom. It now belongs to me; you
cannot claim any place here. But you may live in Benares, which belongs
to Śiva. I shall lead you there with your wife Saibya, and Rohitasva,
your son. There you can procure the auxiliary fee that you owe me."
The royal family, accompanied by the sage, reached Benares and visited the
temple of Śiva.
At the very mention of Śiva, the Master went into spiritual
mood and repeated the holy name several times indistinctly.
The kathak continued:
The king could not procure the fee and was compelled to sell
Saibya, his royal consort, to a brahmin. With her went Prince
Rohitasva. But since even that was not enough to redeem his pledge to the
sage, Harischandra sold himself to an untouchable who kept a cremation ground.
He was ordered to supervise the cremations. One day, while plucking
flowers for his brahmin master, Prince Rohitasva was bitten by a venomous snake
and that very night died. The cruel brahmin would not leave his bed to
help the poor mother cremate the body. The night was dark and
stormy. Lightning rent the black clouds. Saibya started for the
cremation ground alone, carrying the body of her son in her arms. Smitten
with fear and overpowered with grief, the queen filled heaven and earth with
her wailing. Arriving at the cremation ground, she did not recognize her
husband, who demanded the usual fee for the cremation. Saibya was
penniless and wept bitterly at her unending misfortunes. The impenetrable
darkness was illumined only by the terrible flames of the cremation
pyres. Above her the thunder roared, and before her the uncouth guardian
of the cremation ground demanded his fee. She who had once been queen of
the world sat there with her only child dead and cold on her lap.
The devotees burst into tears and loudly lamented this
tragic episode of a royal life. And what was the Master doing? He was
listening to the recital with rapt attention. Tear-drops appeared in his
eyes and he wiped them away.
The kathak continued:
When the queen, wailing bitterly, uttered the name of her
husband, Harischandra at once recognized his wife and son. Then the two
wept for the dead prince. Yet in all these misfortunes the king never
once uttered a word of regret for his charity.
Finally the sage Viswamitra appeared and told them that he had only wanted to put the king's charitable impulses to a crucial test. Then, through his spiritual power, the sage brought the prince back to life and returned to the king his lost kingdom.
Finally the sage Viswamitra appeared and told them that he had only wanted to put the king's charitable impulses to a crucial test. Then, through his spiritual power, the sage brought the prince back to life and returned to the king his lost kingdom.
Story of Uddhava
SRI RAMAKRISHNA asked the kathak to recite the
episode of Uddhava, the friend and devotee of Krishna.
At
the request of Krishna, Uddhava had gone to Vrindāvan to console the cowherds
and the gopis, who were sore at heart because of their separation from their
beloved Krishna.
The Kathak said:
When Uddhava arrived at Vrindāvan, the gopis and cowherd
boys ran to him eagerly and asked him: "How is our Krishna? Has He
forgotten us altogether? Doesn't He even speak our names?" So saying, some
of them wept. Others accompanied him to various places in Vrindāvan still
filled with Krishna's sweet memory. They said: "Here it was that
Krishna lifted up Mount Govardhan, and here He killed the demons sent by the
evil-minded Kamśa. In this meadow He tended His cows; here on the bank of
the Jamuna He sported with the gopis. Here
He played with the cowherd boys, and here in these groves He
met the gopis secretly." Uddhava said to them: "Why are you so
grief-stricken at Krishna's absence? He resides in all beings as their
indwelling Spirit. He is God Himself, and nothing can exist without
God." "But", said the gopis, "we do not understand all
that. We can neither read nor write. We know only our Krishna of
Vrindāvan, who played with us here in so many ways." Uddhava said:
"Krishna is God Himself. By meditating on Him, man escapes from
birth and death in the world and attains liberation." The gopis said:
"We do not understand big words like 'liberation'. We want to see
the Krishna of our hearts."
The Master listened to the story from the Bhagavata with
great attention and said at last, "Yes, the gopis were right."
Then
he sang:
Though I am never loath to grant salvation,
I hesitate indeed, to grant pure love.
Whoever wins pure love surpasses all;
He is adored by men;
He triumphs over the three worlds.
I hesitate indeed, to grant pure love.
Whoever wins pure love surpasses all;
He is adored by men;
He triumphs over the three worlds.
Listen, Chandravali! I shall tell you of love:
Mukti a man may gain, but rare is bhakti.
Solely for pure love's sake did I become
King Vali's door-keeper
Down in his realm in the nether world.
Mukti a man may gain, but rare is bhakti.
Solely for pure love's sake did I become
King Vali's door-keeper
Down in his realm in the nether world.
Alone in Vrindāvan can pure love be found;
Its secret none but the gopas and gopis know.
For pure love's sake I dwelt in Nanda's house;
Taking him as My father,
I carried his burdens on My head.
Its secret none but the gopas and gopis know.
For pure love's sake I dwelt in Nanda's house;
Taking him as My father,
I carried his burdens on My head.
The Master said to the kathak: "The gopis had ecstatic
love, unswerving and single-minded devotion to one ideal. Do you know the
meaning of devotion that is not loyal to one ideal? It is devotion tinged with
intellectual knowledge. It makes one feel: 'Krishna has become all
these. He alone is the Supreme Brahman. He is Rama, Śiva, and
Śakti.' But this element of knowledge is not present in ecstatic love of
God. Once Hanuman came to Dwaraka and wanted to see Sita and Rama.
Krishna said to Rukmini, His queen, 'You had better assume the form of Sita;
otherwise there will be no escape from the hands of Hanuman.'
"Once the Pandava brothers performed the Rajasuya
sacrifice. All the kings placed Yudhisthira on the royal throne and bowed
low before him in homage. But Bibhishana, the King of Ceylon, said, 'I
bow down to Narayana and to none else.' At these words the Lord Krishna bowed
down to Yudhisthira. Only then did Bibhishana prostrate himself, crown
and all, before him.
"Do you know what devotion to one ideal is like? It is
like the attitude of a daughter-in-law in the family. She serves all the
members of the family-her brothers-in-law, father-in-law, husband, and so
forth-, bringing them water to wash their feet, fetching their towels,
arranging their seats, and the like; but with her husband she has a special
relationship.
Characteristics of divine love
"There
are two elements in this ecstatic love: 'I-ness' and 'my-ness'. Yaśoda
used to think: 'Who would look after Gopala if I did not? He will fall ill if I
do not serve Him.' She did not look on Krishna as God. The other element
is 'my-ness'. It means to look on God as one's own-'my Gopala'.
Uddhava said to Yaśoda: 'Mother, your Krishna is God Himself. He is the
Lord of the Universe and not a common human being.' 'Oh!' exclaimed
Yaśoda. 'I am not asking you about your Lord of the Universe. I
want to know how my Gopala fares. Not the Lord of the Universe, but my
Gopala.'
"How faithful to Krishna the gopis were! After many
entreaties to the door-keeper, the gopis entered the royal court in Mathura,
where Krishna was seated as king. The door-keeper took them to Him; but at
the sight of King Krishna wearing the royal turban, the gopis bent down their
heads and said among themselves: 'Who is this man with a turban on his head?
Should we violate our chaste love for Krishna by talking to him? Where is our
beloved Krishna with the yellow robe and the bewitching crest with the peacock
feather?'
"Did you observe the single-minded love of the gopis
for Krishna? The ideal of Vrindāvan is unique. I am told that the people
of Dwaraka worship Krishna, the companion of Arjuna, but reject Radha."
A DEVOTEE: "Which is the better, ecstatic love or love mixed with
knowledge?"
Parable of the three friends
MASTER: "It is not possible to develop
ecstatic love of God unless you love Him very deeply and regard Him as your
very own.
"Listen to a story. Once three friends were going
through a forest, when a tiger suddenly appeared before them. 'Brothers,'
one of them exclaimed, 'we are lost!' 'Why should you say that?' said the
second friend. 'Why should we be lost? Come, let us pray to God.' The
third friend said: 'No. Why should we trouble God about it? Come, let us
climb this tree.'
"The friend who said, 'We are lost!' did not know that
there is a God who is our Protector. The friend who asked the others to
pray to God was a jnani. He was aware that God is the Creator, Preserver,
and Destroyer of the world. The third friend, who didn't want to trouble
God with prayers and suggested climbing the tree, had ecstatic love of
God. It is the very nature of such love that it makes a man think himself
stronger than his Beloved. He is always alert lest his Beloved should
suffer. The one desire of his life is to keep his Beloved from even being
pricked in the foot by a thorn."
Ram served the Master and the devotees with delicious sweets.
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