Chapter 12
THE FESTIVAL AT PĀNIHĀTI
Monday, June 18, 1883
Festival at Pānihāti
SRI RAMAKRISHNA had
been invited to the great religious festival at Pānihāti, near Calcutta.
This "Festival of the Flattened Rice" was inaugurated by Raghunath
Das, a disciple of Sri Chaitanya. It is said that Raghunath used to run
away from home, secretly practise his devotions, and enjoy the bliss of
spiritual ecstasy. One day Nityananda said to hiM:
"Thief! You run away from home and enjoy the love of God all alone.
You hide it from us. I shall punish you today. You must arrange a
religious festival and entertain the devotees with flattened rice." Since
then the festival has been annually celebrated at Pānihāti by the Vaishnavas.
Thousands of the followers of Sri Chaitanya participate in it. Its chief
feature is the singing of the names and glories of God, and the dancing of the
devotees in religious fervour. The centre of the festivity is the temple
of Radha-Krishna, built on the bank of the Ganges.
The MASTER had been invited to the
festival by Mani Sen, who was the custodian of the temple. Ram, M.,
Rākhāl , Bhavanath, and a few other disciples went with the MASTER
in a carriage. On his way to Pānihāti SRI RAMAKRISHNA was in a light mood
and joked with the youngsters. But as soon as the carriage reached the
place of the festival, the MASTER, to the utter amazement of' the devotees,
shot into the crowd. He joined the kirtan party of Navadvip Goswami, Mani
Sen's guru, and danced, totally forgetting the world. Every now and then
he stood still in samādhi, carefully supported by Navadvip Goswami for fear he
might fall to the ground. Thousands of devotees were gathered together
for the festival. Wherever one looked there was a forest of human
heads. The crowd seemed to become infected by the MASTER's divine fervour and swayed
to and fro, chanting the name of God, until the very air seemed to reverberate
with it. Drums, cymbals, and other instruments produced melodious
sounds. The atmosphere became intense with spiritual fervour. The
devotees felt that Gaurānga himself was being manifested in the person of Sri
Ramakrishna. Flowers were showered from all sides on his feet and
head. The shouting of the name of Hari was heard even at a distance, like
the rumbling of the ocean.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA entered
by turn into all the moods of ecstasy. In deep samādhi he stood still,
his face radiating a divine glow. In the state of partial consciousness
he danced, sometimes gently and sometimes with the vigour of a lion.
Again, regaining consciousness of the world, he sang, himself leading the
chorus:
Behold,
the two brothers have come, who weep while chanting Hari's name,
The brothers who dance in ecstasy and make the world dance in His name!
Behold them, weeping themselves, and making the whole world weep as well,
The brothers who, in return for blows, offer to sinners Hari's love.
Behold them, drunk with Hari's love, who make the world drunk as well!
Behold, the two brothers have come, who once were Kanai and Balai of Braja,
They who would steal the butter out of the pots of the gopi maids.
Behold, the two have come, who shatter all the rules of caste,
Embracing everyone as brother, even the outcaste shunned by men;
Who lose themselves in Hari's name, making the whole world mad;
Who are none other than Hari Himself, and chant His hallowed name!
Behold them,who saved from their sinful ways the ruffians Jagai and Madhai,
They who cannot distinguish between a friend and an enemy!
Behold the two brothers, Gaur and Nitai, who come again to save mankind.
The brothers who dance in ecstasy and make the world dance in His name!
Behold them, weeping themselves, and making the whole world weep as well,
The brothers who, in return for blows, offer to sinners Hari's love.
Behold them, drunk with Hari's love, who make the world drunk as well!
Behold, the two brothers have come, who once were Kanai and Balai of Braja,
They who would steal the butter out of the pots of the gopi maids.
Behold, the two have come, who shatter all the rules of caste,
Embracing everyone as brother, even the outcaste shunned by men;
Who lose themselves in Hari's name, making the whole world mad;
Who are none other than Hari Himself, and chant His hallowed name!
Behold them,who saved from their sinful ways the ruffians Jagai and Madhai,
They who cannot distinguish between a friend and an enemy!
Behold the two brothers, Gaur and Nitai, who come again to save mankind.
Again the MASTER sang:
See
how all Nadia is shaking
Under the waves of Gaurānga's love! . . .
Under the waves of Gaurānga's love! . . .
The crowd, with the MASTER
in the centre, surged toward the temple of Radha-Krishna. Only a small
number could enter. The rest stood outside the portal and jostled with
one another to have a look at Sri Ramakrishna. In a mood of intoxication
he began to dance in the courtyard of the shrine. Every now and then his
body stood transfixed in deep samādhi. Hundreds of people around him
shouted the name of God, and thousands outside caught the strain and raised the
cry with full-throated voices. The echo travelled over the Ganges,
striking a note in the hearts of people in the boats on the holy river, and
they too chanted the name of God.
When the kirtan was over, Mani Sen
took SRI
RAMAKRISHNA and Navadvip Goswami into a room and served them with
refreshments. Afterwards Ram, M., and the other devotees were also served
with the prasad.
In the afternoon, the MASTER
was sitting in Mani Sen's drawing-room with the devotees. Navadvip was
also near him. Mani offered the carriage hire to Sri Ramakrishna.
Pointing to Ram and the others, the MASTER said: "Why should they accept it from
you? They earn money." He became engaged in conversation with Navadvip.
Different states of bhakti
MASTER:
"Bhakti matured becomes bhava. Next is mahabhava, then prema, and
last of all is the attainment of God. Gaurānga experienced the states of
mahabhava and prema. When prema is awakened, a devotee completely forgets
the world; he also forgets his body, which is so dear to a man. Gaurānga
experienced prema. He jumped into the ocean, thinking it to be the
Jamuna. The ordinary jiva does not experience mahabhava or prema.
He goes only as far as bhava. But Gaurānga experienced all three
states. Isn't that so?"
NAVADVIP: "Yes, sir, that is true.
The inmost state, the semi-conscious state, and the conscious state."
MASTER: "In
the inmost state he would remain in samādhi, unconscious of the outer
world. In the semi-conscious state he could only dance. In the
conscious state he chanted the name of God."
Navadvip introduced his son to the MASTER.
The young man was a student of the scriptures. He saluted Sri
Ramakrishna.
NAVADVIP: "He studies the scriptures at
home. Previously one hardly saw a copy of the Vedas in this
country. Max Muller has translated them; so people can now read these
books."
Essence of the scriptures
MASTER:
"Too much study of the scriptures does more harm than good. The
important thing is to know the essence of the scriptures. After that,
what is the need of books? One should learn the essence and then dive deep in
order to realize God.
Ideal of the Gitā
"The Divine Mother has revealed
to me the essence of the Vedānta. It is that Brahman alone is real and
the world illusory. The essence of the Gitā is what you get by repeating
the word ten times. The word becomes reversed. It is then 'tagi', which
refers to renunciation. The essence of the Gitā is: 'O man, renounce
everything and practise spiritual discipline for the realization of God.'
"
NAVADVIP: "But how can we persuade our
minds to renounce?"
MASTER:
"You are a goswami. It is your duty to officiate as priest in the
temple. You cannot renounce the world; otherwise, who would look after
the temple and its services? You have to renounce mentally.
"It is God Himself who has kept
you in the world to set an example to men. You may resolve in your mind a
thousand times to renounce the world, but you will not succeed. God has
given you such a nature that you must perform your worldly duties.
"Krishna said to Arjuna: 'What
do you mean, you will not fight? By your mere will you cannot desist from
fighting. Your very nature will make you fight.' "
At the mere mention of Krishna and
Arjuna the MASTER
went into samādhi. In the twinkling of an eye his body became motionless
and his eyeballs transfixed, while his breathing could scarcely be noticed.
At this sudden transformation Navadvip and his son and the other devotees
looked at the MASTER
in mute wonder.
Regaining partial consciousness, he
said to Navadvip: "Yoga and bhoga. You goswamis have both. Now
your only duty is to call on God and pray to Him sincerely: 'O God, I don't
want the glories of Thy world-bewitching maya. I want Thee alone!' God
dwells in all beings, undoubtedly. That being the case, who may be called
His devotee? He who dwells in God, he who has merged his mind and life and
innermost soul in God."
The MASTER returned to the sense
plane. Referring to his samādhi, he said to Navadvip: "Some say that
this state of mine is a disease. I say to them, 'How can one become
unconscious by thinking of Him whose Consciousness has made the whole world
conscious?' "
Mani Sen said good-bye to the
invited brahmins and Vaishnavas with suitable gifts of money. He offered
five rupees to Sri Ramakrishna. The latter said that he could not
possibly accept any money. But Mani insisted. The MASTER
then asked him in the name of his guru not to press him. Mani requested
him again to accept the offering. SRI RAMAKRISHNA asked M., in a distressed voice,
whether he should take the money. The disciple made a vehement protest
and said, "No, sir. By no means."
Friends of Mani Sen gave the money
to Rākhāl , requesting him to buy some mangoes and sweets for the MASTER.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA said
to M.: "I have definitely said to Mani that I would not accept the
money. I feel free now. But Rākhāl has accepted it. His
is now the responsibility."
Sri Ramakrishna,
accompanied by the devotees, took a carriage to return to Dakshineswar.
They were going to pass the temple garden of Mati Seal on the way. For a
long time the MASTER
had been asking M. to take him to the reservoir in the garden in order that he
might teach him how to meditate on the formless God. There were tame fish
in the reservoir. Nobody harmed them. Visitors threw puffed rice
and other bits of food into the water, and the big fish came in swarms to eat
the food. Fearlessly the fish swam in the water and sported there
joyously.
Coming to the reservoir, the MASTER
said to M.: "Look at the fish. Meditating on the formless God is
like swimming joyfully like these fish, in the Ocean of Bliss and
Consciousness."
Monday, June 25, 1883
SRI RAMAKRISHNA was
at Balarām Bose's house in Calcutta. Rākhāl and M. were seated near
him. The MASTER
was in ecstasy. He conversed with the devotees in an abstracted mood.
MASTER:
"Let me assure you that a man can realize his Inner Self through sincere
prayer. But to the extent that he has the desire to enjoy worldly
objects, his vision of the Self becomes obstructed."
M: "Yes, sir. You always
ask us to plunge into God."
MASTER (joyously):
"Yes! That's it. Let me tell you that the realization of Self is
possible for all, without any exception."
M: "That is true, sir. But
God is the Doer. He works through different beings in different ways,
according to their capacity to manifest the Divine. God gives to some
full spiritual consciousness, and others He keeps in ignorance."
MASTER:
"No, that is not so. One should pray to God with a longing
heart. God certainly listens to prayer if it is sincere. There is
no doubt about it."
A DEVOTEE:
"Yes, sir. There is this 'I-consciousness' in us; therefore we must
pray."
Nitya and Lila
MASTER
(to M.): "A man should reach the Nitya,
the Absolute, by following the trail of the Lila, the Relative. It is
like reaching the roof by the stairs. After realizing the Absolute, he
should climb down to the Relative and live on that plane in the company of
devotees, charging his mind with the love of God. This is my final and
most mature opinion.
"God has different forms, and
He sports in different ways. He sports as Isvara, deva, man, and the
universe. In every age He descends to earth in human form, as an
Incarnation, to teach people love and devotion. There is the instance of
Chaitanya. One can taste devotion and love of God only through His Incarnations.
Infinite are the ways of God's play, but what I need is love and
devotion. I want only the milk. The milk comes through the udder of
the cow. The Incarnation is the udder."
Was Sri Ramakrihsna hinting that he was
an Incarnation of God? Did he suggest that those who saw him saw God? Did he
thus speak about himself when speaking of Chaitanya?
It was a hot day in June 1883.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA was
sitting on the steps of the Śiva temples in the temple garden. M. arrived
with ice and other offerings and sat down on the steps after saluting the MASTER.
MASTER
(to M.): "The husband of Mani Mallick's
granddaughter was here. He read in a book that God could not be said to
be quite wise and omniscient; otherwise, why should there be so much misery in
the world? As regards death, it would be much better to kill a man all at once,
instead of putting him through slow torture. Further, the author writes
that if he himself were the Creator, he would have created a better
world."
M. listened to these words in surprise
and made no comment.
The ways of God are inscrutable
MASTER
(to M.): "Can a man ever understand God's ways? I too think of God
sometimes as good and sometimes as bad. He has kept us deluded by His
great illusion. Sometimes He wakes us up and sometimes He keeps us
unconscious. One moment the ignorance disappears, and the next moment it
covers our mind. If you throw a brick-bat into a pond covered with moss,
you get a glimpse of the water. But a few moments later the moss comes
dancing back and covers the water.
Body-consciousness produces duality
"One is aware of pleasure and
pain, birth and death, disease and grief, as long as one is identified with the
body. All these belong to the body alone, and not to the Soul.
After the death of the body, perhaps God carries one to a better place.
It is like the birth of the child after the pain of delivery. Attaining
Self-Knowledge, one looks on pleasure and pain, birth and death, as a dream.
"How little we know! Can a
one-seer pot hold ten seers of milk? If ever a salt doll ventures into the
ocean to measure its depth, it cannot come back and give us the
information. It melts into the water and disappears."
At dusk the evening service began in
the different temples. The MASTER was sitting on the small couch in his room,
absorbed in contemplation of the Divine Mother. Several devotees also
were there. M. was going to spend the night with the MASTER.
A little later SRI RAMAKRISHNA began to talk to a
devotee privately, on the verandah north of his room. He said: "It
is good to meditate in the small hours of the morning and at dawn. One
should also meditate daily after dusk." He instructed the devotee
about meditation on the Personal God and on the Impersonal Reality.
After a time he sat on the
semicircular porch west of his room. It was about nine o'clock.
MASTER:
"Those who come here will certainly have all their doubts removed.
What do you say?"
M: "That is true, sir."
A boat was moving in the Ganges, far
away from the bank. The boatman began to sing. The sound of his
voice floating over the river reached the MASTER's ears, and he went into a spiritual
mood. The hair on his body stood on end. He said to M., "Just
feel my body." M. was greatly amazed. He thought: "The
Upanishads describe Brahman as permeating the universe and the ether. Has
that Brahman, as sound, touched the MASTER's body?"
After a time SRI RAMAKRISHNA began to converse
again.
MASTER:
"Those who come here must have been born with good tendencies. Isn't
that true?"
M: "It is true, sir."
MASTER:
"Adhar must have good tendencies."
M: "That goes without
saying."
MASTER:
"A guileless man easily realizes God. There are two paths: the path
of righteousness and the path of wickedness. One should follow the path
of righteousness."
M: "That is true, sir. If a
thread has a single fibre sticking out, it cannot pass through the eye of a
needle."
MASTER:
"If a man finds a hair in the food he is chewing, he spits out the entire
morsel."
M: "But you say that the man who
has realized God cannot be injured by evil company. A blazing fire burns
up even a plantain-tree."
Saturday, July 14, 1883
SRI RAMAKRISHNA arrived
at Adhar's house in Calcutta. Rākhāl , M., and other devotees were with
the MASTER.
Adhar had arranged to have Rajnarayan, the famous singer, and his party, recite
the Chandi.
Rajnarayan began the recital in the
worship hall. He sang:
I
have surrendered my soul at the fearless feet of the Mother;
Am I afraid of Death any more? . . .
Am I afraid of Death any more? . . .
As the MASTER listened, he became filled
with divine fervour and joined the musicians. Now and then he improvised
an appropriate line. Suddenly he went into samādhi and stood still.
The singer sang again:
Who
is the Woman yonder who lights the field of battle?
Darker Her body gleams even than the darkest storm-cloud,
And from Her teeth there flash the lightning's blinding flames!
Dishevelled Her hair is flying behind as She rushes about,
Undaunted in this war between the gods and the demons.
Laughing Her terrible laugh, She slays the fleeing asuras,
And with Her dazzling flashes She bares the horror of war.
How beautiful on Her brow the drops of moisture appear!
About Her dense black hair the bees are buzzing in swarms;
The moon has veiled its face, beholding this Sea of Beauty.
Tell me, who can She be, this Sorceress? Wonder of wonders!
Śiva Himself, like a corpse, lies vanquished at Her feet.
Kamalakanta has guessed who She is, with the elephant's gait;
She is none other than Kāli, Mother of all the worlds.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA was in deep samādhi.
Darker Her body gleams even than the darkest storm-cloud,
And from Her teeth there flash the lightning's blinding flames!
Dishevelled Her hair is flying behind as She rushes about,
Undaunted in this war between the gods and the demons.
Laughing Her terrible laugh, She slays the fleeing asuras,
And with Her dazzling flashes She bares the horror of war.
How beautiful on Her brow the drops of moisture appear!
About Her dense black hair the bees are buzzing in swarms;
The moon has veiled its face, beholding this Sea of Beauty.
Tell me, who can She be, this Sorceress? Wonder of wonders!
Śiva Himself, like a corpse, lies vanquished at Her feet.
Kamalakanta has guessed who She is, with the elephant's gait;
She is none other than Kāli, Mother of all the worlds.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA was in deep samādhi.
Saturday, July 21, 1883
It was about four o'clock in the
afternoon when Sri Ramakrishna, with Ramlal and one or two other devotees,
started from Dakshineswar for Calcutta in a carriage. As the carriage
passed the gate of the Kāli temple, they met M. coming on foot with four
mangoes in his hand. The carriage stopped and M. saluted the MASTER.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA was
going to visit some of his devotees in Calcutta.
MASTER
(to M., with a smile): "Come with
us. We are going to Adhar's house."
M. got joyfully into the
carriage. Having received an English education, he did not believe in the
tendencies inherited from previous births. But he had admitted a few days
before that it was on account of Adhar's good tendencies from past births that
he showed such great devotion to the MASTER. Later on he had thought about this
subject and had discovered that he was not yet completely convinced about
inherited tendencies. He had come to Dakshineswar that day to discuss the
matter with Sri Ramakrishna.
MASTER:
"Well, what do you think of Adhar?"
M: "He has great yearning for
God."
MASTER:
"Adhar, too, speaks very highly of you."
M. remained silent awhile and then
began to speak of past tendencies.
M: "I haven't much faith in
rebirth and inherited tendencies. Will that in any way injure my devotion
to God?"
Everything is possible for God
MASTER:
"It is enough to believe that all is possible in God's creation.
Never allow the thought to cross your mind that your ideas are the only true
ones, and that those of others are false. Then God will explain
everything.
"What can a man understand of
God's activities? The facets of God's creation are infinite. I do not try
to understand God's actions at all. I have heard that everything is possible
in God's creation, and I always bear that in mind. Therefore I do not
give a thought to the world, but meditate on God alone. Once Hanuman was
asked, 'What day of the lunar month is it?' Hanuman said: 'I don't know
anything about the day of the month, the position of the moon and stars, or any
such things. I think of Rāma alone.'
"Can one ever understand the
work of God? He is so near; still it is not possible for us to know Him.
Balarama did not realize that Krishna was God."
M: "That is true, sir."
Maya is the cause of ignorance
MASTER:
"God has covered all with His maya. He doesn't let us know
anything. Maya is 'woman and gold'. He who puts maya aside to see
God, can see Him. Once, when I was explaining God's actions to someone,
God suddenly showed me the lake at Kamarpukur. I saw a man removing the
green scum and drinking the water. The water was clear as crystal.
God revealed to me that Satchidananda is covered by the scum of maya. He
who puts the green scum aside can drink the water.
"Let me tell you a very secret
experience. Once I had entered the wood near the pine-grove, and was
sitting there, when I had a vision of something like the hidden door of a
chamber. I couldn't see the inside of the chamber. I tried to bore
a hole in the door with a nail-knife, but did not succeed. As I bored,
the earth fell back into the hole and filled it. Then suddenly I made a
very big opening."
Uttering these words, the MASTER
remained silent. After a time he said: "These are very profound
words. I feel as if someone were pressing my mouth. . .
. I have seen with my own eyes that God dwells even in the sexual
organ. I saw Him once in the sexual intercourse of a dog and a bitch.
"The universe is conscious on
account of the Consciousness of God. Sometimes I find that this
Consciousness wriggles about, as it were, even in small fish."
The carriage came to the crossing at
Shovabazar in Calcutta. The MASTER continued, saying, "Sometimes I find
that the universe is saturated with the Consciousness of God, as the earth is
soaked with water in the rainy season.
"Well, I see so many visions,
but I never feel vain about them."
M. (with a smile): "That you
should speak of vanity, sir!"
MASTER:
"Upon my word, I don't feel vanity even in the slightest degree."
M: "There once lived a man in
Greece, Socrates by name. A voice from heaven said that he was wise among
men. Socrates was amazed at this revelation. He meditated on it a
long time in solitude and then realized its significance. He said to his
friends, 'I alone of all people have understood that I do not know anything.'
But every man believes he is wise. In reality all are ignorant."
MASTER:
"Now and then I think, 'What is it I know that makes so many people come
to me?' Vaishnavcharan was a great pundit. He used to say to me: 'I can
find in the scriptures all the things you talk about. But do you know why
I come to you? I come to hear them from your mouth.' "
M: "All your words tally with the
scriptures. Navadvip Goswami also said that the other day at the festival
at Pānihāti. You told us that day that by repeating the word 'Gitā' a
number of times one reverses it and it becomes 'tagi', which refers to
renunciation. Renunciation is the essence of the Gitā. Navadvip
Goswami supported your statement from the grammatical standpoint."
MASTER:
"Have you found anyone else resembling me-any pundit or holy man?"
M: "God has created you with His
own hands, whereas He has made others by machine. All others He has
created according to law."
MASTER
(laughing, to Ramlal and the other devotees): "Listen to what he is
saying!"
SRI RAMAKRISHNA laughed
for some time, and said at last. "Really and truly I have no
pride-no, not even the slightest bit."
M: "Knowledge does us good in one
respect at least; it makes us feel that we do not know anything, that we are
nothing."
MASTER:
"Right you are! I am nothing. I am nobody. "Do you
believe in English astronomy?"
M: "It is possible to make new discoveries
by applying the laws of Western astronomy. Observing the irregular
movement of Uranus, the astronomers looked through their telescopes and
discovered Neptune shining in the sky. They can also foretell
eclipses."
MASTER: "Yes,
that is so."
MASTER's visits to various devotees
The carriage drove on. They
were approaching Adhar's house. SRI RAMAKRISHNA said to M., "Dwell in the
truth and you will certainly realize God."
M: "You said the other day to
Navadvip Goswami:'O God, I want Thee. Please do not delude me with Thy
world-bewitching maya. I want to realize Thee.' "
MASTER:
"Yes, one should be able to say that from one's innermost soul."
SRI RAMAKRISHNA arrived
at Adhar's house and took a seat in the parlour. Ramlal, Adhar, M., and
the other devotees sat near him. Rākhāl was staying with his father
in Calcutta.
MASTER
(to Adhar): " Didn't you let Rākhāl know that I was coming?"
ADHAR: "Yes, sir. I have sent
him word."
Finding that the MASTER
was eager to see Rākhāl , Adhar at once sent his carriage to fetch him.
Adhar had been yearning to see the MASTER that day, but he had not definitely known
that SRI
RAMAKRISHNA was coming.
ADHAR: "You haven't been here for a
long time. I prayed to God today that you might come. I even shed
tears"
The MASTER was pleased and said with a
smile, "You don't mean that!"
It was dusk and the lamps were
lighted. SRI
RAMAKRISHNA saluted the Divine Mother with folded hands and sat
quietly absorbed in meditation. Then he began to chant the names of God
in his sweet voice: "Govinda! Govinda! Satchidananda! Hari! Hari!"
Every word he uttered showered nectar on the ears of the devotees.
Ramlal sang in praise of Kāli, the
Divine Mother:
Thy
name, I have heard, O Consort of Śiva, is the destroyer of our fear,
And so on Thee I cast my burden: Save me! Save me, O kindly Mother!
Out of Thy womb the world is born, and Thou it is that dost pervade it.
Art Thou Kāli? Art Thou Radha? Who can ever rightly say?
Mother, in every living creature Thou dost have Thy dwelling place;
As Kundalini Thou dost live in the lotus of the Muladhara.
Above it lies the Svadhisthana, where the four-petalled lotus blooms;
There also Thou dost make Thy home, O mystic power of Kundalini,
In the four petals of that flower, and in Vajrasana's six petals
At the navel is Manipura, the blue ten-petalled lotus flower;
Through the pathway of Sushumna, Thou dost ascend and enter there.
O Lady of the lotuses, in lotus blossoms Thou dost dwell!
Beyond them lies the Lake of Nectar, in the region of the heart,
Where the twelve-petalled lotus flower enchants the eye with scarlet flame.
When Thou dost open it, O Mother, touching it with Thy Lotus Feet,
The age-long darkness of the heart instantly scatters at Thy sight.
Above, in the throat, is the sixteen-petalled lotus flower, of smoky hue;
Within the petals of this flower there lies concealed a subtle space,
Transcending which, one sees at length the universe in Space dissolve.
And higher yet, between the eyebrows, blossoms the lotus of two petals,
Where the mind of man remains a prisoner and past controlling;
From this flower the mind desires to watch the sportive play of life.
Highest of all, within the head, the soul-enthralling centre is,
Where shines the thousand-petalled lotus, Mahadeva's dwelling place.
Having ascended to His throne, O Spouse of Śiva, sit beside Him!
Thou art the Primal Power, O Mother! She whose senses are controlled;
The yogis meditate on Thee as Uma, great Himalaya's daughter.
Thou who art the Power of Śiva! Put to death my ceaseless cravings;
Grant that I never fall again into the ocean of this world.
Mother, Thou art the Primal Power, Thou the five cosmic principles;
Who can ever hope to know Thee, who art beyond all principles?
Only for Thy bhaktas' sake dost Thou assume Thy various forms;
But when Thy devotee's five senses merge in the five elements,
Mother, it is Thyself alone that he beholds as formless Truth.
And so on Thee I cast my burden: Save me! Save me, O kindly Mother!
Out of Thy womb the world is born, and Thou it is that dost pervade it.
Art Thou Kāli? Art Thou Radha? Who can ever rightly say?
Mother, in every living creature Thou dost have Thy dwelling place;
As Kundalini Thou dost live in the lotus of the Muladhara.
Above it lies the Svadhisthana, where the four-petalled lotus blooms;
There also Thou dost make Thy home, O mystic power of Kundalini,
In the four petals of that flower, and in Vajrasana's six petals
At the navel is Manipura, the blue ten-petalled lotus flower;
Through the pathway of Sushumna, Thou dost ascend and enter there.
O Lady of the lotuses, in lotus blossoms Thou dost dwell!
Beyond them lies the Lake of Nectar, in the region of the heart,
Where the twelve-petalled lotus flower enchants the eye with scarlet flame.
When Thou dost open it, O Mother, touching it with Thy Lotus Feet,
The age-long darkness of the heart instantly scatters at Thy sight.
Above, in the throat, is the sixteen-petalled lotus flower, of smoky hue;
Within the petals of this flower there lies concealed a subtle space,
Transcending which, one sees at length the universe in Space dissolve.
And higher yet, between the eyebrows, blossoms the lotus of two petals,
Where the mind of man remains a prisoner and past controlling;
From this flower the mind desires to watch the sportive play of life.
Highest of all, within the head, the soul-enthralling centre is,
Where shines the thousand-petalled lotus, Mahadeva's dwelling place.
Having ascended to His throne, O Spouse of Śiva, sit beside Him!
Thou art the Primal Power, O Mother! She whose senses are controlled;
The yogis meditate on Thee as Uma, great Himalaya's daughter.
Thou who art the Power of Śiva! Put to death my ceaseless cravings;
Grant that I never fall again into the ocean of this world.
Mother, Thou art the Primal Power, Thou the five cosmic principles;
Who can ever hope to know Thee, who art beyond all principles?
Only for Thy bhaktas' sake dost Thou assume Thy various forms;
But when Thy devotee's five senses merge in the five elements,
Mother, it is Thyself alone that he beholds as formless Truth.
As Ramlal sang the lines:
Above,
in the throat, is the sixteen-petalled lotus flower, of smoky hue;
Within the petals of this flower there lies concealed a subtle space,
Transcending which, one sees at length the universe in Space dissolve,
Within the petals of this flower there lies concealed a subtle space,
Transcending which, one sees at length the universe in Space dissolve,
The MASTER said to M.:
"Listen. This is known as the vision of Satchidananda, the Formless
Brahman. The Kundalini, rising above the Visuddha chakra, enables one to
see everything as Ākāśa."
M: "Yes, sir."
MASTER:
"One attains the Absolute by going beyond the universe and its created
beings conjured up by maya. By passing beyond the Nada one goes into samādhi.
By repeating 'Om' one goes beyond the Nada and attains samādhi."
Adhar served SRI RAMAKRISHNA with fruits and
sweets. The MASTER left for Jadu Mallick's house.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA entered
the room in Jadu's house where the Divine Mother was worshipped. He
stood before the image, which had been decorated with flowers, garlands, and
sandal-paste, and which radiated a heavenly beauty and splendour. Lights
were burning before the pedestal. A priest was seated before the
image. The MASTER asked one of his companions to offer a rupee in the
shrine, according to the Hindu custom.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA stood
a long time with folded hands before the blissful image, the devotees standing
behind him. Gradually he went into samādhi, his body becoming motionless
and his eyes fixed.
With a long sigh he came back to the
world of the senses and said, still intoxicated with divine fervour,
"Mother, good-bye." But he could not leave the place. He
remained standing there. Addressing Ramlal, he said: "Please sing
that song. Then I shall be all right."
Ramlal sang:
O
Mother, Consort of Śiva, Thou hast deluded this world. . . .
The MASTER went to the drawing-room with
the devotees. Every now and then he said, "O Mother, please dwell in
my heart." Jadu was sitting in the drawing-room with his
friends. The MASTER sat down, still in an ecstatic mood, and
sang:
O
Mother, ever blissful as Thou art,
Do not deprive Thy worthless child of bliss! . . .
Do not deprive Thy worthless child of bliss! . . .
Finishing the song, he said to Jadu,
still in a state of divine fervour: "Well, sir, what shall I sing? Shall I
sing 'Mother, am I Thine eight-months child'? "
He sang:
Mother,
am I Thine eight-months child? Thy red eyes cannot frighten me!
My riches are Thy Lotus Feet, which Śiva holds upon His breast;
Yet, when I seek my heritage, I meet with excuses and delays.
A deed of gift I hold in my heart, attested by Thy Husband Śiva;
I shall sue Thee, if I must, and with a single point shall win.
If Thou dost oppose me, Thou wilt learn what sort of mother's son I am.
This bitterly contested suit between the Mother and Her son-
What sport it is! says Ramprasad. I shall not cease tormenting Thee
Till Thou Thyself, shalt yield the fight and take me in Thine arms at last.
My riches are Thy Lotus Feet, which Śiva holds upon His breast;
Yet, when I seek my heritage, I meet with excuses and delays.
A deed of gift I hold in my heart, attested by Thy Husband Śiva;
I shall sue Thee, if I must, and with a single point shall win.
If Thou dost oppose me, Thou wilt learn what sort of mother's son I am.
This bitterly contested suit between the Mother and Her son-
What sport it is! says Ramprasad. I shall not cease tormenting Thee
Till Thou Thyself, shalt yield the fight and take me in Thine arms at last.
Coming down nearly to a normal
state, the MASTER
said, "I shall take some of the Divine Mother's prasad." Then he ate
a little of it.
Jadu Mallick was sitting near him
with several friends, among whom were a few of his flatterers.
MASTER
(with a smile): "Well, why do you keep these buffoons with
you?"
JADU (with a smile):
"Suppose they are. Won't you redeem them?"
MASTER
(smiling): "The water of the Ganges cannot purify a wine-jar."
Jadu had promised the MASTER
that he would arrange a recital of the Chandi in his house. Some time had
elapsed, but he had not yet kept his promise.
MASTER:
"Well, what about the recital of the Chandi?"
JADU: "I have been busy with many
things; I haven't been able to arrange it."
MASTER:
"How is that? A man gives his word and doesn't take it back! 'The words of
a man are like the tusks of the elephant: they come out but do not go back.' A
man must be true to his word. What do you say?"
JADU (with a smile): "You are
right."
MASTER:
"You are a shrewd man. You do a thing after much calculation.
You are like the brahmin who selects a cow that eats very little, supplies
plenty of dung, and gives much milk." (All laugh.)
After a time he said to Jadu:
"I now understand your nature. It is half warm and half cold.
You are devoted to God and also to the world."
The MASTER and his devotees were served
by Jadu with sweets and fruit, and then the party left for the home of Khelat
Ghosh.
Khelat Ghosh's house was a big
mansion, but it looked deserted. As the MASTER entered the house he fell
into an ecstatic mood. M., Ramlal, and a few other devotees were with
him. Their host was Khelat Ghosh's brother-in-law. He was an old
man, a Vaishnava. His body was stamped with the name of God, according to
the Vaishnava custom, and he carried in his hand a small bag containing his
rosary. He had visited the MASTER, now and then, at Dakshineswar. But
most of the Vaishnavas held narrow religious views; they criticized the
Vedantists and the followers of the Śiva cult. SRI RAMAKRISHNA soon began to speak.
Dogmatism condemned
MASTER:
"It is not good to feel that one's own religion alone is true and all
others are false. God is one only, and not two. Different people
call on Him by different names: some as Allah, some as God, and others as
Krishna, Śiva, and Brahman. It is like the water in a lake. Some
drink it at one place and call it 'jal', others at another place and call it
'pani', and still others at a third place and call it 'water'. The Hindus
call it 'jal', the Christians 'water', and the Mussalmans 'pani'. But it
is one and the same thing. Opinions are but paths. Each religion is
only a path leading to God, as rivers come from different directions and
ultimately become one in the one ocean.
Oneness of God
"The Truth established in the
Vedas, the Puranas, and the Tantras is but one Satchidananda. In the
Vedas It is called Brahman, in the Puranas It is called Krishna, Rāma, and so
on, and in the Tantras It is called Śiva. The one Satchidananda is called
Brahman, Krishna, and Śiva."
The devotees were silent.
A VAISHNAVA DEVOTEE: "Sir, why
should one think of God at all"
MASTER:
"If a man really has that knowledge, then he is indeed liberated though
living in a body.
Shallow faith of the worldly-minded
"Not all, by any means, believe
in God. They simply talk. The worldly-minded have heard from
someone that God exists and that everything happens by His will; but it is not
their inner belief.
"Do you know what a worldly
man's idea of God is like? It is like the children's swearing by God when they
quarrel. They have heard the word while listening to their elderly aunts
quarreling.
"Is it possible for all to
comprehend God? God has created the good and the bad, the devoted and the
impious, the faithful and the sceptical. The wonders that we see all
exist in His creation. In one place there is more manifestation of His
Power, in another less. The sun's light is better reflected by water than
by earth, and still better by a mirror. Again, there are different levels
among the devotees of God: superior, mediocre, and inferior. All this has
been described in the Gitā."
VAISHNAVA: "True, sir."
Various classes of devotees
MASTER:
"The inferior devotee says, 'God exists, but He is very far off, up there
in heaven.' The mediocre devotee says, 'God exists in all beings as life and
consciousness.' The superior devotee says: 'It is God Himself who has become
everything; whatever I see is only a form of God. It is He alone who has
become maya, the universe, and all living beings. Nothing exists but
God.' "
VAISHNAVA: "Does anyone ever attain that
state of mind?"
Signs of God-vision
MASTER:
"One cannot attain it unless one has seen God. But there are signs
that a man has had the vision of God. A man who has seen God sometimes
behaves like a madman: he laughs, weeps, dances, and sings. Sometimes he
behaves like a child, a child five years old-guileless, generous, without
vanity, unattached to anything, not under the control of any of the gunas,
always blissful. Sometimes he behaves like a ghoul: he doesn't
differentiate between things pure and things impure; he sees no difference
between things clean and things unclean. And sometimes he is like an
inert thing, staring vacantly: he cannot do any work; he cannot strive for
anything."
Was the MASTER making a veiled reference to
his own states of mind?
Knowledge and ignorance
MASTER
(to the Vaishnava devotee): "The feeling of 'Thee and Thine' is the
outcome of Knowledge; 'I and mine' comes from ignorance. Knowledge makes
one feel: 'O God, Thou art the Doer and I am Thy instrument.
O God, to Thee belongs all-body, mind, house, family, living beings, and the universe. All these are Thine. Nothing belongs to me.'
O God, to Thee belongs all-body, mind, house, family, living beings, and the universe. All these are Thine. Nothing belongs to me.'
"An ignorant person says, 'Oh,
God is there-very far off.' The man of Knowledge knows that God is right here,
very near, in the heart; that He has assumed all forms and dwells in all hearts
as their Inner Controller."
Sunday, July 22, 1883
Taking advantage of the holiday,
many householder devotees visited SRI RAMAKRISHNA in his room at the Dakshineswar
temple garden. The Young devotees, mostly students, generally came on
week-days. Sometimes the MASTER asked his intimate disciples to come on a
Tuesday or a Saturday, days that he considered very auspicious for special
religious instruction. Adhar, Rākhāl , and M. had come from Calcutta in a
hired carriage.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA had
enjoyed a little rest after his midday meal. The room had an atmosphere
of purity and holiness. On the walls hung pictures of gods and goddesses,
among them one of Christ rescuing the drowning Peter. Outside the room
were plants laden with fragrant flowers, and the Ganges could be seen flowing
toward the south. The MASTER was seated on the small couch, facing the
north, and the devotees sat on mats and carpets spread on the floor. All
eyes were directed toward him. Mani Mallick, an old Brahmo devotee about
sixty-five years of age, came to pay his respects to the MASTER. He had returned a few
months earlier from a pilgrimage to Benares and was recounting his experiences
to Sri Ramakrishna.
Difficulty of the Vedantic method
MANI MALLICK: "A monk whom I met in Benares
said that no religious experience is possible without the control of the
sense-organs. Nothing could be achieved by merely crying, 'God! God!'
"
MASTER:
"Do you understand the views of teachers like him? According to them, one
must first practise spiritual discipline: self-restraint, self-control,
forbearance, and the like. Their aim is to attain Nirvāna. They are
followers of Vedānta. They constantly discriminate, saying, 'Brahman
alone is real, and the world illusory.' But this is an extremely difficult
path. If the world is illusory, then you too are illusory. The
teacher who gives the instruction is equally illusory. His words, too,
are as illusory as a dream.
"But this experience is beyond
the reach of the ordinary man. Do you know what it is like? If you burn
camphor nothing remains. When wood is burnt at least a little ash is
left. Finally, after the last analysis, the devotee goes into
samādhi. Then he knows nothing whatsoever of 'I', 'you', or the universe.
"Padmalochan was a man of deep
wisdom. He had great respect for me, though at that time I constantly
repeated the name of the Divine Mother. He was the court pundit of the
Maharaja of Burdwan. Once he came to Calcutta and went to live in a
garden house near kamarhati. I felt a desire to see him and sent Hriday
there to learn if the pundit had any vanity. I was told that he had
none. Then I met him. Though a man of great knowledge and
scholarship, he began to weep on hearing me sing Ramprasad's devotional
songs. We talked together a long while; conversation with nobody else
gave me such satisfaction. He said to me, 'Give up the desire for the
company of devotees; otherwise people of all sorts will come to you and make
you deviate from your spiritual ideal.' Once he entered into a controversy, by
correspondence, with Utshavananda, Vaishnavcharan's guru. He told me an
interesting incident. Once a meeting was called to decide which of the
two deities, Śiva or Brahma, was the greater. Unable to come to any
decision, the pundits at last referred the matter to Padmalochan. With
characteristic guilelessness he said: 'How do I know? Neither I nor any of my
ancestors back to the fourteenth generation have seen Śiva or Brahma.' About
the renunciation of 'woman and gold', he said to me one day: 'Why have
you given up those things? Such distinctions as "This is money and that is
clay" are the outcome of ignorance.' What could I say to that? I replied:
'I don't know all these things, my dear sir. But for my part, I cannot
relish such things as money and the like.'
"There was a pundit who was
tremendously vain. He did not believe in the forms of God. But who
can understand the inscrutable ways of the Divine? God revealed Himself to him
as the Primal Power. This vision made the pundit unconscious for a long
time. After regaining partial consciousness he uttered only the sound
'Ka! Ka! Ka!' He could not fully pronounce 'Kāli'."
A DEVOTEE: "Sir, you met Pundit
Vidyasagar. What did you think of him?"
MASTER:
"Vidyasagar has both scholarship and charity, but he lacks inner
vision. Gold lies hidden within him. Had he but found it out, his
activities would have been reduced; finally they would have stopped
altogether. Had he but known that God resides in his heart, his mind
would have been directed to God in thought and meditation. Some persons
must perform selfless work a long time before they can practise dispassion and
direct their minds to the spiritual ideal and at last be absorbed in God.
Charity and attachment
"The activities that Vidyasagar
is engaged in are good. Charity is very noble. There is a great
deal of difference between daya, compassion, and maya, attachment. Daya
is good, but not maya. Maya is love for one's relatives-one's wife,
children, brother, sister, nephew, father, and mother. But daya is the
same love for all created beings without any distinction."
M: "Is daya also a bondage?"
The three gunas
MASTER:
"Yes, it is. But that concept is something far beyond the ordinary
man. Daya springs from sattva. Sattva preserves, rajas creates, and
tamas destroys. But Brahman is beyond the three gunas. It is beyond
Prakriti.
"None of the three gunas can
reach Truth; they are like robbers, who cannot come to a public place for fear
of being arrested. Sattva, rajas, and tamas are like so many robbers.
"Listen to a story. Once
a man was going through a forest, when three robbers fell upon him and robbed
him of all his possessions. One of the robbers said, 'What's the use of
keeping this man alive?' So saying, he was about to kill him with his
sword, when the second robber interrupted him, saying: 'Oh, no! What is
the use of killing him? Tie him hand and foot and leave him here.' The robbers
bound his hands and feet and went away.
After a while the third robber
returned and said to the man: 'Ah, I am sorry. Are you hurt? I will
release you from your bonds.' After setting the man free, the thief said: 'Come
with me. I will take you to the public highway.' After a long time they
reached the road. Then the robber said: 'Follow this road. Over
there is your house.' At this the man said: 'Sir, you have been very good to
me. Come with me to my house ' 'Oh, no!' the robber replied. 'I
can't go there. The police will know it.'
This world itself is the
forest. The three robbers prowling here are sattva, rajas, and
tamas. It is they that rob a man of the Knowledge of Truth. Tamas
wants to destroy him. Rajas binds him to the world. But sattva
rescues him from the clutches of rajas and tamas. Under the protection of
sattva, man is rescued from anger, passion, and the other evil effects of
tamas. Further, sattva loosens the bonds of the world. But sattva
also is a robber. It cannot give him the ultimate Knowledge of Truth,
though it shows him the road leading to the Supreme Abode of God. Setting
him on the path, sattva tells hiM: 'Look
yonder. There is your home.' Even sattva is far away from the Knowledge
of Brahman.
Nature of Brahman cannot he described
"What Brahman is cannot be
described. Even he who knows It cannot talk about It. There is a
saying that a boat, once reaching the 'black waters' of the ocean, cannot come
back.
Parable of the four friends
"Once four friends, in the
course of a walk, saw a place enclosed by a wall. The wall was very
high. They all became eager to know what was inside. One of them
climbed to the top of the wall. What he saw on looking inside made him
speechless with wonder. He only cried,'Ah! Ah!' and dropped in. He
could not give any information about what he saw. The others, too,
climbed the wall, uttered the same cry, 'Ah! Ah!', and jumped in. Now who
could tell what was inside?
"Sages like Jadabharata and
Dattatreya, after realizing Brahman, could not describe It. A man's 'I'
completely disappears when he goes into samādhi after attaining the Knowledge
of Brahman. That is why Ramprasad sang, addressing his mind:
If you should find the task too
hard, Call upon Ramprasad for help.
The mind must completely merge
itself in Knowledge. But that is not enough. 'Ramprasad', that is,
the principle of 'I', must vanish too. Then alone does one get the
Knowledge of Brahman."
A DEVOTEE: "Sir, is it possible then that
Sukadeva did not have the ultimate Knowledge?"
MASTER:
"According to some people, Sukadeva only saw and touched the Ocean of
Brahman; he did not dive into It. That is why he could return to the
world and impart religious instruction. According to others, he returned
to the world of name and form, after attaining the Knowledge of Brahman, for
the purpose of teaching others. He had to recite the Bhagavata to King
Parikshit and had to teach people in various ways; therefore God did not
destroy his 'I' altogether. God kept in him the 'ego of Knowledge.'
"
God and religious organization
DEVOTEE: "Can one keep up an
organization after attaining the Knowledge of Brahman?"
MASTER:
"Once I talked to Keshab Sen about the Knowledge of Brahman. He
asked me to explain it further. I said, 'If I proceed further, then you
won't be able to preserve your organization and following.' 'Then please stop
here!' replied Keshab. (All laugh.) But still I said to Keshab: ' "I"
and "mine" indicate ignorance. Without ignorance one cannot
have such a feeling as "I am the doer; these are my wife, children,
possessions, name and fame".' Thereupon Keshab said, 'Sir, if one
gave up the "I", nothing whatsoever would remain.' I reassured
him and said: 'I am not asking you to give up all of the "I".
You should give up only the "unripe I". The "unripe
I" makes one feel: "I am the doer. These are my wife and
children. I am a teacher." Renounce this. "unripe I"
and keep the "ripe I", which will make you feel that you are the
servant of God, His devotee, and that God is the Doer and you are His
instrument.' "
DEVOTEE: "Can the 'ripe I' form an
organization?"
Two kinds of ego
MASTER:
"I said to Keshab Sen that the 'I' that says, 'I am a leader, I have
formed this party, I am teaching people', is the 'unripe I'. It is very
difficult to preach religion. It is not possible to do so without
receiving the commandment of God. The permission of God is
necessary. Sukadeva had a command from God to recite the Bhagavata.
If, after realizing God, a man gets His command and becomes a preacher or
teacher, then that preaching or teaching does no harm. His 'I' is not
'unripe'; it is 'ripe'.
"I asked Keshab to give up this
'unripe I'. The ego that feels, 'I am the servant of God and lover of
God' does not injure one. I said to hiM:
'You have been constantly talking of your organization and your
followers. But people also go away from your organization.' Keshab
answered: 'It is true, sir. After staying in it several years, people go
to another organization. What is worse, on deserting me they abuse me
right and left.' 'Why don't you study their nature?' I said. 'Is there
any good in making anybody and everybody a disciple?'
"I said to Keshab further: 'You
should accept the Divine Mother, the Primal Energy. Brahman is not
different from Its Śakti. What is Brahman is also Śakti. As long as
a man remains conscious of the body, he is conscious of duality. It is
only when a man tries to describe what he sees that he finds duality.'
Keshab later on recognized Kāli.
"One day when Keshab was here
with his disciples, I said to him that I would like to hear him preach.
He delivered a lecture in the chandni. Then we all sat by the
bathing-ghat and had a long conversation. I said to hiM: 'It is Bhagavan alone who in one form appears
as bhakta, and in another as the Bhagavata. Please repeat
"Bhagavata-Bhakta-Bhagavan".' Keshab and his disciples repeated the
words. Then I asked him to repeat 'Guru-Krishna-Vaishnava'.
Thereupon Keshab said: 'Sir, I should not go so far now. People will say
that I have become an orthodox Hindu.'
"It is extremely difficult to
go beyond the three gunas. One cannot reach that state without having
realized God. Man dwells in the realm of maya. Maya does not permit
him to see God. It has made him a victim of ignorance.
Man's inordinate attachment
"Once Hriday brought a
bull-calf here. I saw, one day, that he had tied it with a rope in the
garden, so that it might graze there. I asked him, 'Hriday, why do you
tie the calf there every day?' 'Uncle,' he said, 'I am going to send this calf
to our village. When it grows strong I shall yoke it to the plough.' As
soon as I heard these words I was stunned to think: 'How inscrutable is the
play of the divine maya! Kamarpukur and Sihore are so far away from Calcutta!
This poor calf must go all that way. Then it will grow, and at length it
will be yoked to the plough. This is indeed the world! This is indeed
maya!' I fell down unconscious. Only after a long time did I regain
consciousness."
It was three or four o'clock in the
afternoon. M. found SRI RAMAKRISHNA seated on the couch in an
abstracted mood. After some time he heard him talking to the Divine
Mother. The MASTER said, "O Mother, why hast Thou given
him only a particle?" Remaining silent a few moments, he added: "I
understand it, Mother. That little bit will be enough for him and will
serve Thy purpose. That little bit will enable him to teach people."
Did the MASTER thus transmit spiritual
powers to his disciples? Did he thus come to know that his disciples, after
him, would go out into the world as teachers of men?
Rākhāl was in the room. SRI RAMAKRISHNA was
still in a state of partial consciousness when he said to Rākhāl : "You
were angry with me, weren't you? Do you know why I made you angry? There was a
reason. Only then would the medicine work. The surgeon first brings
an abscess to a head. Only then does he apply a herb so that it may burst
and dry up."
After a pause he went on: "Yes,
I have found Hazra to be like a piece of dry wood. Then why does he live
here? This has a meaning too. The play is enlivened by the presence of
trouble-makers like Jatila and Kutila.
(To M.) "One must accept the forms
of God. Do you know the meaning of the image of Jagaddhatri? She is the
Bearer of the Universe. Without her support and protection the universe
would fall from its place and be destroyed. The Divine Mother,
Jagaddhatri, reveals Herself in the heart of one who can control the mind,
which may be compared to an elephant."
RĀKHĀL : "The mind is a mad
elephant."
MASTER:
"Therefore the lion, the carrier of the Divine Mother, keeps it under
control."
It was dusk. The evening
service began in the temples. SRI RAMAKRISHNA was chanting the names of the gods
and goddesses. He was seated on the small couch, with folded hands, and
became absorbed in contemplation of the Divine Mother. The world outside
was flooded with moonlight, and the devotees inside the MASTER's room sat in silence and
looked at his serene face.
In the mean time Govinda of
Belgharia and some of his friends had entered the room. SRI RAMAKRISHNA was
still in a semi-conscious state. After a few minutes he said to the
devotees: "Tell me your doubts. I shall explain everything."
Govinda and the other devotees
looked thoughtful.
Black complexion of the Divine Mother
GOVINDA: "Revered sir, why does the
Divine Mother have a black complexion?"
MASTER:
"You see Her as black because you are far away from Her. Go near and
you will find Her devoid of all colour. The water of a lake appears black
from a distance. Go near and take the water in your hand, and you will
see that it has no colour at all. Similarly, the sky looks blue from a
distance. But look at the atmosphere near you; it has no colour.
The nearer you come to God, the more you will realize that He has neither name
nor form. If you move away from the Divine Mother, you will find Her blue,
like the grass-flower. Is Syama male or female? A man once saw the image
of the Divine Mother wearing a sacred thread. He said to the worshipper:
'What? You have put the sacred thread on the Mother's neck!' The worshipper
said: 'Brother, I see that you have truly known the Mother. But I have
not yet been able to find out whether She is male or female; that is why I have
put the sacred thread on Her image.'
"That which is Syama is also
Brahman. That which has form, again, is without form. That which
has attributes, again, has no attributes. Brahman is Śakti; Śakti is
Brahman. They are not two. These are only two aspects, male and
female, of the same Reality, Existence-Knowledge-Bliss Absolute."
GOVINDA: "What is the meaning of
'yogamaya'?"
MASTER:
"It signifies the yoga, or union, of Purusha and Prakriti. Whatever
you perceive in the universe is the outcome of this union. Take the image
of Śiva and Kāli. Kāli stands on the bosom of Śiva; Śiva lies under Her
feet like a corpse; Kāli looks at Śiva. All this denotes the union of
Purusha and Prakriti. Purusha is inactive; therefore Śiva lies on the
ground like a corpse. Prakriti performs all Her activities in conjunction
with Purusha. Thus She creates, preserves, and destroys. That is
also the meaning of the conjoined images of Radha and Krishna. On account
of that union, again, the images are slightly inclined toward each other.
"To denote this union, Sri
Krishna wears a pearl in His nose, Radha a blue stone in hers. Radha has
a fair complexion, bright as the pearl. Sri Krishna's is blue. For
this reason Radha wears the blue stone. Further, Krishna's apparel is
yellow, and Radha's blue.
"Who is the best devotee of
God? It is he who sees, after the realization of Brahman, that God alone has
become all living beings, the universe, and the twenty-four cosmic
principles. One must discriminate at first, saying 'Not this, not this',
and reach the roof. After that one realizes that the steps are made of
the same materials as the roof, namely, brick, lime, and brick-dust. The
devotee realizes that it is Brahman alone that has become all these-the living
beings, the universe, and so on.
"Mere dry reasoning-I spit on
it! I have no use for it! (The MASTER spits on the ground.)
"Why should I make myself dry
through mere reasoning? May I have unalloyed love for the Lotus Feet of God as
long as the consciousness of 'I' and 'you' remains with me!
(To Govinda) "Sometimes I say,
'Thou art verily I, and I am verily Thou.' Again I feel, 'Thou art Thou.'
Then I do not find any trace of 'I'. It is Śakti alone that becomes
flesh as God Incarnate. According to one school of thought, Rāma
and Krishna are but two waves in the Ocean of Absolute Bliss and Consciousness.
Seeing God in everything
"Chaitanya, Consciousness, is
awakened after Advaita-jnāna, the Knowledge of the non-dual Brahman. Then
one perceives that God alone exists in all beings as Consciousness. After
this realization comes Ānanda, Bliss. Advaita, Chaitanya, and Nityananda.
(to M.)
"Let me ask you not to disbelieve in the forms of God. Have faith in
God's forms. Meditate on that form of God which appeals to your mind.
(To Govinda)
"The fact is that one does not feel the longing to know or see God as long
as one wants to enjoy worldly objects. The child forgets everything when
he plays with his toys. Try to cajole him away from play with a
sweetmeat; you will not succeed. He will eat only a bit of it. When
he relishes neither the sweetmeat nor his play, then he says, 'I want to go to
my mother.' He doesn't care for the sweetmeat any more. If a man whom he
doesn't know and has never seen says to the child, 'Come along; I shall take you
to your mother', the child follows him. The child will go with anyone who
will carry him to his mother.
The soul becomes restless for God
when one is through with the enjoyment of worldly things. Then a person
has only one thought-how to realize God. He listens to whatever anyone
says to him about God."
M. (to himself): "Alas! The soul
becomes restless for God only when one is through with the enjoyment of worldly
things."
August 18, 1883
Mystery of Divine Incarnation
SRI RAMAKRISHNA was
at Balarām Bose's house in Calcutta. He was explaining the mystery of
Divine Incarnation to the devotees.
MASTER:
"In order to bring people spiritual knowledge, an Incarnation of God lives
in the world in the company of devotees, cherishing an attitude of love for
God. It is like going up and coming down the stairs after having once
reached the roof. In order to reach the roof, other people should follow
the path of devotion, as long as they have not attained Knowledge and become
free of desire. The roof can be reached only when all desires are done
away with. The shopkeeper does not go to bed before finishing his
accounts. He goes to sleep only when his accounts are finished.
(To M.)
"A man will certainly succeed if he will take the plunge. Success is
sure for such a man.
"Well, what do you think of the
worship conducted by Keshab, Shivanath, and the other Brahmo leaders?"
M: "They are satisfied, as you
say, with describing the garden, but they seldom speak of seeing the MASTER
of the garden. Describing the garden is the beginning and end of their
worship."
MASTER:
"You are right. Our only duty is to seek the MASTER of the garden and speak to
Him. The only purpose of life is to realize God."
SRI RAMAKRISHNA then
went to Adhar's house. After dusk he sang and danced in Adhar's
drawing-room. M., Rākhāl , and other devotees were present. After
the music he sat down, still in an ecstatic mood. He said to Rākhāl :
"This religious fervour is not like rain in the rainy season, which comes
in torrents and goes in torrents. It is like an image of Śiva that has
not been set up by human hands but is a natural one that has sprung up, as it
were, from the bowels of the earth. The other day you left Dakshineswar
in a temper. I prayed to the Divine Mother to forgive you."
The MASTER was still in an abstracted
mood and said to Adhar, "My son, meditate on the Deity whose name you
chanted." With these words he touched Adhar's tongue with his finger and
wrote something on it. Did the MASTER thereby impart spirituality to Adhar?
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