Chapter
17
M. AT DAKSHINESWAR (I)
Tuesday, December
18, 1883
SRI RAMAKRISHNA was seated in his room with his
devotees. He spoke highly of Devendranath Tagore's love of God and
renunciation, and then said, pointing to Rākhāl and the other young
devotees, "Devendra is a good man; but blessed indeed are those young
aspirants who, like Sukadeva, practise renunciation from their very boyhood and
think of God day and night without being involved in worldly life.
Nature of worldly people
"The
worldly man always has some desire or other, though at times he shows much
devotion to God. Once Mathur Babu was entangled in a lawsuit. He
said to me in the shrine of Kāli, 'Sir, please offer this flower to the Divine
Mother.' I offered it unsuspectingly, but he firmly believed that he would
attain his objective if I offered the flower.
"What devotion Rati's mother had! How often she used to
come here and how much she served me! She was a Vaishnava. One day she
noticed that I ate the food offered at the Kāli temple, and that stopped her
coming. Her devotion to God was one-sided. It isn't possible to
understand a person right away."
It was a winter morning, and the MASTER was sitting near the east
door of his room, wrapped in his moleskin shawl. He looked at the sun and
suddenly went into samādhi. His eyes stopped blinking and he lost all
consciousness of the outer world. After a long time he came down to the
plane of the sense world. Rākhāl , Hazra, M., and other devotees were
seated near him.
MASTER (to Hazra):
"The state of samādhi is certainly inspired by love. Once, at
Syambazar, they arranged a kirtan at Natavar Goswami's house. There I had
a vision of Krishna and the gopis of Vrindāvan. I felt that my subtle
body was walking at Krishna's heels.
"I went into samādhi when similar devotional songs were
sung at the Hari Sabha in Jorashanko in Calcutta. That day they feared I
might give up the body."
After
the MASTER
had finished his bath, he again spoke of the ecstatic love of the gopis.
He said to M. and the other devotees: "One should accept the fervent
attachment of the gopis to their beloved Krishna. Sing songs like this:
Tell me, friend, how far is
the grove
Where Krishna, my Beloved, dwells?
His fragrance reaches me even here;
But I am tired and can walk no farther."
Where Krishna, my Beloved, dwells?
His fragrance reaches me even here;
But I am tired and can walk no farther."
Again
he sang:
I am not going home, O friend,
For there it is hard for me to chant my Krishna's name. . . .
For there it is hard for me to chant my Krishna's name. . . .
SRI RAMAKRISHNA had vowed to offer green coconut
and sugar to Siddhesvari, the Divine Mother, for Rākhāl 's welfare. He
asked M. whether he would pay for the offerings.
That afternoon the MASTER, accompanied by M., Rākhāl , and some other
devotees, set out in a carriage for the temple of Siddhesvari in
Calcutta. On the way the offerings were purchased. On reaching the
temple, the MASTER
asked the devotees to offer the fruit and sugar to the Divine Mother.
They saw the priests and their friends playing cards in the temple. SRI RAMAKRISHNA
said: "To play cards in a temple! One should think of God here."
From the temple the MASTER went to Jadu Mallick's house. Jadu
was surrounded by his admirers, well-dressed dandies. He welcomed the MASTER.
MASTER ((with a smile): "Why do
you keep so many clowns and flatterers with you?"
JADU
(smiling): "That you may liberate them." (Laughter.)
MASTER: "Flatterers think that the
rich man will loosen his purse-strings for them. But it is very difficult
to get anything from him. Once a jackal saw a bullock and would not give
up his company. The bullock roamed about and the jackal followed him.
The jackal thought: 'There hang the bullock's testicles. Some time
or other they will drop to the ground and I shall eat them.' When the bullock
slept on the ground, the jackal lay down too, and when the bullock moved about,
the jackal followed him. Many days passed in this way, but the bullock's
testicles still clung to his body. The jackal went away
disappointed. (All laugh.) That also happens to flatterers."
Jadu and his mother served refreshments to SRI RAMAKRISHNA
and the devotees.
Wednesday, December 19, 1883
It
was nine o'clock in the morning. SRI RAMAKRISHNA was talking to M. near the
bel-tree at Dakshineswar. This tree, under which the MASTER had practised the most
austere sadhana, stood in the northern end of the temple garden. Farther
north ran a high wall, and just outside was the government magazine. West
of the bel-tree was a row of tall pines that rustled in the wind. Below
the trees flowed the Ganges, and to the south could be seen the sacred grove of
the Panchavati. The dense trees and underbrush hid the temples. No
noise of the outside world reached the bel-tree.
MASTER (to M.):
"But one cannot realize God without renouncing 'woman and gold'."
M: "Why? Did not Vasishtha say to Rāma, 'O Rāma, You may
renounce the world if the world is outside God'?"
MASTER (smiling): "He said that to
Rāma so that Rāma might destroy Ravana. Rāma accepted the life of a
householder and married to fulfil that mission."
M. stood there like a log, stunned and speechless.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA went to the Panchavati on his way
back to his room. M. accompanied
him. It was then about ten o'clock.
Path of the Impersonal God
M:
"Sir, is there no spiritual discipline leading to realization of the
Impersonal God?"
MASTER: "Yes, there is. But the path is extremely difficult. After intense austerities the rishis of olden times realized God as their inner most consciousness and experienced the real nature of Brahman. But how hard they had to work! They went out of their dwellings in the early morning and all day practised austerities and meditation. Returning home at nightfall, they took a light supper of fruit and roots.
MASTER: "Yes, there is. But the path is extremely difficult. After intense austerities the rishis of olden times realized God as their inner most consciousness and experienced the real nature of Brahman. But how hard they had to work! They went out of their dwellings in the early morning and all day practised austerities and meditation. Returning home at nightfall, they took a light supper of fruit and roots.
"But an aspirant cannot succeed in this form of
spiritual discipline if his mind is stained with worldliness even in the
slightest degree. The mind must withdraw totally from all objects of
form, taste, smell, touch, and sound. Only thus does it become
pure. The Pure Mind is the same as the Pure Ātman. But such a mind
must be altogether free from 'woman and gold'. When it becomes pure, one
has another experience. One realizes: 'God alone is the Doer, and I am
His instrument.' One does not feel oneself to be absolutely necessary to
others either in their misery or in their happiness.
"Once a wicked man beat into unconsciousness a monk who
lived in a monastery. On regaining consciousness he was asked by his
friends, 'Who is feeding you milk?' The monk said, 'He who beat me is now
feeding me.' "
M: "Yes, sir. I know that story."
Obstacles to samādhi
MASTER: "It is not enough to know
it. One must assimilate its meaning. It is the thought of worldly
objects that prevents the mind from going into samādhi. One becomes
established in samādhi when one is completely rid of worldliness. It is
possible for me to give up the body in samādhi; but I have a slight desire to
enjoy the love of God and the company of His devotees. Therefore I pay a
little attention to my body.
"There is another kind of samādhi, called unmana
samādhi. One attains it by suddenly gathering the dispersed mind.
You understand what that is, don't you?"
M: "Yes, sir."
MASTER: "Yes. It is the sudden
withdrawal of the dispersed mind to the Ideal. But that samādhi does not
last long. Worldly thoughts intrude and destroy it. The yogi slips
down from his yoga.
"At Kamarpukur I have seen the mongoose living in its
hole up in the wall. It feels snug there. Sometimes people tie a
brick to its tail; then the pull of the brick makes it come out of its
hole. Every time the mongoose tries to be comfortable inside the hole, it
has to come out because of the pull of the brick. Such is the
effect of brooding on worldly objects that it makes the yogi stray from the
path of yoga.
"Worldly people may now and then experience
samādhi. The lotus blooms, no doubt, when the sun is up; but its petals
close again when the sun is covered by a cloud. Worldly thought is the
cloud."
M: "Isn't it possible to develop both jnāna and bhakti by
the practice of spiritual discipline?"
MASTER: "Through the path of bhakti a
man may attain them both. If it is necessary, God gives him the Knowledge
of Brahman. But a highly qualified aspirant may develop both jnāna and
bhakti at the same time. Such is the case with the Isvarakotis-Chaitanya
for example. But the case of ordinary devotees is different.
"There are five kinds of light: the light of a lamp,
the light of various kinds of fire, the light of the moon, the light of the
sun, and lastly the combined light of the sun and the moon. Bhakti is the
light of the moon, and jnāna the light of the sun.
"Sometimes it is seen that the sun has hardly set when
the moon rises in the sky. In an Incarnation of God one sees, at the same
time, the sun of Knowledge and the moon of Love.
"Can everyone, by the mere wish, develop Knowledge and
Love at the same time? It depends on the person. One bamboo is more
hollow than another. Is it possible for all to comprehend the nature of
God? Can a one seer pot hold five seers of milk?"
M: "But what about the grace of God? Through His grace a
camel can pass through the eye of a needle."
MASTER: "But is it possible to obtain
God's grace just like that? A beggar may get a penny, if he asks for it.
But suppose he asks you right off for his train fare: How about that?"
M. stood silent. The MASTER, too, remained silent.
Suddenly he said: "Yes, it is true. Through the grace of God some
may get both jnāna and bhakti."
M. saluted the MASTER and went back to the bel-tree.
At midday, finding that M. had not yet returned, SRI RAMAKRISHNA
started toward the bel-tree; but on reaching the Panchavati he met M. carrying
his prayer carpet and water-jug. M. saluted the MASTER.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA said to M:
"I was coming to look for you. Because of your delay I thought you
might have scaled the wall and run away. I watched your eyes this morning
and felt apprehensive lest you should go away like Narayan Shastri. Then
I said to myself: 'No, he won't run away. He thinks a great deal before
doing anything.' "
The same night the MASTER talked to M.,
Rākhāl , Lātu, Harish, and a few other devotees.
MASTER (to M.):
"Some people give a metaphysical interpretation of the Vrindāvan episode
of Sri Krishna's life. What do you say about it?"
M: "There are various opinions. What if there are?
You have told us the story of Bhishmadeva's weeping, on his bed of arrows,
because he could not understand anything of God's ways.
"Again, you have told us that Hanuman used to say: 'I
don't know any thing about the day of the week, the position of the stars, and
so forth. I only meditate on Rāma.'
"Further, you have said to us that in the last analysis
there are two things only. Brahman and Its Power. You have also
said that, after the attainment of Brahmajnana, a man realizes these two to be
One, the One that has no two"
MASTER: "Yes, that is true.
Your ideal is to reach the goal. You may reach it by going either through
a thorny forest or along a good road.
"Diverse opinions certainly exist. Nangta used to
say that the monks could not be feasted because of the diversity of their
views. Once a feast was arranged for the sannyasis. Monks belonging
to many sects were invited. Everyone claimed that his sect should be fed
first, but no conclusion could be arrived at. At last they all went away
and the food had to be given to the prostitutes."
M: "Totapuri was indeed a great soul."
MASTER: "But Hazra says he was an
ordinary man. There's no use in discussing these things. Everyone
says that his watch alone gives the correct time.
"You see, Narayan Shastri developed a spirit of intense
renunciation. He was a great scholar. He gave up his wife and went
away. A man attains yoga when he completely effaces 'woman and gold' from
his mind. With some, the characteristics of the yogi are well marked.
"I shall have to tell you something of the six
centres. The mind of the yogi passes through these, and he realizes God
through His grace. Have you heard of the six centres?"
M: "These are the 'seven planes' of the Vedānta."
MASTER: "Not the Vedānta, but the
Vedas. Do you know what the six centres are like? They are the 'lotuses'
in the subtle body. The yogis see them. They are like the fruits
and leaves of a wax tree."
M: "Yes, sir. The yogis can perceive them. I
have read that there is a kind of glass through which a tiny object looks very
big. Likewise, through yoga one can see those subtle lotuses."
Following SRI RAMAKRISHNA's direction, M. spent the night in the hut at the
Panchavati. In the early hours of the morning he was singing alone:
I am without the least benefit of prayer and
austerity, O Lord!
I am the lowliest of the lowly; make me pure with Thy hallowed touch.
One by one I pass my days in hope of reaching Thy Lotus Feet,
But Thee, alas, I have not found. . . .
I am the lowliest of the lowly; make me pure with Thy hallowed touch.
One by one I pass my days in hope of reaching Thy Lotus Feet,
But Thee, alas, I have not found. . . .
Suddenly
M. glanced toward the window and saw the MASTER
standing there. SRI RAMAKRISHNA's eyes became heavy with tears as
M. sang the line:
I am the lowliest of the lowly; make me pure with
Thy hallowed touch.
M.
sang again:
I shall put on the ochre robe and
ear-rings made of conch-shell;
Thus, in the garb of a yogini, from place to place I shall wander,
Till I have found my cruel Hari. . . .
Thus, in the garb of a yogini, from place to place I shall wander,
Till I have found my cruel Hari. . . .
M. saw that the MASTER was walking with Rākhāl .
Friday, December 21, 1883
In the morning the MASTER and M.
were conversing alone under the bel-tree. The MASTER told him many secrets of
spiritual discipline, exhorting him to renounce "woman and
gold". He further said that the mind at times becomes one's guru.
After his midday meal the MASTER went to the Panchavati
wearing a beautiful yellow robe. Two or three Vaishnava monks were there,
clad in the dress of their sect.
In the afternoon a monk belonging to the sect of Nanak
arrived. He was a worshipper of the formless God. SRI RAMAKRISHNA
asked him to meditate as well on God with form. The MASTER said to him: "Dive deep;
one does not get the precious gems by merely floating on the surface. God
is without form, no doubt; but He also has form. By meditating on God
with form one speedily acquires devotion; then one can meditate on the formless
God. It is like throwing a letter away, after learning its contents, and
then setting out to follow its instructions."
Saturday, December 22, 1883
Rākhāl
, Harish, M., and Lātu had been staying with
SRI RAMAKRISHNA
at Dakshineswar. About nine o'clock in the morning the MASTER
was sitting with them on the southeast verandah of his room, when Balarām's
father and Devendra Ghosh of Syampukur arrived.
A DEVOTEE: "Sir, how does one obtain love for God?"
MASTER: "Go forward. The king
dwells beyond the seven gates. You can see him only after passing through
all the gates.
"At the time of the installation of Annapurna at
Chanak, I said to Dwarika Babu: 'Large fish live in the deep water of a big
lake. Throw some spiced bait into the water; then the fish will come,
attracted by its smell; now and then they will make the water splash.
Devotion and ecstatic love are like the spiced bait.
Divine Incarnations
"God
sports in the world as man. He incarnates Himself as man-as in the case
of Krishna, Rāma, and Chaitanya. Once I said to Keshab: 'The greatest
manifestation of God is in man. There are small holes in the balk of a
field, where crabs and fish accumulate in the rainy season. If you want
to find them you must seek them in the holes. If you seek God, you must
seek Him in the Incarnations.'
"The
Divine Mother of the Universe manifests Herself through this three-and-a-half
cubit man. There is a song that says:
O Mother, what a machine is this that Thou hast
made!
What pranks Thou playest with this toy
Three and a half cubits high!
What pranks Thou playest with this toy
Three and a half cubits high!
"One needs spiritual practice in order to know
God and recognize Divine Incarnations. Big fish live in
the large lake, but to see them one must throw spiced bait in the
water. There is butter in milk, but one must churn the milk to get
it. There is oil in mustard-seed, but one must press the seed to
extract the oil."
DEVOTEE: "Has God form, or is He formless?"
MASTER:"Wait, wait! First of all you
must go to Calcutta; then only will you know where the Maidan, the Asiatic
Society, and the Bengal Bank are located. If you want to go to the
brahmin quarter of Khardaha, you must first of all go to Khardaha.
"Why should it not be possible to practice the
discipline of the formless God? But it is very difficult to follow that
path. One cannot follow it without renouncing 'woman and
gold'. There must be complete renunciation, both inner and
outer. You cannot succeed in this path if you have the slightest
trace of worldliness.
"It is easy to worship God with form. But
it is not easy as all that.
"One should not discuss the discipline of the
Impersonal God or the path of knowledge with a bhakta. Through
great effort perhaps he is just cultivating a little devotion. You
will injure it if you explain away everything as a mere dream.
"Kabir was a worshipper
of the Impersonal God. He did not believe in Śiva, Kāli, or
Krishna. He used to make fun of them and say that Kāli lived on the
offerings of rice and banana, and that Krishna danced like a monkey when the
gopis clapped their hands. (All laugh).
"One who worships God without form perhaps sees at
first the deity with ten arms, then the deity with four arms, then the Baby
Krishna with two arms. At last he sees the Indivissible Light and
merges in It.
"It is said that sages like Dattatreya and Jadabharata
did not return to the relative plane after having the visition of
Brahman. According to some people Sukadeva tasted only a drop of
that Ocean of Brahman-Consciousness. He saw and heard the rumbling
of the waves of that Ocean, but did not dive into It.
"A brahmachari once said to me, 'One who goes beyond
Kedār cannot keep his body alive.' Likewise, a man cannot preserve his
body after attaining Brahmajnana.1 The body drops off in twenty-one days.
"There was an infinite field beyond a high wall.
Four friends tried to find out what was beyond the wall.
Three of them, one after the other, climbed the wall, saw the field,
burst into loud laughter, and dropped to the other side. These
three could not give any information about the field. Only the
fourth man came back and told people about it. He is like those who
retain their bodies, even after attaining Brahmajnana, in order to teach
others. Divine Incarnations belong to this class.
"Parvati was born as the daughter of King
Himalaya. After Her birth She revealed to the king Her various
divine forms. The father said: 'Well, Daughter, You have shown me
all these forms. That is nice. But You have another aspect, which
is Brahman. Please show me that.' 'Father,' replied Parvati, 'if you seek
the Knowledge of Brahman, then renounce the world and live in the company of
holy men.' But King Himalaya insisted. Thereupon Parvati revealed Her
Brahman-form, and immediately the king fell down unconscious.
"All that I have just said belongs to the realm of
reasoning. Brahman alone is real and the world illusory-that is
reasoning. And everything but Brahman is like a dream. But this is
an extremely difficult path. To one who follows it even the divine play
in the world becomes like a dream and appears unreal; his 'I' also
vanishes. The followers of this path do not accept the Divine
Incarnation. It is a very difficult path. The lovers of God should
not hear much of such reasoning.
"That is why God incarnates Himself as man and teaches
people the path of devotion. He exhorts people to cultivate
self-surrender to God. Following the path of devotion, one realizes
everything through His grace both Knowledge and Supreme Wisdom.
"God sports in this world. He is under the
control of His devotee. 'Syama, the Divine Mother, is Herself tied by the
cord of the love of Her devotee.'
"Sometimes God becomes the magnet and the devotee the
needle, and sometimes the devotee becomes the magnet and God the needle.
The devotee attracts God to him. God is the Beloved of His devotee and is
under his control.
"According to one school, the gopis of Vrindāvan, like
Yaśoda, had believed in the formless God in their previous births; but they did
not derive any satisfaction from this belief. That is why later on they
enjoyed so much bliss in the company of Sri Krishna in the Vrindāvan episode of
His life. One day Krishna said to the gopis: 'Come along. I shall
show you the Abode of the Eternal. Let us go to the Jamuna for a bath.'
As they dived into the water of the river, they at once saw Goloka. Next
they saw the Indivisible Light. Thereupon Yaśoda exclaimed: 'O Krishna,
we don't care for these things any more. We would like to see You in Your
human form. I want to take You in my arms and feed You.'
God and His devotee
"So
the greatest manifestation of God is through His Incarnations. The
devotee should worship and serve an Incarnation of God as long as He lives in a
human body. 'At the break of day He disappears into the secret chamber of
His House.'
God manifesting Himself as living beings
"Not
all, by any means, can recognize an Incarnation of God. Assuming a human
body, the Incarnation falls victim to disease, grief, hunger, thirst, and all
such things, like ordinary mortals. Rāma wept for Sita. 'Brahman
weeps, entrapped in the snare of the five elements.'
"It is said in the Purana that God, in His Incarnation
as the Sow, lived happily with His young ones even after the destruction of
Hiranyāksha. As the Sow, He nursed them and forgot all about His abode in
heaven. At last Śiva killed the sow body with his trident, and God,
laughing aloud, went to His own abode."
In the afternoon Bhavanath arrived. Rākhāl , M., Harish, and other devotees were in the room.
MASTER (to Bhavanath): "To
love an Incarnation of God- that is enough. Ah, what ecstatic love
the gopis had for Krishna!"
SRI RAMAKRISHNA began to sing, asuming the attitude
of the gopis:
O Krishna! You are the Soul of my soul...
Then
he sang:
I am not going home, O friend,
For there it is hard for me to chant my Krishna's
name...
And
again:
O Friend, that day I stood at my door as You were
going to the woods...
Continuing, the MASTER said:"When Krishna suddenly
disappeared in the act of dancing and playing with gopis, they were beside
themselves with grief. Looking at tree, they said: 'O tree, you
must be a great hermit. You must have seen Krishna.
Otherwise, why do you stand there motionless, as if absorbed in samādhi?'
Looking at the earth covered with green grass, they said" 'O earth, you
must have seen Kirshna. Otherwise, why does your hair stand on end?
you must have enjoyed the thrill of His touch.' Looking at the madhavi
creeper, they said, 'O madhavi, give us back our Madhava!' The gopis were
intoxicated with ecstatic love for Krishna. Akrura came to
Vrindāvan to take Krishna and Balarama to Mathura. When they
mounted the chariot, the gopis clung to the wheels. They
would not let the chariot move."
Saying this, Sri Ramkrisna sang, assuming the attitude
of Akrura:
Hold not, hold not the chariot's wheels!
Is it the wheels that make it move?
The Mover of its wheels is Krishna,
By whose will the worlds are moved....
MASTER: " 'Is it the wheels that
make it move?' 'By whose will the worlds are moved.' 'The driver moves the
chariot at His MASTER's
bidding.' I feel deeply touched by these lines."
Sunday, December 23, 1883
At
nine o'clock in the morning SRI RAMAKRISHNA was seated on the southwest porch
of his room, with Rākhāl , Lātu, M., Harish,
and some other devotees. M. had
now been nine days with the MASTER at Dakshineswar. Earlier in the
morning Manomohan had arrived from Konnagar on this way to Calcutta.
Hazra, too, was present.
A Vaishnava was singging. Referring to one of
the songs, SRI
RAMAKRISHNA said: "I didn't enjoy that song very much.
The songs of the earlier writers seem to me to have more of the
right spirit. Once I sang for Nangta at the Panchavati:
'To arms! To arms, O man! Death storms your house
in battle array.' I sang another: 'O Mother, I have no one else to blame: Alas! I
sink in the well these very hands have dug.'
"Nangta, the Vedantist, was a man of profound
knowledge. The song moved him to tears though he didn't understand its
meaning. Padmalochan also wept when I sang the songs of Ramprasad about
the Divine Mother. And he was truly a great pundit."
After the midday meal SRI RAMAKRISHNA rested a few minutes in his
room. M. was sitting on the
floor. The MASTER was delighted to hear the music that was being played in
the nahabat. He then explained to M.
that Brahman alone has become the universe and all living beings.
MASTER: "Referring to a certain
place, someone once said to me: 'Nobody sings the name of God there. It
has no holy atmosphere.' No sooner did he say this than I perceived that it was
God alone who had become all living beings. They appeared as countless
bubbles, or reflections in the Ocean of Satchidananda.
"Again, I find sometimes that living beings are like so
many pills made of Indivisible Consciousness. Once I was on my way to
Burdwan from Kamarpukur. At one place I ran to the meadow to see how
living beings are sustained. I saw ants crawling there. It appeared
to me that every place was filled with Consciousness."
Hazra entered the room and sat on the floor.
MASTER: "Again, I perceive that
living beings are like different flowers with various layers of petals.
They are also revealed to me as bubbles, some big, some small."
MASTER's childlike mood
While
describing in this way the vision of different divine forms, the MASTER
went into an ecstatic state and said, "I have become! I am here!"
Uttering these words he went into samādhi. His body was motionless.
He remained in that state a long time and then gradually regained partial
consciousness of the world. He began to laugh like a boy and pace the
room. His eyes radiated bliss as if he had seen a wondrous vision.
His gaze was not fixed on any particular object, and his face beamed with
joy. Still pacing the room, the MASTER said: "I saw the paramahamsa who
stayed under the banyan tree walking thus with just such a smile. Am I
too in that state of mind?"
He sat on the small couch and engaged in conversation with
the Divine Mother.
MASTER: "I don't even care to
know. Mother, may I have pure love for Thy Lotus Feet!
(To M.) "One attains
this state immediately after freeing oneself of all grief and desire.
(To the Divine Mother) "Mother, Thou hast done away
with my worship. Please see, Mother, that I don't give up all
desire. Mother, the paramahamsa is but a child. Doesn't a child
need a mother? Therefore Thou art the Mother and I am the child. How can
the child live without the Mother?"
SRI RAMAKRISHNA was talking to the Divine Mother
in a voice that would have melted even a stone. Again he addressed
Her, saying: "mere knowledge of Advaita! I spit on it! Thou doest exist as
long as Thou dost keep the ego in me. The paramahamsa is but a
child. Doesn't a child need a mother?"
M. sat there speechless and looked at the divine manifestation
in the MASTER.
He said to himself: "The MASTER is an ocean of mercy that knows no
motive. He has kept himself in the state of a paramahamsa that he
might, as teacher, awaken the spiritual consciousness of myself and other
earnest souls."
M. further thought: "The MASTER says,
'Advaita-Chaitanya-Nitayananda'; that is to say, through the knowledge of the
Non-dual Brahman one attains Consciousness and enjoys Eternal Bliss.
The MASTER
has not only attained the knowledge of non-duality but is in a state of Eternal
Blisss. He is always drunk with ecstatic love for the Mother of the
Universe."
With folded hands Hazara looked at the MASTER and said every now and
they:"How blessed you are! How blessed you are!"
MASTER (to Hazra): "But
you have hardly any faith; you simply live here to add to the play, like Jatila
and Kutila."
In the afternoon M. paced
the temple garden alone. He was deeply absorbed in the thought of
the MASTER
and was pondering the MASTER's words concerning the attainment of the
exalted state of the paramahamsa, after the elimination of grief and
desire. M. said to himself:
"Who is this SRI RAMAKRISHNA, acting as my teacher? Has God
embodied Himself for our welfare? The MASTER himself says that none but an Incarnation
can come down to the phenomenal plane from the state of nirvikalpa
samādhi."
Monday, December 24, 1883
At
eight o'clock in the morning SRI RAMAKRISHNA and M.
were talking together in the pine-grove at the northern end of the temple
garden. This was the eleventh day of M.'s stay with the MASTER.
It was winter. The sun had just risen.
The river was flowing north with the tide. Not far off could
be seen the bel-tree where the MASTER had practised great spiritual austerities.
SRI
RAMAKRISHNA faced the east as he talked to his disciple and told him
about the Knowledge of Brahman.
MASTER: "The formless God is real,
and equally real is God with form. Nangta used to instruct me about
the nature of Satchidananda Brahman. He would say that It is like
an infinite ocean- water everywhere, to the right, left, above, and
below. Water enveloped in water. It is the Water of the
Great Cause, motionless. Waves spring up when It becomes
active. Its activities are creation, preservation and destruction.
"Again, he ued to say that Brahman is where reason
comes to stop. There is the instance of camphor.
Nothing remains after it is burnt-not even a trace of ash.
"Brahman is beyond mind and speech. A salt
doll entered the ocean to measure its depth; but it did not return to tell
others how deep the ocean was. It melted in the ocean itself.
"The rishis once said to Rāma: 'O Rāma, sages like
Bharadvaja may very well call you an Incarnation of God, but we cannot do
that. We adore the Word-Brahman. 3 We do not want the human
form of God.' Rāma smiled and went away, pleased with their adoration.
Different manifestations of the Absolute
"But
the Nitya and the Lila are the two aspects of the same Reality. As I have
said before, it is like the roof and the steps leading to it. The
Absolute plays in many ways: as Isvara, as the gods, as man, and as the
universe. The Incarnation is the play of the Absolute as man. Do
you know how the Absolute plays as man? It is like the rushing down of water
from a big roof through a pipe; the power of Satchidananda-nay, Satchidananda
Itself-descends through the conduit of a human form as water descends through
the pipe. Only twelve sages, Bharadvaja and the others, recognized Rāma
as an Incarnation of God. Not everyone can recognize an Incarnation.
"It is God alone who incarnates Himself as man to teach
people the ways of love and knowledge. Well, what do you think of me?
"Once my father went to Gaya. There Raghuvir said
to him in a dream, 'I shall be born as your son.' Thereupon my father said to
Him: 'O Lord, I am a poor brahmin. How shall I be able to serve You?'
'Don't worry about it', Raghuvir replied. 'It will be taken care of.'
"My sister, Hriday's mother, used to worship my feet
with flowers and sandal-paste. One day I placed my foot on her head and
said to her, 'You will die in Benares.'
"Once Mathur Babu said to me: 'Father, there is nothing
inside you but God. Your body is like an empty shell. It may look
from outside like a pumpkin, but inside there is nothing-neither flesh nor
seed. Once I saw you as someone moving with a veil on.'
MASTER's vision of Gaurānga
(To
M.) "I am shown everything
beforehand. Once I saw Gaurānga and his devotees singing kirtan in the
Panchavati. I think I saw Balarām there and you too.
"I wanted to know the experiences of Gaurānga and was
shown them at Syambazar in our native district. A crowd gathered; they
even climbed the trees and the walls; they stayed with me day and night.
For seven days I had no privacy whatever. Thereupon I said to the Divine
Mother, 'Mother, I have had enough of it.'
"I am at peace now. I shall have to be born
once more. Therefore I am not giving all knowledge to my companions.
(With a smile) Suppose I give you all knowledge; will you then come to me again
so willingly?
"I recognized you on hearing you
read the Chaitanya Bhagavat. You are my own. The same
substance, like father and son. All of you are coming here again.
When you pull one part of the kalmi creeper, all the branches come toward
you. You are all relatives-like brothers. Suppose Rākhāl , Harish,
and the others had gone to Puri, and you were there too. Would you live
separately?
Parable of the grass-eating tiger
"Before
you came here, you didn't know who you were. Now you will know. It
is God who, as the guru, makes one know.
"Nangta told the story of the tigress and the herd of
goats. Once a tigress attacked a herd of goats. A hunter saw her from
a distance and killed her. The tigress was pregnant and gave birth
to a cub as she expired. The cub began to grow in the company of
the goats. At first it was nursed by the she-goats, and later on,
as it grew bigger, it began to eat grass and bleat like the goats.
Gradually the cub became a big tiger; but still it ate grass and
bleated. When atached by other animals, it would run away,
like the goats. One day a fierce-looking tiger attacked the herd.
It was amazed to see a tiger in the herd eating grass and running away
with the goats at its approach. It lef the goats and caught hold of
the grass-eating tiger, which began to bleat and tried to run away.
But the fierce tiger dragged it to the water and said: 'Now look at your
face in the water. You see, you have the pot-face of a tiger; it is
exactly like mine.' Next it pressed a piece of meat into its mouth.
At first the grass-eating tiger refused to eat the meat. Then
it got the taste of the meat and relished it. At last the fierce
tiger said to the grass-eater: 'What a disgrace! You lived with goats and ate
grass like them!' And the other was really ashamed of itself.
"Eating grass is like enjoying 'woman and gold'.
To bleat and run away like a goat is to behave like an ordinary man.
Going away with the new tiger is like taking shelter with the guru, who
awakens one's spiritual consciousness, and recognizing him alone as one's
relative. To see one's face rightly is to know one's real
Self."
SRI RAMAKRISHNA stood up. There was
silence all around, distrubed only the by the gentle rustling of the
pine-needless and the murmuring of the Ganges. The MASTER
went to the Panchavati and then to his room, talking all the while with M. The disciple followed him,
fascinated. At the Panchavati Sri Ramakrishan touched with his
forehead the raised platform around the banyan-tree. This was the
place of his intense spiritual discipline, where he had wept bitterly for the
vision of the Divine Mother, where he had held intimate communion with Her, and
where he had seen many divine forms.
The maser and M. passed the cluster of bakul-tress and came
to the nahabat. Hazara awas there. The MASTER
said to him:" Don't eat too much, and give up this craze for outer
cleanliness. People with a craze do not attain Knowledge.
Follow conventions only as much as necessary. Don't go to
excess." The MASTER entered his room and sat on the couch.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA was resting after his midday meal
when Surendra, Ram, and other devotees arrived from Calcutta. It
was about one o'clock. While M.
was strolling alone under the pine-tress, Harish came there and told him that
the MASTER
wanted him in his room. Someone was going to read from the 'Śiva
Samhita, a book containing instructions about yoga and six centres.
M. entered the room and saluted the MASTER. The devotees
were seated on the floor, but no one was reading the book. SRI RAMAKRISHNA
was talking to the devotees.
MASTER:"The gopis cherished escstatic
love for Krishna. There are two elements in such love: 'I-ness' and
'my-ness'. 'I-ness' is the feeling that Krishna will be ill if 'I' do not
serve Him. In this attitude the devotee does not look upon his
Ideal as God.
"'My-ness' is to feel that the Beloved is 'my'
own. The gopis had such a feeling of 'my-ness' toward Krishna that
they would place their subtle bodies under His feet lest His soles should get
hurt.
"Yaśoda remarked: 'I don't understand your Chintamani
Krishna. To me He is simply Gopala.' The gopis also said: 'Oh, where is
Krishna, our Beloved? Where is Krishna, our Sweetheart?' They were not
conscious of His being God.
"It is like a small child saying 'my daddy'. If
someone says to the child, 'No, he is not your daddy', the child says, 'Yes, he
is my daddy.'
God, incarnated as man, acts like a man
"God,
incarnating Himself as man, behave exactly like a man. That is why it is
difficult to recognize an Incarnation. When God becomes man, He is
exactly like man. He has the same hunger, thirst, disease, grief, and
sometimes even fear. Rāma was stricken with grief for Sita. Krishna
carried on His head the shoes and wooden stool of His father Nanda.
"In the theatre, when an actor comes on the stage in
the role of a holy man, he behaves like one, and not like the actor who is
taking the part of the king. He plays his own role.
"Once an impersonator dressed himself as a
world-renouncing monk. Pleased with the correctness of his disguise, some
rich people offered him a rupee. He did not accept the money but went
away shaking his head. Afterwards he removed his disguise and appeared in
his usual dress. Then he said to the rich people, 'Please give me the
rupee.' They replied: 'Why, you went away refusing our present. Why do
you ask for it now?' The man said: 'But then I was in the role of a holy
man. I could not accept money.' Likewise, when God becomes man He behaves
exactly like a man.
"At Vrindāvan one sees many places associated with
Krishna's life."
SURENDRA: "We were there during the holidays. Visitors
were continually pestered for money. The priests and others asked for it
continually. We told them that we were going to leave for Calcutta the
next day, but we fled from Vrindāvan that very night."
MASTER: "What is that? Shame! You
said you would leave the place the next day and ran away that very day.
What a shame!"
SURENDRA (embarrassed): "Here and there we saw the babajis in
the woods practising spiritual discipline in solitude."
MASTER: "Did you give them
anything?"
SURENDRA: "No, sir."
MASTER: "That was not proper of
you. One should give something to monks and devotees. Those who
have the means should help such persons when they meet them.
MASTER's reminiscences of Mathura and Vrindāvan
"I
went to Vrindāvan with Mathur Babu. The moment I came to the Dhruva Ghat
at Mathura, in a flash I saw Vasudeva crossing the Jamuna with Krishna in his
arms.
"One evening I was taking a stroll on the beach of the
river. There were small thatched huts on the beach and big
plum-trees. It was the 'cow-dust' hour. The cows were returning
from the pasture, raising dust with their hoofs. I saw them
fording the river. Then came some cowherd boys crossing the river
with their cows. No sooner did I behold this scene than I cried
out, 'O Krishna, whre are You?' and becam unconscious.
"I wanted to visit Syamakunda and Radhakunda; so Mathur
Babu sent me there in a palanquin. We had a long way to go.
Food was put in the palanquin. While going over the meadow I
was overpowerd with emotion and wept:'O Krishna, I find everything the same;
only You are not here. This is the very meadow where You tended the
cows.' Hriday followed me on foot. I was bathed in tears.
I couldn't ask the bearers to stop the palanquin.
"At Syamakunda and Radhakunda I saw the holy men living
in small mud huts. Facing away from the road lest their eyes should
fall on men, they were engaged in spiritual discipline. One should
visit the 'Twelve Grove'.
"I went in to samdhi at the sight of the image of
Bankuvihari. In that state I wanted to touch it. I did
not want to visit Govindaji twice. At Mathura I dreamt of Krishna
as the cowherd boy. Hriday dnd Mathur Babu had the same dream.
(To Surendra) "You have both- yoga and bhoga.
There are different classes of sages: the brahmarshi, the devarshi, and
the rajarshi. Sukadeva is an example of the brahmarshi.
He didn't keep even one book with him. An example of the
devarhi is Nārada. Janaka was a rajarshi, devoted to selfless
work.
"The devotee of the Divine Mother attains dharma and
moksha. He enjoys artha and kama as well. Once I saw
you in a vision as the child of the Divine Mother. You have both-
yoga and bhoga; otherwise your countenance would look dry.
"The man who renounces all looks dry. Once
I saw a devotee of the Divine Mother at the bathing-ghat on the Ganges.
He was eating his meal and at the same time worhipping the Mother.
He looked on himself as the Mother's child.
"But it isn't good to have much money. I
find that Jadu Mallick is drowned in worldliness. It is because he
has too much money. Nabin Niyogi, too, has both yoga and bhoga.
I saw him and his son waving the fan before the image of the Divine
Mother at the time of the Durga Puja."
SURENDRA:"Sir, why can't I meditate?"
MASTER:"You remember God and think of
Him, don't you?"
SURENDRA:"Yes, sir. I go to sleep repeating the word
'Mother'."
MASTER:"That is very good.
It will be enough if you remember God and think of Him."
SRI RAMAKRISHNA had taken Surendra's
responsibilities on himself. Why should Surendra worry about
anything?
It was evening. The MASTER was sitting on the floor of
this room with the devotees. He was talking to them about yoga and
the six centes. These are described in the Śiva Samhita.
MASTER:"Ida, Pingala, and Sushumna
are the three principal nerves. All the lotuses are located in the
Sushumna. They are formed of Consciousness, like a tree made of
wax-the branches, twigs, fruits, and so forth all of wax. The Kundalini
lies in the lotus of the Muladhara. That lotus has four petals. The
Primordial Energy resides in all bodies as the Kundalini. She is like a
sleeping snake coiled up-'of the form of a sleeping snake, having the Muladhara
for Her abode'. (To M.) The Kundalini is speedily awakened if one follows
the path of bhakti. God cannot be seen unless She is awakened. Sing
earnestly and secretly in solitude:
Waken, O Mother! O
Kundalini, whose nature is Bliss Eternal!
Thou art the serpent coiled in sleep, in the lotus of the Muladhara.
Thou art the serpent coiled in sleep, in the lotus of the Muladhara.
"Ramprasad achieved perfection through singing.
One obtains the vision of God if one sings with yearning heart."
M: "Grief and distress of mind disappear if one has these
experiences but once."
Proper time for spiritual unfoldment
MASTER: "That is true. Distress
of mind disappears for ever. I shall tell you a few things about
yoga. But you see, the mother bird doesn't break the shell until the
chick inside the egg is matured. The egg is hatched in the fullness of
time. It is necessary to practise some spiritual discipline. The
guru no doubt does everything for the disciple; but at the end he makes the
disciple work a little himself. When cutting down a big tree, a man cuts
almost through the trunk; then he stands aside for a moment, and the tree falls
down with a crash.
"The farmer brings water to his field through a canal
from the river. He stands aside when only a little digging remains to be
done to connect the field with the water. Then the earth becomes soaked
and falls of itself, and the water of the river pours into the canal in
torrents.
"A man is able to see God as soon as he gets rid of ego
and other limitations. He sees God as soon as he is free from such
feelings as 'I am a scholar', 'I am the son of such and such a person', 'I am
wealthy', 'I am honourable', and so forth.
" 'God alone is real and all else unreal; the world is
illusory'-that is discrimination. One cannot assimilate spiritual
instruction without discrimination.
"Through the practice of spiritual discipline one
attains perfection, by the grace of God. But one must also labour a
little. Then one sees God and enjoys bliss. If a man hears that a
jar filled with gold is buried at a certain place, he rushes there and begins
to dig. He sweats as he goes on digging. After much digging he
feels the spade strike something. Then he throws away the spade and looks
for the jar. At the sight of the jar he dances for joy. Then he
takes up the jar and pours out the gold coins. He takes them into his
hand, counts them, and feels the ecstasy of joy. Vision-touch-
enjoyment. Isn't it so?"
M: "Yes, sir."
The MASTER was silent a moment and then went on.
MASTER: "Those who are my own will
come here even if I scold them. Look at Narendra's nature! At first he
used to abuse my Mother Kāli very much. One day I said to him sharply,
'Rascal! Don't come here any more.'
He slowly left the room and prepared a smoke. He who
is one's own will not be angry even if scolded. What do you say?"
M: "That is true, sir."
MASTER: "Narendra is perfect from his
very birth. He is devoted to the ideal of the formless God."
M. (smiling): "Whenever he comes here he brings
along great excitement."
SRI RAMAKRISHNA smiled and said, "Yes,
excitement indeed."
The following day was Tuesday, the ekadasi day of the lunar
fortnight. It was eleven o'clock in the morning and the MASTER
had not yet taken his meal. M., Rākhāl , and other devotees were
sitting in the MASTER's
room.
MASTER (to M.):
"One should fast on the eleventh day of the lunar fortnight. That
purifies the mind and helps one to develop love of God. Isn't that
so?"
M:
"Yes, sir."
MASTER: "But you may take milk and
puffed rice. Don't you think so?"
--------------------
No comments:
Post a Comment