Translated into English by
Swami Nikhilananda
Published by :
Sri Ramakrishna Math
Chennai, India
Sri Ramakrishna Math
Chennai, India
Chapter 1
MASTER
AND DISCIPLE
February
1882
M.'s
first visit to the Master
IT WAS ON A SUNDAY in spring, a few
days after Sri Ramakrishna's birthday, that M. met him the first
time. Sri Ramakrishna lived at the Kailibari, the temple garden of
Mother Kali, on the bank of the Ganges at Dakshineswar.
M.,
being at leisure on Sundays, had gone with his friend Sidhu to visit several
gardens at Baranagore. As they were walking in Prasanna Bannerji's
garden, Sidhu said: "There is a charming place on the bank of the Ganges
where a paramahamsa lives. Should you like to go there?"
M. assented and they started immediately for the Dakshineswar temple
garden. They arrived at the main gate at dusk and went straight to
Sri Ramakrishna's room. And there they found him seated on a wooden
couch, facing the east. With a smile on his face he was talking of
God. The room was full of people, all seated on the floor, drinking in
his words in deep silence.
M.
stood there speechless and looked on. It was as if he were standing where
all the holy places met and as if Sukadeva himself were speaking the word of
God, or as if Sri Chaitanya were singing the name and glories of the Lord in
Puri with Ramananda, Swarup, and the other devotees.
Formalities
and essentials of religion
Sri Ramakrishna said: "When,
hearing the name of Hari or Rāma once, you shed tears and your hair stands on
end, then you may know for certain that you do not have to perform such
devotions as the sandhya any more. Then only will you have a right to
renounce rituals; or rather, rituals will drop away of themselves. Then
it will be enough if you repeat only the name of Rāma or Hari, or even simply
Om." Continuing, he said, "The sandhya merges in the Gayatri, and the
Gayatri merges in Om."
M.
looked around him with wonder and said to himself: "What a beautiful
place! What a charming man! How beautiful his words are! I have no wish to move
from this spot." After a few minutes he thought, "Let me see the
place first; then I'll come back here and sit down."
As
he left the room with Sidhu, he heard the sweet music of the evening service
arising in the temple from gong, bell, drum, and cymbal. He could hear
music from the nahabat, too, at the south end of the garden. The sounds
travelled over the Ganges, floating away and losing themselves in the
distance. A soft spring wind was blowing, laden with the fragrance of
flowers; the moon had just appeared. It was as if nature and man together
were preparing for the evening worship. M. and Sidhu visited the twelve
Siva temples, the Radhakanta temple, and the temple of Bhavatarini. And
as M. watched the services before the images his heart was filled with
joy.
On
the way back to Sri Ramakrishna's room the two friends talked. Sidhu told
M. that the temple garden had been founded by Rani Rasmani. He said that
God was worshipped there daily as Kali, Krishna, and Siva, and that within the
gates sadhus and beggars were fed. When they reached Sri Ramakrishna's
door again, they found it shut, and Brinde, the Maid, standing outside.
M., who had been trained in English manners and would not enter a room without
permission, asked her, "Is the holy man in?" Brinde replied,
"Yes he's in the room."
M:
"How long has he lived here?"
BRINDE:
"Oh, he has been here a long time."
M:
"Does he read many books?"
BRINDE:
"Books? Oh, dear no! They're all on his tongue."
M.
had just finished his studies in college. It amazed him to hear that Sri
Ramakrishna read no books.
M:
"Perhaps it is time for his evening worship. May we go into the
room? Will you tell him we are anxious to see him?"
BRINDE:
"Go right in, children. Go in and sit down."
Entering
the room, they found Sri Ramakrishna alone, seated on the wooden couch.
Incense had just been burnt and all the doors were shut. As he entered,
M. with folded hands saluted the Master. Then, at the Master's bidding,
he and Sidhu sat on the floor. Sri Ramakrishna asked them: "Where do
you live? What is your occupation? Why have you come to Baranagore?" M.
answered the questions, but he noticed that now and then the Master seemed to
become absent-minded. Later he learnt that this mood is called bhava,
ecstasy. It is like the state of the angler who has been sitting with his
rod: the fish comes and swallows the bait, and the float begins to tremble; the
angler is on the alert; he grips the rod and watches the float steadily and
eagerly; he will not speak to anyone. Such was the state of Sri
Ramakrishna's mind. Later M. heard, and himself noticed, that Sri
Ramakrishna would often go into this mood after dusk, sometimes becoming
totally unconscious of the outer world.
M:
"Perhaps you want to perform your evening worship. In that case may
we take our leave?"
SRI
RAMAKRISHNA (still in ecstasy): "No-evening worship? No, it is not exactly
that."
After
a little conversation M. saluted the Master and took his leave.
"Come again", Sri Ramakrishna said.
On
his way home M. began to wonder: "Who is this serene-looking man who is
drawing me back to him? Is it possible for a man to be great without being a
scholar? How wonderful it is! I should like to see him again. He himself
said, 'Come again.' I shall go tomorrow or the day after."
Second visit
M.'s
second visit to Sri Ramakrishna took place on the southeast verandah at eight
o'clock in the morning. The Master was about to be shaved, the barber
having just arrived. As the cold season still lingered he had put on a
moleskin shawl bordered with red. Seeing M., the Master said: "So
you have come. That's good. Sit down here." He was
smiling. He stammered a little when he spoke.
SRI
RAMAKRISHNA (to M.): "Where do you live?"
M:
"In Calcutta, sir."
SRI
RAMAKRISHNA: "Where are you staying here?"
M:
"I am at Baranagore at my older sister's-Ishan Kaviraj's house."
SRI
RAMAKRISHNA: "Oh, at Ishan's? Well, how is Keshab now? He was very
ill."
M:
"Indeed, I have heard so too, but I believe he is well now."
Master's love for Keshab
SRI RAMAKRISHNA: "I made a vow
to worship the Mother with green coconut and sugar on Keshab's recovery.
Sometimes, in the early hours of the morning, I would wake up and cry before
Her: 'Mother, please make Keshab well again. If Keshab doesn't live, whom
shall I talk with when I go to Calcutta?' And so it was that I resolved to
offer Her the green coconut and sugar.
"Tell
me, do you know of a certain Mr. Cook who has come to Calcutta? Is it
true that he is giving lectures? Once Keshab took me on a steamer, and this
Mr. Cook, too was in the party."
M:
"Yes, sir, I have heard something like that; but I have never been to his
lectures. I don't know much about him."
Sri Ramakrishna on M.'s marriage
SRI
RAMAKRISHNA: "Pratap's brother came here. He stayed a few
days. He had nothing to do and said he wanted to live here. I came
to know that he had left his wife and children with his father-in-law. He
has a whole brood of them! So I took him to task. Just fancy! He is the
father of so many children! Will people from the neighbourhood feed them and
bring them up? He isn't even ashamed that someone else is feeding his wife and
children, and that they have been left at his father-in-law's house. I
scolded him very hard and asked him to look for a job. Then he was
willing to leave here.
"Are
you married?"
M:
"Yes, sir."
SRI
RAMAKRISHNA (with a shudder): "Oh, Ramlal! Alas, he is married!"
Like
one guilty of a terrible offence, M. sat motionless, his eyes fixed on the
ground.
He thought, "Is it such a wicked thing to get married?"
The
Master continued, "Have you any children?"
M.
this time could hear the beating of his own heart. He whispered in a
trembling voice, "Yes, sir, I have children."
Very
sadly Sri Ramakrishna said, "Ah me! He even has children!"
Thus
rebuked M. sat speechless. His pride had received a blow. After a
few minutes Sri Ramakrishna looked at him kindly and said affectionately:
"You see, you have certain good signs. I know them by looking at a
person's forehead, his eyes, and so on. Tell me, now, what kind of person
is your wife? Has she spiritual attributes, or is she under the power of
avidya?"
M:
"She is all right. But I am afraid she is ignorant."
MASTER
(with evident displeasure): "And you are a man of knowledge!"
M.
had yet to learn the distinction between knowledge and ignorance. Up to
this time his conception had been that one got knowledge from books and
schools. Later on he gave up this false conception. He was taught
that to know God is knowledge, and not to know Him, ignorance. When Sri
Ramakrishna exclaimed, "And you are a man of knowledge!", M.'s ego
was again badly shocked.
God with and without form
MASTER:
"Well, do you believe in God with form or without form?"
M.,
rather surprised, said to himself: "How can one believe in God without
form when one believes in God with form? And if one believes in God without
form, how can one believe that God has a form? Can these two contradictory
ideas be true at the same time? Can a white liquid like milk be black?"
M:
"Sir, I like to think of God as formless."
MASTER:
"Very good. It is enough to have faith in either aspect. You
believe in God without form; that is quite all right. But never for a
moment think that this alone is true and all else false. Remember that
God with form is just as true as God without form. But hold fast to your
own conviction."
The
assertion that both are equally true amazed M.; he had never learnt this from
his books. Thus his ego received a third blow; but since it was not yet
completely crushed, he came forward to argue with the Master a little
more.
God and the clay image
M:
"Sir, suppose one believes in God with form. Certainly He is not the
clay image!"
MASTER
(interrupting): "But why clay? It is an image of Spirit."
M.
could not quite understand the significance of this "image of
Spirit". "But, sir," he said to the Master, "one
should explain to those who worship the clay image that it is not God, and
that, while worshipping it, they should have God in view and not the clay
image. One should not worship clay."
God the only real teacher
MASTER
(sharply): "That's the one hobby of you Calcutta people - giving lectures
and bringing others to the light! Nobody ever stops to consider how to get the
light himself.
Who are you to teach others?
"He
who is the Lord of the Universe will teach everyone. He alone teaches us,
who has created this universe; who has made the sun and moon, men and beasts,
and all other beings; who has provided means for their sustenance; who has
given children parents and endowed them with love to bring them up. The
Lord has done so many things - will He not show people the way to worship Him?
If they need teaching, then He will be the Teacher. He is our Inner
Guide.
"Suppose
there is an error in worshipping the clay image; doesn't God know that through
it He alone is being invoked? He will he pleased with that very worship.
Why should you get a headache over it? You had better try for knowledge and
devotion yourself."
This
time M. felt that his ego was completely crushed. He now said to himself:
"Yes, he has spoken the truth. What need is there for me to teach
others? Have I known God? Do I really love Him? 'I haven't room enough for
myself in my bed, and I am inviting my friend to share it with me!' I know
nothing about God, yet I am trying to teach others. What a shame! How
foolish I am! This is not mathematics or history or literature, that one can
teach it to others. No, this is the deep mystery of God. What he
says appeals to me."
This
was M.'s first argument with the Master, and happily his last.
MASTER:
"You were talking of worshipping the clay image. Even if the image
is made of clay, there is need for that sort of worship. God Himself has
provided different forms of worship. He who is the Lord of the Universe
has arranged all these forms to suit different men in different stages of
knowledge.
"The
mother cooks different dishes to suit the stomachs of her different
children. Suppose she has five children. If there is a fish to
cook, she prepares various dishes from it - pilau, pickled fish, fried fish,
and so on - to suit their different tastes and powers of digestion.
"Do
you understand me?"
Need
of holy company & Meditation in solitude
M.
(humbly): "Yes, sir. How, sir, may we fix our minds on God?"
MASTER:
"Repeat God's name and sing His glories, and keep holy company; and now
and then visit God's devotees and holy men. The mind cannot dwell on God
if it is immersed day and night in worldliness, in worldly duties and
responsibilities; it is most necessary to go into solitude now and then and
think of God. To fix the mind on God is very difficult, in the beginning,
unless one practises meditation in solitude. When a tree is young it
should be fenced all around; otherwise it may be destroyed by cattle.
"To
meditate, you should withdraw within yourself or retire to a secluded corner or
to the forest. And you should always discriminate between the Real and
the unreal. God alone is real, the Eternal Substance; all else is unreal,
that is, impermanent. By discriminating thus, one should shake off
impermanent objects from the mind."
God and worldly duties
M.
(humbly):"How ought we to live in the world?"
MASTER:
"Do all your duties, but keep your mind on God. Live with all - with
wife and children, father and mother - and serve them. Treat them as if
they were very dear to you, but know in your heart of hearts that they do not
belong to you.
"A
maidservant in the house of a rich man performs all the household duties, but
her thoughts are fixed on her own home in her native village. She brings
up her Master's children as if they were her own. She even speaks of them
as 'my Rāma' or 'my Hari'. But in her own mind she knows very well that
they do not belong to her at all.
"The
tortoise moves about in the water. But can you guess where her thoughts
are?
There on the bank, where her eggs are lying. Do all your duties in
the world, but keep your mind on God.
"If
you enter the world without first cultivating love for God, you will be
entangled more and more. You will be overwhelmed with its danger, its
grief, its sorrows. And the more you think of worldly things, the more
you will be attached to them.
"First
rub your hands with oil and then break open the jack-fruit; otherwise they will
be smeared with its sticky milk. First secure the oil of divine love, and
then set your hands to the duties of the world.
"But
one must go into solitude to attain this divine love. To get butter from
milk you must let it set into curd in a secluded spot; if it is too much
disturbed, milk won't turn into curd. Next, you must put aside all other
duties, sit in a quiet spot, and churn the curd. Only then do you get
butter.
"Further,
by meditating on God in solitude the mind acquires knowledge, dispassion, and
devotion. But the very same mind goes downward if it dwells in the
world. In the world there is only one thought: 'woman and gold'.
"The
world is water and the mind milk. If you pour milk into water they become
one; you cannot find the pure milk any more. But turn the milk into curd
and churn it into butter. Then, when that butter is placed in water, it
will float. So, practise spiritual discipline in solitude and obtain the
butter of knowledge and love. Even if you keep that butter in the water
of the world the two will not mix. The butter will float.
Practice of discrimination
"Together
with this, you must practise discrimination. 'Woman and gold' is impermanent.
God is the only Eternal Substance. What does a man get with money? Food,
clothes, and a dwelling-place - nothing more. You cannot realize God with
its help. Therefore money can never be the goal of life. That is
the process of discrimination. Do you understand?"
M:
"Yes, sir. I recently read a Sanskrit play called Prabodha
Chandrodaya. It deals with discrimination."
MASTER:
"Yes, discrimination about objects. Consider - what is there in
money or in a beautiful body? Discriminate and you will find that even the body
of a beautiful woman consists of bones, flesh, fat, and other disagreeable
things. Why should a man give up God and direct his attention to such
things? Why should a man forget God for their sake?"
How to see God
M:
"Is it possible to see God?"
MASTER:
"Yes, certainly. Living in solitude now and then, repeating God's
name and singing His glories, and discriminating between the Real and the
unreal - these are the means to employ to see Him."
Longing and yearning
M:
"Under what conditions does one see God?"
MASTER:
"Cry to the Lord with an intensely yearning heart and you will certainly
see Him. People shed a whole jug of tears for wife and children.
They swim in tears for money. But who weeps for God? Cry to Him with a
real cry."
The
Master sang:
Cry to your
Mother Syama , with a real cry, O mind!
And how can She hold Herself from you?
How can Syama stay away?
How can your Mother Kali hold Herself away?
And how can She hold Herself from you?
How can Syama stay away?
How can your Mother Kali hold Herself away?
O mind, if you
are in earnest, bring Her an offering
Of bel-leaves and hibiscus flowers;
Lay at Her feet your offering
And with it mingle the fragrant sandal-paste of Love.
Of bel-leaves and hibiscus flowers;
Lay at Her feet your offering
And with it mingle the fragrant sandal-paste of Love.
Continuing,
he said: "Longing is like the rosy dawn. After the dawn out comes
the sun. Longing is followed by the vision of God.
"God
reveals Himself to a devotee who feels drawn to Him by the combined force of
these three attractions: the attraction of worldly possessions for the worldly
man, the child's attraction for its mother, and the husband's attraction for
the chaste wife. If one feels drawn to Him by the combined force of these
three attractions, then through it one can attain Him.
"The
point is, to love God even as the mother loves her child, the chaste wife her
husband, and the worldly man his wealth. Add together these three forces
of love, these three powers of attraction, and give it all to God. Then
you will certainly see Him.
"It
is necessary to pray to Him with a longing heart. The kitten knows only
how to call its mother, crying, 'Mew, mew!' It remains satisfied wherever its
mother puts it. And the mother cat puts the kitten sometimes in the
kitchen, sometimes on the floor, and sometimes on the bed. When it
suffers it cries only, 'Mew, mew!' That's all it knows. But as soon as
the mother hears this cry, wherever she may be; she comes to the kitten."
Third visit
It
was Sunday afternoon when M. came on his third visit to the Master. He
had been profoundly impressed by his first two visits to this wonderful
man. He had been thinking of the Master constantly, and of the utterly
simple way he explained the deep truths of the spiritual life. Never
before had he met such a man.
Sri
Ramakrishna was sitting on the small couch. The room was filled with
devotees,3 who had taken advantage of the holiday to come to see the
Master. M. had not yet become acquainted with any of them; so he took his
seat in a corner. The Master smiled as he talked with the devotees.
Narendra
He
addressed his words particularly to a young man of nineteen, named
Narendranath, who was a college student and frequented the Sadharan Brahmo
Samaj. His eyes were bright, his words were full of spirit, and he had
the look of a lover of God.
How the spiritually minded should look upon the worldly
M.
guessed that the conversation was about worldly men, who look down on those who
aspire to spiritual things. The Master was talking about the great number
of such people in the world, and about how to deal with them.
MASTER
(to Narendra): "How do you feel about it? Worldly people say all kinds of
things about the spiritually minded. But look here! When an elephant
moves along the street, any number of curs and other small animals may bark and
cry after it; but the elephant doesn't even look back at them. If people
speak ill of you, what will you think of them?"
NARENDRA:
"I shall think that dogs are barking at me."
God in every being
MASTER
(Smiling): "Oh, no! You mustn't go that far, my child! (Laughter).
God dwells in all beings. But you may be intimate only with good people;
you must keep away from the evil-minded. God is even in the tiger; but
you cannot embrace the tiger on that account. (Laughter). You may
say, 'Why run away from a tiger, which is also a manifestation of God?' The
answer to that is: 'Those who tell you to run away are also manifestations of
God - and why shouldn't you listen to them?'
Parable of the "elephant God"
"Let
me tell you a story. In a forest there lived a holy man who had many disciples.
One day he taught them to see God in all beings and, knowing this, to bow low
before them all. A disciple went to the forest to gather wood for the
sacrificial fire. Suddenly he heard an outcry: 'Get out of the way! A mad
elephant is coming!' All but the disciple of the holy man took to their
heels. He reasoned that the elephant was also God in another form.
Then why should he run away from it? He stood still, bowed before the animal,
and began to sing its praises. The mahut of the elephant was shouting:
'Run away! Run away!' But the disciple didn't move. The animal seized him
with its trunk, cast him to one side, and went on its way. Hurt and
bruised, the disciple lay unconscious on the ground. Hearing what had
happened, his teacher and his brother disciples came to him and carried him to
the hermitage. With the help of some medicine he soon regained
consciousness. Someone asked him, 'You knew the elephant was coming - why
didn't you leave the place?' 'But', he said, 'our teacher has told us that God
Himself has taken all these forms, of animals as well as men. Therefore,
thinking it was only the elephant God that was coming, I didn't run away.' At
this the teacher said: 'Yes, my child, it is true that the elephant God was
coming; but the mahut God forbade you to stay there. Since all are
manifestations of God, why didn't you trust the mahut's words? You should have
heeded the words of the mahut God.'
(Laughter)
"It
is said in the scriptures that water is a form of God. But some water is
fit to be used for worship, some water for washing the face, and some only for
washing plates or dirty linen. This last sort cannot be used for drinking
or for a holy purpose. In like manner, God undoubtedly dwells in the
hearts of all - holy and unholy, righteous and unrighteous; but a man should
not have dealings with the unholy, the wicked, the impure. He must not be
intimate with them. With some of them he may exchange words, but with
others he shouldn't go even that far. He should keep aloof from such
people."
How to deal with the wicked
A
DEVOTEE: "Sir, if a wicked man is about to do harm, or actually does so,
should we keep quiet then?"
MASTER:
"A man living in society should make a show of tamas to protect himself
from evil-minded people. But he should not harm anybody in anticipation
of harm likely to be done him.
Parable of the snake
"Listen
to a story. Some cowherd boys used to tend their cows in a meadow where a
terrible poisonous snake lived. Everyone was on the alert for fear of
it. One day a brahmachari was going along the meadow. The boys ran
to him and said: 'Revered sir, please don't go that way. A venomous snake
lives over there.' 'What of it, my good children?' said the brahmachari.
'I am not afraid of the snake. I know some mantras.' So saying, he
continued on his way along the meadow. But the cowherd boys, being
afraid, did not accompany him. In the mean time the snake moved swiftly
toward him with upraised hood. As soon as it came near, he recited a mantra,
and the snake lay at his feet like an earthworm. The brahmachari said:
'Look here. Why do you go about doing harm? Come, I will give you a holy
word. By repeating it you will learn to love God. Ultimately you
will realize Him and so get rid of your violent nature.' Saying this, he taught
the snake a holy word and initiated him into spiritual life. The snake
bowed before the teacher and said, 'Revered sir, how shall I practise spiritual
discipline?' 'Repeat that sacred word', said the teacher, 'and do no harm to anybody'.
As he was about to depart, the brahmachari said, 'I shall see you again.'
"Some
days passed and the cowherd boys noticed that the snake would not bite.
They threw stones at it. Still it showed no anger; it behaved as if it
were an earthworm. One day one of the boys came close to it, caught it by
the tail, and, whirling it round and round, dashed it again and again on the
ground and threw it away. The snake vomited blood and became
unconscious. It was stunned. It could not move. So, thinking
it dead, the boys went their way.
"Late
at night the snake regained consciousness. Slowly and with great
difficulty it dragged itself into its hole; its bones were broken and it could
scarcely move. Many days passed. The snake became a mere skeleton covered
with a skin. Now and then, at night, it would come out in search of
food. For fear of the boys it would not leave its hole during the
day-time. Since receiving the sacred word from the teacher, it had given
up doing harm to others. It maintained its life on dirt, leaves, or the
fruit that dropped from the trees.
"About
a year later the brahmachari came that way again and asked after the
snake. The cowherd boys told him that it was dead. But he couldn't
believe them. He knew that the snake would not die before attaining the
fruit of the holy word with which it had been initiated. He found his way
to the place and, searching here and there, called it by the name he had given
it. Hearing the teacher's voice, it came out of its hole and bowed before
him with great reverence. 'How are you?' asked the brahmachari. 'I
am well, sir', replied the snake. 'But', the teacher asked, 'why are you
so thin?' The snake replied: 'Revered sir, you ordered me not to harm any
body. So I have been living only on leaves and fruit. Perhaps that
has made me thinner.'
"The
snake had developed the quality of sattva; it could not be angry with
anyone. It had totally forgotten that the cowherd boys had almost killed
it.
"The
brahmachari said: 'It can't be mere want of food that has reduced you to this
state. There must be some other reason. Think a little.' Then the
snake remembered that the boys had dashed it against the ground. It said:
'Yes, revered sir, now I remember. The boys one day dashed me violently
against the ground. They are ignorant, after all. They didn't
realize what a great change had come over my mind. How could they know I
wouldn't bite or harm anyone?' The brahmachari exclaimed: 'What a shame! You
are such a fool! You don't know how to protect yourself. I asked you not
to bite, but I didn't forbid you to hiss. Why didn't you scare them by
hissing?'
"So
you must hiss at wicked people. You must frighten them lest they should
do you harm. But never inject your venom into them. One must not
injure others.
"In
this creation of God there is a variety of things: men, animals, trees,
plants. Among the animals some are good, some bad. There are
ferocious animals like the tiger. Some trees bear fruit sweet as nectar,
and others bear fruit that is poisonous. Likewise, among human beings,
there are the good and the wicked, the holy and the unholy. There are
some who are devoted to God, and others who are attached to the world.
Four classes of men
"Men
may be divided into four classes: those bound by the fetters of the world, the
seekers after liberation, the liberated, and the ever-free.
"Among
the ever-free we may count sages like Narada. They live in the world for
the good of others, to teach men spiritual truth.
"Those
in bondage are sunk in worldliness and forgetful of God. Not even by
mistake do they think of God.
"The
seekers after liberation want to free themselves from attachment to the
world. Some of them succeed and others do not.
"The
liberated souls, such as the sadhus and mahatmas, are not entangled in the
world, in 'woman and gold'. Their minds are free from worldliness.
Besides, they always meditate on the Lotus Feet of God.
"Suppose
a net has been cast into a lake to catch fish. Some fish are so clever
that they are never caught in the net. They are like the ever-free.
But most of the fish are entangled in the net. Some of them try to free
themselves from it, and they are like those who seek liberation. But not
all the fish that struggle succeed. A very few do jump out of the net,
making a big splash in the water. Then the fishermen shout, 'Look! There
goes a big one!' But most of the fish caught in the net cannot escape, nor do
they make any effort to get out. On the contrary, they burrow into the
mud with the net in their mouths and lie there quietly, thinking, 'We need not
fear any more; we are quite safe here.' But the poor things do not know that
the fishermen will drag them out with the net. These are like the men
bound to the world.
"The
bound souls are tied to the world by the fetters of 'woman and gold'.
They are bound hand and foot. Thinking that 'woman and gold' will make
them happy and give them security, they do not realize that it will lead them
to annihilation. When a man thus bound to the world is about to die, his
wife asks, 'You are about to go; but what have you done for me?' Again, such is
his attachment to the things of the world that, when he sees the lamp burning
brightly, he says: 'Dim the light. Too much oil is being used.' And he is
on his death-bed!
"The
bound souls never think of God. If they get any leisure they indulge in
idle gossip and foolish talk, or they engage in fruitless work. If you
ask one of them the reason, he answers, 'Oh, I cannot keep still; so I am
making a hedge.' When time hangs heavy on their hands they perhaps start
playing cards."
There
was deep silence in the room.
Redeeming power of faith
A
DEVOTEE: "Sir, is there no help, then, for such a worldly person?"
MASTER:
"Certainly there is. From time to time he should live in the company
of holy men, and from time to time go into solitude to meditate on God.
Furthermore, he should practise discrimination and pray to God, 'Give me faith
and devotion.' Once a person has faith he has achieved everything. There
is nothing greater than faith.
(To
Kedar) "You must have heard about the tremendous power of faith. It
is said in the purana that Rāma, who was God Himself - the embodiment of
Absolute Brahman - had to build a bridge to cross the sea to Ceylon. But
Hanuman, trusting in Rama's name, cleared the sea in one jump and reached the
other side. He had no need of a bridge. (All laugh)
"Once
a man was about to cross the sea. Bibhishana wrote Rama's name on a leaf,
tied it in a corner of the man's wearing-cloth, and said to him: 'Don't be
afraid. Have faith and walk on the water. But look here - the
moment you lose faith you will be drowned.' The man was walking easily on the
water. Suddenly he had an intense desire to see what was tied in his
cloth. He opened it and found only a leaf with the name of Rāma written
on it. 'What is this?' he thought. 'Just the name of Rāma!' As soon
as doubt entered his mind he sank under the water.
"If a man has faith in God, then even if he has committed the most heinous sins - such as killing a cow, a brahmin, or a woman - he will certainly be saved through his faith. Let him only say to God, 'O Lord, I Will not repeat such an action', and he need not be afraid of anything."
When
he had said this, the Master sang:
If only I can pass away repeating Durga's name,
How canst Thou then, O Blessed One,
Withhold from me deliverance,
Wretched though I may be?
1 may have stolen a drink of wine, or killed a child unborn,
Or slain a woman or a cow,
Or even caused a brahmin's death;
But, though it all be true,
Nothing of this can make me feel the least uneasiness;
For through the power of Thy sweet name
My wretched soul may still aspire
Even to Brahmanhood.
How canst Thou then, O Blessed One,
Withhold from me deliverance,
Wretched though I may be?
1 may have stolen a drink of wine, or killed a child unborn,
Or slain a woman or a cow,
Or even caused a brahmin's death;
But, though it all be true,
Nothing of this can make me feel the least uneasiness;
For through the power of Thy sweet name
My wretched soul may still aspire
Even to Brahmanhood.
Parable
of the homa bird
Pointing to Narendra, the Master
said: "You all see this boy. He behaves that way here. A
naughty boy seems very gentle when with his father. But he is quite
another person when he plays in the chandni. Narendra and people of his
type belong to the class of the ever-free. They are never entangled in
the world. When they grow a little older they feel the awakening of inner
consciousness and go directly toward God. They come to the world only to
teach others. They never care for anything of the world. They are
never attached to 'woman and gold'.
"The
Vedas speak of the homa bird. It lives high up in the sky and there it
lays its egg. As soon as the egg is laid it begins to fall; but it is so
high up that it continues to fall for many days. As it falls it hatches,
and the chick falls. As the chick falls its eyes open; it grows
wings. As soon as its eyes open, it realizes that it is falling and will
be dashed to pieces on touching the earth. Then it at once shoots up
toward the mother bird high in the sky."
At
this point Narendra left the room. Kedar, Prankrishna, M., and many
others remained.
Master
praises Narendra
MASTER: "You see, Narendra
excels in singing, playing on instruments, study, and everything. The
other day he had a discussion with Kedar and tore his arguments to
shreds. (All laugh.)
(To
M.) "Is there any book in English on reasoning?"
M:
"Yes, sir, there is. It is called Logic."
MASTER:
"Tell me what it says."
M.
was a little embarrassed. He said: "One part of the book deals with
deduction from the general to the particular. For example: All men are
mortal. Scholars are men. Therefore scholars are mortal.
Another part deals with the method of reasoning from the particular to the
general. For example: This crow is black. That crow is black.
The crows we see everywhere are black. Therefore all crows are
black. But there may be a fallacy in a conclusion arrived at in this way;
for on inquiry one may find a white crow in some country. There is
another illustration: If there is rain, there is, or has been, a cloud.
Therefore rain comes from a cloud. Still another example: This man has
thirty-two teeth. That man has thirty-two teeth. All the men we see
have thirty-two teeth. Therefore men have thirty-two teeth. English
logic deals with such inductions and deductions."
Sri
Ramakrishna barely heard these words. While listening he became
absent-minded. So the conversation did not proceed far.
When
the meeting broke up, the devotees sauntered in the temple garden. M.
went in the direction of the Panchavati. It was about five o'clock in the
afternoon. After a while he returned to the Master's room. There,
on the small north verandah, he witnessed an amazing sight.
Sri
Ramakrishna was standing still, surrounded by a few devotees, and Narendra was
singing. M. had never heard anyone except the Master sing so
sweetly. When he looked at Sri Ramakrishna he was struck with wonder; for
the Master stood motionless, with eyes transfixed. He seemed not even to
breathe. A devotee told M. that the Master was in samadhi. M. had
never before seen or heard of such a thing. Silent with wonder, he
thought: "Is it possible for a man to be so oblivious of the outer world
in the consciousness of God? How deep his faith and devotion must be to bring
about such a state!"
Narendra
was singing:
Meditate, O my mind, on the Lord Hari,
The Stainless One, Pure Spirit through and through.
How peerless is the Light that in Him shines!
How soul-bewitching is His wondrous form!
How dear is He to all His devotees!
The Stainless One, Pure Spirit through and through.
How peerless is the Light that in Him shines!
How soul-bewitching is His wondrous form!
How dear is He to all His devotees!
Ever more beauteous in fresh-blossoming love
That shames the splendour of a million moons,
Like lightning gleams the glory of His form,
Raising erect the hair for very joy.
That shames the splendour of a million moons,
Like lightning gleams the glory of His form,
Raising erect the hair for very joy.
The
Master shuddered when this last line was sung. His hair stood on end, and
tears of joy streamed down his cheeks. Now and then his lips parted in a
smile. Was he seeing the peerless beauty of God, "that shames the
splendour of a million moons"? Was this the vision of God, the Essence of
Spirit? How much austerity and discipline, how much faith and devotion, must be
necessary for such a vision!
The
song went on:
Worship His feet in the lotus of your heart;
With mind serene and eyes made radiant
With heavenly love, behold that matchless sight.
With mind serene and eyes made radiant
With heavenly love, behold that matchless sight.
Again
that bewitching smile. The body motionless as before, the eyes half Shut,
as if beholding a strange inner vision.
The
song drew to a close. Narendra sang the last lines:
Caught in the spell of His love's ecstasy,
Immerse yourself for evermore, O mind"
In Him who is Pure Knowledge and Pure Bliss.
Immerse yourself for evermore, O mind"
In Him who is Pure Knowledge and Pure Bliss.
The
sight of the samadhi, and the divine bliss he had witnessed, left an indelible
impression on M.'s mind. He returned home deeply moved. Now and
then he could hear within himself the echo of those soul-intoxicating lines:
Immerse yourself for evermore, O mind,
In Him who is Pure Knowledge and Pure Bliss.
In Him who is Pure Knowledge and Pure Bliss.
Fourth
visit
The next day, too, was a holiday for
M. He arrived at Dakshineswar at three o'clock in the afternoon. Sri
Ramakrishna was in his room; Narendra, Bhavanath, and a few other devotees were
sitting on a mat spread on the floor. They were all young men of nineteen
or twenty. Seated on the small couch, Sri Ramakrishna was talking with
them and smiling.
No
sooner had M. entered the room than the Master laughed aloud and said to the
boys, "There! He has come again." They all joined in the
laughter. M. bowed low before him and took a seat. Before this he
had saluted the Master with folded hands, like one with an English
education. But that day he learnt to fall down at his feet in orthodox
Hindu fashion.
The
peacock and the opium
Presently the Master explained the
cause of his laughter to the devotees, He said: "A man once fed a peacock
with a pill of opium at four o'clock in the afternoon. The next day,
exactly at that time, the peacock came back. It had felt the intoxication
of the drug and returned just in time to have another dose."(All laugh.)
M.
thought this a very apt illustration. Even at home he had been unable to
banish the thought of Sri Ramakrishna for a moment. His mind was
constantly at Dakshineswar and he had counted the minutes until he should go
again.
In
the mean time the Master was having great fun with the boys, treating them as
if they were his most intimate friends. Peals of side-splitting laughter
filled the room, as if it were a mart of joy. The whole thing was a
revelation to M. He thought: "Didn't I see him only yesterday intoxicated
with God? Wasn't he swimming then in the Ocean of Divine Love - a sight I had
never seen before? And today the same person is behaving like an ordinary man!
Wasn't it he who scolded me on the first day of my coming here? Didn't he
admonish me, saying, 'And you are a man of knowledge!'? Wasn't it he who said
to me that God with form is as true as God without form? Didn't he tell me that
God alone is real and all else illusory? Wasn't it he who advised me to live in
the world unattached, like a maidservant in a rich man's house?"
Sri
Ramakrishna was having great fun with the young devotees; now and then he
glanced at M. He noticed that M. sat in silence. The Master said to
Ramlal: "You see, he is a little advanced in years, and therefore somewhat
serious. He sits quiet while the youngsters are making merry." M.
was then about twenty-eight years old.
Hanuman's
devotion to Rāma
The conversation drifted to Hanuman,
whose picture hung on the wall in the Master's room.
Sri
Ramakrishna said: "Just imagine Hanuman's state of mind. He didn't
care for money, honour, creature comforts, or anything else. He longed
only for God. When he was running away with the heavenly weapon that had
been secreted in the crystal pillar, Mandodari began to tempt him with various
fruits so that he might come down and drop the weapon.5 But he couldn't be
tricked so easily. In reply to her persuasions he sang this song:
Am I in need of fruit?
I have the Fruit that makes this life
Fruitful indeed. Within my heart
The Tree of Rāma grows,
Bearing salvation for its fruit.
I have the Fruit that makes this life
Fruitful indeed. Within my heart
The Tree of Rāma grows,
Bearing salvation for its fruit.
Under the Wish-fulfilling Tree
Of Rāma do I sit at ease,
Plucking whatever fruit I will.
But if you speak of fruit -
No beggar, I, for common fruit.
Behold, I go,
Leaving a bitter fruit for you."
Of Rāma do I sit at ease,
Plucking whatever fruit I will.
But if you speak of fruit -
No beggar, I, for common fruit.
Behold, I go,
Leaving a bitter fruit for you."
As
Sri Ramakrishna was singing the song he went into samadhi. Again the
half-closed eyes and motionless body that one sees in his photograph.
Just a minute before, the devotees had been making merry in his company.
Now all eyes were riveted on him. Thus for the second time M. saw the
Master in samadhi.
After
a long time the Master came back to ordinary consciousness. His face
lighted up with a smile, and his body relaxed; his senses began to function in
a normal way. He shed tears of joy as he repeated the holy name of
Rāma. M. wondered whether this very saint was the person who a few
minutes earlier had been behaving like a child of five.
The
Master said to Narendra and M., "I should like to hear you speak and argue
in English." They both laughed. But they continued to talk in their
mother tongue. It was impossible for M. to argue any more before the
Master. Though Ramakrishna insisted, they did not talk in English.
At
five o'clock in the afternoon all the devotees except Narendra and M. took
leave of the Master. As M. was walking in the temple garden, he
suddenly came upon the Master talking to Narendra on the bank of the
goose-pond. Sri Ramakrishna said to Narendra: "Look here. Come
a little more often. You are a new-comer. On first acquaintance
people visit each other quite often, as is the case with a lover and his
sweetheart. (Narendra and M. laugh.) So please come, won't you?"
Narendra,
a member of the Brahmo Samaj, was very particular about his promises. He
said with a smile, "Yes, sir, I shall try."
As
they were returning to the Master's room, Sri Ramakrishna said to M.:
"When peasants go to market to buy bullocks for their ploughs, they can
easily tell the good from the bad by touching their tails. On being
touched there, some meekly lie down on the ground. The peasants recognize
that these are without mettle and so reject them. They select only those
bullocks that frisk about and show spirit when their tails are touched.
Narendra is like a bullock of this latter class. He is full of spirit
within."
The
Master smiled as he said this, and continued: "There are some people who
have no grit whatever. They are like flattened rice soaked in milk - soft
and mushy. No inner strength!"
It
was dusk. The Master was meditating on God. He said to M.: "Go
and talk to Narendra. Then tell me what you think of him."
Evening
worship was over in the temples. M. met Narendra on the bank of the
Ganges and they began to converse. Narendra told M. about his studying in
college, his being a member of the Brahmo Samaj, and so on.
It
was now late in the evening and time for M.'s departure; but he felt reluctant
to go and instead went in search of Sri Ramakrishna. He had been
fascinated by the Master's singing and wanted to hear more. At last he
found the Master pacing alone in the natmandir in front of the Kali
temple. A lamp was burning in the temple on either side of the image of
the Divine Mother. The single lamp in the spacious natmandir blended light
and darkness into a kind of mystic twilight, in which the figure of the Master
could be dimly seen.
M.
had been enchanted by the Master's sweet music. With some hesitation he
asked him whether there would be any more singing that evening. "No,
not tonight", said Sri Ramakrishna after a little reflection. Then,
as if remembering something, he added: "But I'm going soon to Balarām
Bose's house in Calcutta. Come there and you'll hear me sing."
M. agreed to go.
MASTER.
"Do you know Balarām Bose?"
M:
"No, sir. I don't."
MASTER:
"He lives in Bosepara."
M:
"Well, sir, I shall find him."
As
Sri Ramakrishna walked up and down the hall with M., he said to him: "Let
me ask you something. What do you think of me?"
M.
remained silent. Again Sri Ramakrishna asked: "What do you think of
me? How many annas of knowledge of God have I?"
M:
"I don't understand what you mean by 'annas'. But of this I am sure:
I have never before seen such knowledge, ecstatic love, faith in God,
renunciation, and catholicity anywhere."
The
Master laughed.
M.
bowed low before him and took his leave. He had gone as far as the main
gate of the temple garden when he suddenly remembered something and came back
to Sri Ramakrishna, who was still in the natmandir. In the dim light the
Master, all alone, was pacing the hall, rejoicing in the Self as the lion lives
and roams alone in the forest.
In
silent wonder M. surveyed that great soul.
MASTER
(to M.): "What makes you come back?"
M:
"Perhaps the house you asked me to go to belongs to a rich man. They
may not let me in. I think I had better not go. I would rather meet
you here."
MASTER:
"Oh, no! Why should you think that? Just mention my name. Say that
you want to see me; then someone will take you to me."
M.
nodded his assent and, after saluting the Master, took his leave.
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