Chapter 25
ADVICE TO PUNDIT SHASHADHAR
Monday,
June 30, 1884
SRI RAMAKRISHNA was in his room, sitting on a mat
spread on the floor. Pundit Shashadhar and a few devotees were with him on the
mat, and the rest sat on the bare floor. Surendra, Baburam, M., Harish, Lātu,
Hazra, and others were present. It was about four o'clock in the afternoon.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA had met Pundit Shashadhar six days
before in Calcutta, and now the pundit had come to Dakshineswar to visit the MASTER.
Bhudar Chattopadhyaya and his elder brother, the pundit's hosts, were with him.
Nature of Brahman
The
pundit was a follower of the path of jnāna. The MASTER was explaining this path to
him. He said: "Nityā and Lila are the two aspects of one and the same
Reality. He who is the Indivisible Satchidananda has assumed different forms
for the sake of His Lila." As he described the nature of the Ultimate
Reality the MASTER
every now and then became unconscious in samādhi. While he talked he was
intoxicated with spiritual fervour. He said to the PUNDIT:
"My dear sir, Brahman is immutalble and immovable, like Mount Sumeru. But
He who is 'immovable' can also 'move'."
Glories of Kāli
The
MASTER
was in ecstasy. He began to sing in his melodious voice:
Who is there that can understand what Mother Kāli
is?
Even the six darsanas are powerless to reveal Her. . . .
Even the six darsanas are powerless to reveal Her. . . .
He
went on:
Is Mother merely a simple woman, born as others
are born?
Only by chanting Her holy name
Does Śiva survive the deadly poison.
Only by chanting Her holy name
Does Śiva survive the deadly poison.
She it is who creates the worlds, She who preserves
and destroys,
With a mere wink of Her wondrous eyes;
She holds the universe in Her womb.
With a mere wink of Her wondrous eyes;
She holds the universe in Her womb.
Seeking a shelter at Her feet, the gods themselves
feel safe;
And Mahadeva, God of Gods,
Lies prostrate underneath Her feet.
And Mahadeva, God of Gods,
Lies prostrate underneath Her feet.
Again
he sang:
Is Mother only Śiva's wife? To Her must needs bow
down
The all-destroying King of Death!
Naked She roams about the world, slaying Her demon foes,
Or stands erect on Śiva's breast.
Her feet upon Her Husband's form! What a strange wife She makes!
My Mother's play, declares Prasad, shatters all rules and laws:
Strive hard for purity, O mind,
And understand my Mother's ways.
The all-destroying King of Death!
Naked She roams about the world, slaying Her demon foes,
Or stands erect on Śiva's breast.
Her feet upon Her Husband's form! What a strange wife She makes!
My Mother's play, declares Prasad, shatters all rules and laws:
Strive hard for purity, O mind,
And understand my Mother's ways.
And
again:
I drink no ordinary wine, but Wine of Everlasting
Bliss,
As I repeat my Mother Kāli's name;
It so intoxicates my mind that people take me to be drunk! . . .
As I repeat my Mother Kāli's name;
It so intoxicates my mind that people take me to be drunk! . . .
And again:
Can everyone have the vision of Syama? Is Kāli's
treasure for everyone?
Oh, what a pity my foolish mind will not see what is true!
Even with all His penances, rarely does Śiva Himself behold
The mind-bewitching sight of Mother Syama's crimson feet.
To him who meditates on Her the riches of heaven are poor indeed;
Oh, what a pity my foolish mind will not see what is true!
Even with all His penances, rarely does Śiva Himself behold
The mind-bewitching sight of Mother Syama's crimson feet.
To him who meditates on Her the riches of heaven are poor indeed;
If Syama casts Her glance on him, he swims in Eternal Bliss.
The prince of yogis, the king of the gods, meditate on Her feet in vain
Yet worthless kamalakanta yearns for the Mother's blessed feet!
The MASTER's ecstatic mood gradually relaxed. He
stopped singing and sat in silence. After a while he got up and sat on the
small couch.
Pundit Shashadhar was charmed with his singing. Very humbly
he said to SRI
RAMAKRISHNA, "Are you going to sing anymore?"
A little later the MASTER sang again:
High in the heaven of the Mother's feet, my mind
was soaring like a kite,
When came a blast of sin's rough wind that drove it swiftly toward the earth. . . .
When came a blast of sin's rough wind that drove it swiftly toward the earth. . . .
Then
he sang:
Once for all, this time, I have thoroughly
understood;
From One who knows it well, I have learnt the secret of bhava.
A man has come to me from a country where there is no night,
And now I cannot distinguish day from night any longer;
Rituals and devotions have all grown profitless for me.
My sleep is broken; how can I slumber any more?
For now I am wide awake in the sleeplessness of yoga.
O Divine Mother, made one with Thee in yoga-sleep at last,
My slumber I have lulled asleep for evermore.
I bow my head, says Prasad, before desire and liberation;
Knowing the secret that Kāli is one with the highest Brahman,
I have discarded, once for all, both righteousness and sin.
From One who knows it well, I have learnt the secret of bhava.
A man has come to me from a country where there is no night,
And now I cannot distinguish day from night any longer;
Rituals and devotions have all grown profitless for me.
My sleep is broken; how can I slumber any more?
For now I am wide awake in the sleeplessness of yoga.
O Divine Mother, made one with Thee in yoga-sleep at last,
My slumber I have lulled asleep for evermore.
I bow my head, says Prasad, before desire and liberation;
Knowing the secret that Kāli is one with the highest Brahman,
I have discarded, once for all, both righteousness and sin.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA continued:
I have surrendered my soul at the fearless feet of
the Mother;
Am I afraid of Death any more?
Unto the tuft of hair on my head.
Is tied the almighty mantra, Mother Kāli's name.
My body I have sold in the market-place of the world
And with it have bought Sri Durga's name.
Am I afraid of Death any more?
Unto the tuft of hair on my head.
Is tied the almighty mantra, Mother Kāli's name.
My body I have sold in the market-place of the world
And with it have bought Sri Durga's name.
As SRI RAMAKRISHNA sang the line, "And with it have
bought Sri Durga's name", the tears flowed from Pundit Shashadhar's eyes.
The MASTER
went on with the song:
Deep within my heart I have planted the name of
Kāli,
The Wish-fulfilling Tree of heaven;
When Yama, King of Death, appears,
To him I shall open my heart and show it growing there.
I have cast out from me my six unflagging foes;4
Ready am I to sail life's sea,
Crying, "To Durga, victory!"
The Wish-fulfilling Tree of heaven;
When Yama, King of Death, appears,
To him I shall open my heart and show it growing there.
I have cast out from me my six unflagging foes;4
Ready am I to sail life's sea,
Crying, "To Durga, victory!"
Again
he sang:
Dwell, O mind, within yourself;
Enter no other's home.
If you but seek there, you will find
All you are searching for. . . .
Enter no other's home.
If you but seek there, you will find
All you are searching for. . . .
And
again:
Though I am never loath to grant salvation,
I hesitate indeed to grant pure love.
Whoever wins pure love surpasses all;
He is adored by men;
He triumphs over the three worlds. . . .
I hesitate indeed to grant pure love.
Whoever wins pure love surpasses all;
He is adored by men;
He triumphs over the three worlds. . . .
Mere study of scriptures is futile
The
pundit had studied the Vedas and the other scriptures. He loved to discuss
philosophy. The MASTER,
seated on the couch, cast his benign look on the pundit and gave him counsel
through parables.
MASTER (to the pundit): "There are
many scriptures like the Vedas. But one cannot realize God without austerity
and spiritual discipline. 'God cannot be found in the six systems, the Vedas,
or the Tantra.'
"But one should learn the contents of the scriptures
and then act according to their injunctions. A man lost a letter. He couldn't
remember where he had left it. He began to search for it with a lamp. After two
or three people had searched, the letter was at last found. The message in the
letter was: 'Please send us five seers of sandesh and a piece of
wearing-cloth.' The man read it and then threw the letter away. There was no
further need of it; now all he had to do was to buy the five seers of sandesh
and the piece of cloth.
Reading, hearing, and seeing
"Better
than reading is hearing, and better than hearing is seeing. One understands the
scriptures better by hearing them from the lips of the guru or of a holy man.
Then one doesn't have to think about their non-essential part.
Hanuman said: 'Brother, I don't know much about the phase of
the moon or the position of the stars. I just contemplate Rāma.'
"But seeing is far better than hearing. Then all doubts
disappear. It is true that many things are recorded in the scriptures; but all
these are useless without the direct realization of God, without devotion to
His Lotus Feet, without purity of heart. The almanac forecasts the rainfall of
the year. But not a drop of water will you get by squeezing the almanac. No,
not even one drop.
"How long should one reason about the texts of the
scriptures? So long as one does not have direct realization of God. How long
does the bee buzz about? As long as it is not sitting on a flower. No sooner
does it light on a flower and begin to sip honey than it keeps quiet.
"But you must remember another thing. One may talk even
after the realization of God. But then one talks only of God and of Divine
Bliss. It is like a drunkard's crying, 'Victory to the Divine Mother!' He can
hardly say anything else on account of his drunkenness. You can notice, too,
that a bee makes an indistinct humming sound after having sipped the honey from
a flower.
The nature of jnanis and vijnanis
"The
Jnāni reasons about the world through the process of 'Neti, neti', 'Not this,
not this'. Reasoning in this way, he at last comes to a state of Bliss, and
that is Brahman. What is the nature of a Jnāni? He behaves according to
scriptural injunctions.
"Once I was taken to Chanak and saw some sādhus there.
Several of them were sewing. (All laugh.) At the sight of us they threw aside
their sewing. They sat straight, crossing their legs, and conversed with us.
(All laugh.)
"But jnanis will not talk about spiritual things
without being asked. They will inquire, at first, about such things as your
health and your family.
"But the nature of the vijnāni is different. He is
unconcerned about anything. Perhaps he carries his wearing-cloth loose under
his arm, like a child; or perhaps the cloth has dropped from his body
altogether.
"The man who knows that God exists is called a Jnāni. A
Jnāni is like one who knows beyond a doubt that a log of wood contains fire.
But a vijnāni is he who lights the log, cooks over the fire, and is nourished
by the food. The eight fetters have fallen from the vijnāni. He may keep merely
the appearance of lust, anger, and the rest."
PUNDIT: "The knots of his heart are cut asunder; all his
doubts are destroyed."
MASTER: "Yes. Once a ship sailed into
the ocean. Suddenly its iron joints, nails, and screws fell out. The ship was
passing a magnetic hill, and so all its iron was loosened.
"I used to go to Krishnakishore's house. Once, when I
was there, he said to me, 'Why do you chew betel-leaf?' I said: 'It is my sweet
pleasure. I shall chew betel-leaf, look at my face in the mirror, and dance
naked among a thousand girls.'6 Krishnakishore's wife scolded him and said:
'What have you said to Ramakrishna? You don't know how to talk to people.'
"In this state, passions like lust and anger are burnt
up, though nothing happens to the physical body. It looks just like any other
body; but the inside is all hollow and pure."
A DEVOTEE: "Does the body remain even after the realization of
God?"
MASTER: "The body survives with some
so that they may work out their prarabdha karma or work for the welfare of
others. By bathing in the Ganges a man gets rid of his sin and attains
liberation. But if he happens to be blind, he doesn't get rid of his blindness.
Of course, he escapes future births, which would otherwise be necessary for
reaping the results of his past sinful karma. His present body remains alive as
long as its momentum7 is not exhausted; but future births are no longer
possible. The wheel moves as long as the impulse that has set it in motion
lasts. Then it comes to a stop. In the case of such a person, passions like
lust and anger are burnt up. Only the body remains alive to perform a few
actions."
PUNDIT: "That is called samskara."
The nature of jnanis and vijnanis
MASTER: "The vijnāni always sees God.
That is why he is so indifferent about the world. He sees God even with his
eyes open. Sometimes he comes down to the Lila from the Nitya, and sometimes he
goes up to the Nitya from the Lila."
PUNDIT: "I don't understand that."
MASTER: "The Jnāni reasons about the
world through the process of 'Neti, neti', and at last reaches the Eternal and
Indivisible Satchidananda. He reasons in this manner: 'Brahman is not the
living beings; It is neither the universe nor the twenty-four cosmic
principles.' As a result of such reasoning he attains the Absolute. Then he
realizes that it is the Absolute that has become all this-the universe, its
living beings, and the twenty-four cosmic principles.
"Milk sets into curd, and the curd is churned into
butter. After extracting the butter one realizes that butter is not essentially
different from buttermilk and buttermilk not essentially different from butter.
The bark of a tree goes with the pith and the pith goes with the bark."
PUNDIT (smiling, to Bhudar): "Did you understand that? It is
very difficult."
All-embracing realization of the vijnāni
MASTER: "If there is butter, there
must be buttermilk also. If you think of butter, you must also think of buttermilk
along with it; for there cannot be any butter without buttermilk. Just so, if
you accept the Nitya, you must also accept the Lila. It is the process of
negation and affirmation. You realize the Nitya by negating the Lila. Then you
affirm the Lila, seeing in it the manifestation of the Nitya. One attains this
state after realizing Reality in both aspects: Personal and Impersonal. The
Personal is the embodiment of Chit, Consciousness; and the Impersonal is the
Indivisible Satchidananda.
"Brahman alone has become everything. Therefore
to be vijnāni this world is a 'mansion of myrth'. But to the Jnāni it is a
'framework of illusion'. Ramprasad described the world as a 'framework of
illusion'. Another man said to him by way of retort:
This very world is a mansion of myrth;
Here I can eat, here drink and make merry.
O physician, you are a fool!
You see only the surface of things.
Janaka's might was unsurpassed;
What did he lack of the world or the Spirit?
Holding to one as well as the other,
He drank his milk from a brimming cup!
Here I can eat, here drink and make merry.
O physician, you are a fool!
You see only the surface of things.
Janaka's might was unsurpassed;
What did he lack of the world or the Spirit?
Holding to one as well as the other,
He drank his milk from a brimming cup!
"The vijnāni enjoys the bliss of God in a richer way.
Some have heard of milk, some have seen it, and some have drunk it. The vijnāni
has drunk milk, enjoyed it, and been nourished by it."
The MASTER remained silent a few moments and then
asked Pundit Shashadhar to have a smoke. The Pundit went to the south east
verandah to smoke. Soon he came back to the room and sat on the floor with the
devotees. Seated on the small couch, the MASTER continued the conversation.
MASTER (to the Pundit): "Let me tell
you something. There are three kinds of Ānanda, joy: the joy of worldly
enjoyment, the joy of worship, and the Joy of Brahman. The joy of worldly
enjoyment is the joy of 'woman and gold', which people always enjoy. The joy of
worship one enjoys while chanting the name and glories of God. And the Joy of
Brahman is the joy of God-vision. After experiencing the joy of God-vision the
rishis of olden times went beyond all rules and conventions.
Three states of God-Consciousness
"Chaitanyadeva
used to experience three spiritual states: the inmost, the semi-conscious, and
the conscious. In the inmost state he would see God and go into samādhi. He
would be in the state of jada samādhi. In the semi-conscious state he would be
partially conscious of the outer world. In the conscious state he could sing
the name and glories of God."
HAZRA (to the Pundit): "So your doubts are now solved."
Samādhi described
MASTER (to the Pundit): "What is
samādhi? It is the complete merging of the mind in God-Consciousness. The Jnāni
experiences jada samādhi, in which no trace of 'I' is left. The samādhi
attained through the path of bhakti is called 'chetana samādhi'. In this
samādhi there remains the conciousness of 'I' ― the 'I' of the servant-and-MASTER
relationship, of the lover-and-Beloved relationship, of the enjoyer-and-Food
relationship. God is the MASTER; the devotee is the servant. God is the
beloved; the devotee is the lover. God is the Food, and the devotee is the
enjoyer. 'I don't want to be sugar. I want to eat it.' "
PUNDIT : "What will happen if God dissolves all of the 'I', if
He changes the enjoyer himself into sugar?"
MASTER (smiling): "Come, come! Tell
me what is in your mind. But don't the scriptures mention Nārada, Sanaka,
Sanatana, Sananda, and Sanatkumara?"
PUNDIT: "Yes, sir. They do."
MASTER: "Though they were jnanis, yet
they kept the 'I' of the bhakta. Haven't you read the Bhagavata?"
PUNDIT: "I have read only part of it, not the whole."
MASTER: "Pray to God. He is full of
compassion. Will He not listen to the words of His devotee? He is the
Kalpataru. You will get whatever you desire from Him."
PUNDIT: "I haven't thought deeply about these things before.
But now I understand."
MASTER: "God keeps a little of 'I' in
His devotee even after giving him the Knowledge of Brahman. That 'I' is the 'I
of the devotee', the 'I of the Jnāni'. Through that 'I' the devotee enjoys the
infinite play of God.
"The pestle was almost worn out with rubbing. Only a
little was left. That fell into the underbrush and brought about the
destruction of the lunar race, the race of the Yadus. The vijnāni retains the
'I of the devotee', the 'I of the Jnāni', in order to taste the Bliss of God
and teach people.
"The rishis of old had timid natures. They were easily
frightened. Do you know their attitude? It was this: 'Let me somehow get my own
salvation; who cares for others?' A hollow piece of drift-wood somehow manages
to float; but it sinks if even a bird sits on it. But Nārada and sages of his
kind are like a huge log that not only can float across to the other shore but
can carry many animals and other creatures as well. A steamship itself crosses
the ocean and also carries people across.
The vijnāni is fearless and joyous
"Teachers
like Nārada belong to the class of the vijnāni. They were much more courageous
than the other rishis. They are like an expert satrancha-player. You must have
noticed how he shouts, as he throws the dice: 'What do I want? Six? No, five!
Here is five!' And every time he throws the dice he gets the number he wants.
He is such a clever player! And while playing he even twirls his moustaches.
"A mere Jnāni trembles with fear. He is like an amateur
satrancha-player. He is anxious to move his pieces somehow to the safety zone,
where they won't be overtaken by his opponent. But a vijnāni isn't afraid of
anything. He has realized both aspects of God: Personal and Impersonal. He has
talked with God. He has enjoyed the Bliss of God.
"It is a joy to merge the mind in the Indivisible
Brahman through contemplation. And it is also a joy to keep the mind on the
Lila, the Relative, without dissolving it in the Absolute.
"A mere Jnāni is a monotonous person. He always
analyses, saying: 'It is not this, not this. The world is like a dream.' But I
have 'raised both my hands'. Therefore I accept everything.
Parable of the weaver woman
"Listen
to a story. Once a woman went to see her weaver friend. The weaver, who had
been spinning different kinds of silk thread, was very happy to see her friend
and said to her: 'Friend, I can't tell you how happy I am to see you. Let me
get you some refreshments.' She left the room. The woman looked at the threads
of different colours and was tempted. She hid a bundle of thread under one arm.
The weaver returned presently with the refreshments and began to feed her guest
with great enthusiasm. But, looking at the thread, she realized that her friend
had taken a bundle. Hitting upon a plan to get it back, she said: 'Friend, it
is so long since I have seen you. This is a day of great joy for me. I feel
very much like asking you to dance with me.' The friend said, 'Sister, I am
feeling very happy too.' So the two friends began to dance together. When the
weaver saw that her friend danced without raising her hands, she said: 'Friend,
let us dance with both hands raised. This is a day of great joy.' But the guest
pressed one arm to her side and danced raising only the other. The weaver said:
'How is this, friend? Why should you dance with only one hand raised? Dance
with me raising both hands. Look at me. See how I dance with both hands
raised.' But the guest still pressed one arm to her side. She danced with the
other hand raised and said with a smile, 'This is all I know of dancing.'
"
The MASTER continued: "I don't press my arm to my
side. Both my hands are free. I am not afraid of anything. I accept both the
Nitya and the Lila, both the Absolute and the Relative.
The two kinds of ego
"I
said to Keshab Sen that he would not be able to realize God without renouncing
the ego. He said, 'Sir, in that case I should not be able to keep my
organization together.' Thereupon I said to him: 'I am asking you to give up
the "unripe ego", the "wicked ego". But there is no harm in
the "ripe ego", the "child ego", the "servant
ego", the "ego of Knowledge".'
"The worldly man's ego, the 'ignorant ego', the 'unripe
ego', is like a thick stick. It divides, as it were, the water of the Ocean of
Satchidananda. But the 'servant ego', the 'child ego', the 'ego of Knowledge',
is like a line on the water. One clearly sees that there is only one expanse of
water. The dividing line makes it appear that the water has two parts, but one
clearly sees that in reality there is only one expanse of water.
"Sankaracharya kept the 'ego of Knowledge' in order to
teach people. God keeps in many people the 'ego of a Jnāni' or the 'ego of a
bhakta' even after they have attained Brahmajnana. Hanuman, after realizing God
in both His Personal and His Impersonal aspect, cherished toward God the
attitude of a servant, a devotee. He said to Rāma: 'O Rāma, sometimes I think
that You are the whole and I am a part of You. Sometimes I think that You are
the MASTER
and I am Your servant. And sometimes, Rāma, when I contemplate the Absolute, I
see that I am You and You are I.'
"Yaśoda became grief-stricken at being separated from
Krishna, and called on Radha. Radha saw Yaśoda's suffering and revealed herself
to her as the divine Śakti, which was her real nature. She said to Yaśoda:
'Krishna is Chidatma, Absolute Consciousness, and I am ChitŚakti, the Primal
Power. Ask a boon of Me: Yaśoda said: 'I don't want Brahmajnana. Please grant
me only this: that I may see the form of Gopala in my meditation; that I
may always have the company of Krishna's devotees; that I may always serve the
devotees of God; that I may always chant God's name and glories.'
"Once the gopis felt a great desire to see the forms of
the Lord. So Krishna asked them to dive into the water of the Jamuna. No sooner
did they dive into the water than they all arrived at Vaikuntha. There they saw
the form of the Lord endowed with His six celestial splendours. But they did
not like it. They said to Krishna: 'We want to see Gopala and serve Him. Please
grant us that boon alone. We don't want anything else.'
"Before His departure for Mathura, Krishna wanted to
give the Knowledge of Brahman to the gopis. He said to them: 'I dwell both
inside and outside all beings. Why should you see only one form of Mine?' The
gopis cried in chorus: 'O Krishna, do You want to go away from us? Is
that why You are instructing us in Brahmajnana?'
"Do you know the attitude of the gopis? It is this: 'We
are Radha's and Radha is ours.' "
A DEVOTEE: "Does this 'I' of the devotee never disappear
altogether?"
MASTER: "Yes, it disappears at times.
Then one attains the Knowledge of Brahman and goes into samādhi. I too lose it,
but not for all the time. In the musical scale there are seven notes: sa, re,
ga, ma, pa, dha, and ni. But one cannot keep one's voice on 'ni' a long time.
One must bring it down again to the lower notes. I pray to the Divine Mother,
'Mother, do not give me Brahmajnana.' Formerly believers in God with form used
to visit me a great deal. Then the modern Brahmajnanis began to arrive. During
that period I used to remain unconscious in samādhi most of the time. Whenever
I regained consciousness, I would say to the Divine Mother, 'O Mother, please
don't give me Brahmajnana.'"
God listens to our prayer
PUNDIT:
"Does God listen to our prayers?"
MASTER: "God is the Kalpataru, the
Wish-fulfilling Tree. You will certainly get whatever you ask of Him. But you
must pray standing near the Kalpataru. Only then will your prayer be fulfilled.
But you must remember another thing. God knows our inner feeling. A man gets
the fulfillment of the desire he cherishes while practising sadhana. As one
thinks, so one receives. A magician was showing his tricks before a king. Now
and then he exclaimed: 'Come confusion! Come delusion! O King, give me money!
Give me clothes!' Suddenly his tongue turned upward and clove to the roof of
his mouth. He experienced kumbhaka. He could utter neither word nor sound, and
became motionless. People thought he was dead. They built a vault of bricks and
buried him there in that posture. After a thousand years someone dug into the
vault. Inside it people found a man seated in samādhi. They took him for a holy
man and worshipped him. When they shook him his tongue was loosened and
regained its normal position. The magician became conscious of the outer world
and cried, as he had a thousand years before: 'Come confusion! Come delusion! O
King, give me money! Give me clothes!'
"I used to weep, praying to the Divine Mother, 'O
Mother, destroy with Thy thunderbolt my inclination to reason.' "
PUNDIT: "Then you too had an inclination to reason?"
MASTER :"Yes, once."
PUNDIT: "Then please assure us that we shall get rid of that
inclination too. How did you get rid of yours?"
MASTER: "Oh, somehow or other."
SRI RAMAKRISHNA was silent awhile. Then he went on
with his conversation.
MASTER: "God is the Kalpataru.
One should pray standing near It. Then one will get whatever one desires.
"How many things God has created! Infinite is His
universe. But what need have I to know about His infinite splendours? If I must
know these, let me first realize Him. Then God Himself will tell me all about
them. What need have I to know how many houses and how many government
securities Jadu Mallick possesses? All that I need is somehow to converse with
Jadu Mallick. I may succeed in seeing him by jumping over a ditch or through a
petition or after being pushed about by his gate-keeper. Once I get a chance to
talk to him, then he himself will tell me all about his possessions if I ask
him. If one becomes acquainted with the MASTER, then one is respected by his officers too.
(All laugh.)
"There are some who do not care to know the splendours
of God. What do I care about knowing how many gallons of wine there are in the
tavern? One bottle is enough for me. Why should I desire the knowledge of God's
splendours? I am intoxicated with the little wine I have swallowed.
"Both bhaktiyoga and jnanayoga are paths by which you
can realize God. Whatever path you may follow, you will certainly realize Him.
The path of bhakti is an easy one. The path of knowledge and discrimination is
very difficult. Why should one reason so much to know which path is the best? I
talked about this with Vijay for many days. Once I told him about a man who
used to pray, 'O God, reveal to me who and what You are.'
"The path of knowledge and discrimination is difficult
indeed. Parvati, the Divine Mother, revealed Her various forms to Her father
and said, 'Father, if you want Brahmajnana, then live in the company of holy
men.'
"Brahman cannot be described in words. It is said in
the Rāma Gitā that Brahman has only been indirectly hinted at by the
scriptures. When one speaks about the 'cowherd village on the Ganges', one
indirectly states that the village is situated on the bank of the Ganges.
"Why shouldn't a man be able to realize the formless
Brahman? But it is extremely difficult. He cannot if he has even the slightest
trace of worldliness. He can be directly aware of Brahman in his inmost
consciousness only when he renounces all sense-objects―form, taste, smell,
touch, and sound and only when his mind completely stops functioning. And then
too, he knows only this much of Brahman―that It exists."
Quoting from an Upanishad, the pundit said, "It is to
be experienced only as Existence."
MASTER: "In order to realize God a
devotee should make use of a particular attitude-the attitude of a 'hero' or a
friend or a handmaid or a child."
MANI MALLICK: "Only then can one feel
attached to God."
MASTER: "For many days I cherished
the feeling that I was a companion of the Divine Mother. I used to say: 'I am
the handmaid of Brahmamayi, the Blissful Mother. O companions of the Divine
Mother, make me the Mother's handmaid! I shall go about proudly, saying,
"I am Brahmamayi's handmaid!" '
Different classes of perfect souls
"Some
souls realize God without practising any spiritual discipline. They are called
nityasiddha, eternally perfect. Those who have realized God through austerity,
japa, and the like, are called sadhanasiddha, perfect through spiritual
discipline. Again, there are those called kripasiddha, perfect through divine
grace. These last may be compared to a room kept dark a thousand years, which
becomes light the moment a lamp is brought in.
"There is also a class of devotees, the hathatsiddha,
that is to say, those who have suddenly attained God-vision. Their case is like
that of a poor boy who has suddenly found favour with a rich man. The rich man
marries his daughter to the boy and along with her gives him land, house,
carriage, servants, and so forth.
"There is still another class of devotees, the
svapnasiddha, who have had the vision of God in a dream."
SURENDRA (smiling): "Let us go to sleep then. We shall wake and
find ourselves babus, aristocrats."
MASTER (tenderly): "You are already a
babu. When the letter 'a' is joined to the letter 'ka', 'ka' becomes 'kaa'. It
is futile to add another 'a'. If you add it, you will still have the same
'kaa'. (All laugh.)
Description of the nitya-siddha
"The
nityasiddha is in a class apart. He is like arani wood. A little rubbing
produces fire. You can get fire from it even without rubbing. The nityasiddha
realizes God by practising slight spiritual discipline and sometimes without
practising any at all. But he does practise spiritual discipline after
realizing God. He is like the gourd or pumpkin vine―first fruit, then
flower."
The pundit smiled at this illustration.
MASTER: "There is the instance of
Prahlada. He was a nityasiddha. While writing the letter 'ka' he shed a stream
of tears."
The MASTER was pleased with the pundit's humility. He
praised him to the devotees.
MASTER: "He has such a nice nature.
You find no difficulty in driving a nail into a mud wall. But its point breaks
if you try to drive it against a stone; and still it will not pierce it. There
are people whose spiritual consciousness is not at all awakened even though
they hear about God a thousand times. They are like a crocodile, on whose hide
you cannot make any impression with a sword "
PUNDIT: "But one can hurt a crocodile by throwing a spear into
its belly." (All laugh.)
MASTER (smiling): "What good is there
in reading a whole lot of scriptures? What good is there in the study of
philosophy? What is the use of talking big? In order to learn archery one
should first aim at a banana tree, then at a reed, then at a wick, and last at
a flying bird. At the beginning one should concentrate on God with form.
"Then there are devotees who are beyond the three
gunas. They are eternally devoted to God, like Nārada. These devotees behold
Krishna as Chinmaya, all Spirit, His Abode as Chinmaya, His devotee as
Chinmaya. To them God is eternal, His Abode is eternal, His devotee is eternal.
"Those who reason and speculate following the process
of 'Neti, neti' do not accept the Incarnation of God. Hazra says well that
Divine Incarnation is only for the bhakta, and not for the Jnāni, because the
Jnāni is quite contented with his ideal, 'I am He'."
SRI RAMAKRISHNA and the devotees remained silent
awhile. The pundit resumed the conversation.
PUNDIT: "Sir, how does one get rid of callousness? Laughter
makes me think of muscles and nerves. Grief makes me think of the nervous
system."
MASTER (smiling): "That is why
Narayan Shastri used to say, The harmful effect of the study of the scriptures
is that it encourages reasoning and arguing.'"
PUNDIT: "Is there no way for us then?"
MASTER: "Yes, there is the path of
discrimination. In a song occurs the line: 'Ask her son Discrimination about
the Truth.'
"The way lies through discrimination, renunciation, and
passionate yearning for God. Unless a man practises discrimination, he cannot
utter the right words. One time, after expounding religion at great length,
Pundit Samadhyayi said, 'God is dry.' He reminded me of the man who once said,
'My uncle's cow-shed is full of horses.' Now, does anyone keep horses in a
cowshed? (With a smile) You have become like a chānābarā fried in butter. Now
it will be good for you and for others as well, if you are soaked in syrup a
few days. Just a few days."
PUNDIT (smiling): "The sweetmeat is over-fried. It has become
charred."
MASTER (with a laugh): "No! No! It is
brown as a cockroach. Just the right colour."
HAZRA: "The sweetmeat is well cooked. It has become spongy.
Now it will soak up the syrup nicely."
MASTER: "You see, there is no need to
read too much of the scriptures. If you read too much you will be inclined to
reason and argue. Nangta used to teach me thus: What you get by repeating the
word 'Gitā' tell times is the essence of the book. In other words,
if you repeat 'Gitā' ten times it is reversed into 'tagi', which
indicates renunciation.
"Yes, the way to realize God is through discrimination,
renunciation, and yearning for Him. What kind of yearning? One should yearn for
God as the cow, with yearning heart, runs after its calf."
PUNDIT: "The same thing is said in the Vedas: 'O God, we call
on Thee as the cow lows for the calf.'"
MASTER: "Add your tears to your
yearning. And if you can renounce everything through discrimination and
dispassion, then you will be able to see God. That yearning brings about
God-intoxication, whether you follow the path of knowledge or the path of
devotion. The sage Durvasa was mad with the Knowledge of God.
"There is a great deal of difference between the
knowledge of a householder and that of an all-renouncing sannyasi. The
householder's knowledge is like the light of a lamp, which illumines only the
inside of a room. He cannot see anything, with the help of such knowledge,
except his own body and his immediate family. But the knowledge of the
all-renouncing monk is like the light of the sun. Through that light he can see
both, inside and outside the room. Chaitanyadeva's knowledge had the brilliance
of the sun-the sun of Knowledge. Further, he radiated the soothing light of the
moon of Devotion. He was endowed with both-the Knowledge of Brahman and
ecstatic love of God.
(To the pundit) "One can attain spiritual consciousness
through both affirmation and negation. There is the positive path of love and
devotion, and there is the negative path of knowledge and discrimination. You
are preaching the path of knowledge. But that creates a very difficult
situation: there the guru and the disciple do not see each other. Sukadeva went
to Janaka for instruction about the Knowledge of Brahman. Janaka said to him:
'You must pay me the guru's fee beforehand. When you attain the knowledge of
Brahman you won't pay me the fee, because the knower of Brahman sees no
difference between the guru and the disciple.'
Different stages of divine love
"Both
negation and affirmation are ways to realize one and the same goal. Infinite
are the opinions and infinite are the ways. But you must remember one thing.
The injunction is that the path of devotion described by Nārada is best suited
to the Kaliyuga. According to this path, first comes bhakti; then bhava, when
bhakti is mature. Higher than bhava are mahabhava and prema. An ordinary mortal
does not attain mahabhava and prema. He who has achieved these has realized the
goal, that is to say, has attained God."
PUNDIT : "In expounding religion one has to use a great many
words."
MASTER: "While preaching, eliminate
the 'head and tail', that is to say, emphasize only the essentials."
The pundit and Mani Mallick became engaged in conversation.
Mani was a member of the Brahmo Samaj. The pundit argued vehemently about the
good and bad sides of the Samaj. SRI RAMAKRISHNA was seated on the small couch and
looked on, smiling. Presently he remarked: "This is the tamasic aspect of
sattva, the attitude of a hero. This is necessary. One should not hold one's
tongue at the sight of injustice and untruth. Suppose a bad woman wants to drag
you from the path of righteousness. You must then assume the heroic attitude
and say: 'What? You witch! You dare injure my spiritual life? I shall cut your
body in two right now.' "
With a smile SRI RAMAKRISHNA said to the PUNDIT: "Mani Mallick has been following the
tenets of the Brahmo Samaj a long time. You can't convert him to your views. Is
it an easy thing to destroy old tendencies? Once there lived a very pious Hindu
who always worshipped the Divine Mother and chanted Her name. When the
Mussalmans conquered the country, they forced him embrace Islam. They said to
him: 'You are now a Mussalman. Say "Allah". From now on you must repeat
only the name of Allah.' With great difficulty he repeated the word 'Allah',
but every now and then blurted out 'Jagadamba'. At that the Mussalmans
were about to beat him. Thereupon he said to them: 'I beseech you! Please do
not kill me. I have been trying my utmost to repeat the name of Allah, but our
Jagadamba has filled me up to the throat. She pushes out your Allah.' (All
laugh.)
Different paths to suit different tastes
(To
the pundit) "Please don't say anything to Mani Mallick. You must know that
there are different tastes. There are also different powers of digestion. God
has made different religions and creeds to suit different aspirants. By no
means all are fit for the Knowledge of Brahman. Therefore the worship of God
with form has been provided.
"The mother brings home a fish for her children. She
curries part of the fish, part she fries, and with another part she makes
pilau. By no means all can digest the pilau. So she makes fish soup for those
who have weak stomachs. Further, some want pickled or fried fish. There are
different temperaments. There are differences in the capacity to
comprehend."
All sat in silence. SRI RAMAKRISHNA said to the pundit, "Go and
visit the temples and take a stroll in the garden." It was about half past
five in the afternoon. The pundit left the room with his friends and several of
the devotees.
After a while the MASTER went with M. toward the bathing-ghat on the
Ganges. He said to M., "Baburam now says, 'What shall I gain by study?'
" On the bank of the river he met the pundit and said to him, "Aren't
you going to the Kāli temple?" The pundit said: "Yes, sir. Let us go
together." With a smiling face SRI RAMAKRISHNA proceeded to the
temple through the courtyard. He said to the pundit, "Listen to a
song."
He
sang:
Is Kāli, my Mother, really black?
The Naked One, of blackest hue,
Lights the Lotus of the Heart. . . .
The Naked One, of blackest hue,
Lights the Lotus of the Heart. . . .
As he was going through the courtyard, he quoted to the
pundit from a song:
Lighting the lamp of Knowledge in the chamber of
your heart,
Behold the face of the Mother, Brahman's Embodiment.
Behold the face of the Mother, Brahman's Embodiment.
They came to the temple. SRI RAMAKRISHNA saluted the Divine
Mother, touching the ground with his forehead.
Red hibiscus flowers and vilwa-leaves adorned the Mother's
feet. Her three eyes radiated love for Her devotees. Two of Her hands were
raised as if to give them boons and reassurance; the other two hands held
symbols of death. She was clothed in a sari of Benares silk and was decked with
ornaments.
Image of Kāli
Referring
to the image, one of the party remarked, "I heard it was made by the
sculptor Nabin." The MASTER answered: "Yes, I know. But to me She
is the Embodiment of Spirit."
As SRI RAMAKRISHNA was coming back to his room with
the devotees, he said to Baburam, "Come with us." M. also
joined them.
It was dusk. The MASTER was sitting on the semicircular porch west
of his room. Baburam and M. sat near him. He was in a mood of partial ecstasy.
Rākhāl was not then living with SRI RAMAKRISHNA, and therefore the MASTER
was having difficulties about his personal service. Several devotees lived with
him, but he could not bear the touch of everyone during his spiritual moods. He
hinted to Baburam: "Do stay with me. It will be very nice. In this mood I
cannot allow others to touch me."
The pundit entered the MASTER's room after visiting the temples. The MASTER
said to him from the porch, "Take some refreshments." The pundit said
that he had not yet performed his evening devotions. At once SRI RAMAKRISHNA
stood up and sang in an exalted mood:
Why should I go to Ganga or Gaya, to Kasi, Kanchi,
or Prabhas,
So long as I can breathe my last with Kāli's name upon my lips?
What need of rituals has a man, what need of devotions any more,
If he repeats the Mother's name at the three holy hours? . . .
So long as I can breathe my last with Kāli's name upon my lips?
What need of rituals has a man, what need of devotions any more,
If he repeats the Mother's name at the three holy hours? . . .
Intoxicated With ecstatic love, the MASTER said: "How long should
one perform devotions? So long as one's mind does not merge in God while
repeating Om."
PUNDIT: "Then let me eat the refreshments. I shall perform the
devotions later on."
MASTER: "No, I don't want to obstruct
the current of your life. It is not good to renounce anything before the proper
time arrives. When the fruit ripens, the flower drops off of itself. One
shouldn't forcibly tear off the green branch of a coconut tree. That injures
the tree."
Surendra was about to leave. He invited his friends into his
carriage. The MASTER,
still in an ecstatic mood, said, "Don't take more people than your horse
can draw." Suredra took leave of SRI RAMAKRISHNA. The pundit left the room to
perform his worship. M. and Baburam saluted the MASTER. They were about to leave for
Calcutta. SRI
RAMAKRISHNA was still in an ecstatic mood.
MASTER (to M.):
"I cannot utter a word now. Stay a few minutes."
M. again took his seat and waited for the MASTER's
command. SRI
RAMAKRISHNA motioned to Baburam to take a seat and asked him to fan
him a little. M. also took part in rendering this personal service to the MASTER.
MASTER (to M.,
tenderly): "Why don't you come here so frequently now?"
M: "Not for any special reason. I have been rather busy
at home."
MASTER: "Yesterday I came to know
Baburam's inner nature. That is why I have been trying so hard to persuade him
to live with me. The mother bird hatches the egg in proper time. Boys like
Baburam are pure in heart. They have not yet fallen into the clutches of 'woman
and gold'. Isn't that so?"
M: "It is true, sir. They are still stainless."
MASTER: "They are like a new pot.
Milk kept in it will not turn sour."
M: "Yes, sir."
MASTER: "I need Baburam here. I pass
through certain spiritual states when I need someone like him. He says he must
not, all at once, live with me permanently, for it will create difficulties.
His relatives will make trouble. I am asking him to come here Saturdays and
Sundays."
MASTER's advice to householders
The
pundit entered the room with his friends. He had finished his devotions and was
ready to eat the refreshments. One of his companions asked the MASTER:
"Shall we succeed in spiritual life? Please tell us what our way is."
MASTER: "You all have the yearning
for liberation. If an aspirant has yearning, that is enough for him to realize
God. Don't eat any food of the sraaddha ceremony. Live in the world like an
unchaste woman. She performs her household duties with great attention, but her
mind dwells day and night on her paramour. Perform your duties in the world but
keep your mind always fixed on God.
The pundit finished eating his refreshments.
MASTER (to the pundit): "You have
read the Gitā, no doubt. It says that there is a special power of God in the
man who is honoured and respected by all."
The pundit quoted the verse from the Gitā.
MASTER: "You surely possess divine
power."
PUNDIT: "Shall I labour with perseverance to finish the task
that I have accepted?"
SRI RAMAKRISHNA forced himself, as it were, to say,
"Yes." He soon changed the conversation.
MASTER: "One cannot but admit the
manifestation of power. Vidyasagar once asked me, 'Has God given more power to
some than to others?' I said to him: 'Certainly. Otherwise, how can one man
kill a hundred? If there is no special manifestation of power, then why is
Queen Victoria so much honoured and respected? Don't you admit it?' He agreed
with me."
The pundit and his friends saluted the MASTER and were about to take their
leave. SRI
RAMAKRISHNA said to the PUNDIT:
"Come again. One hemp-smoker rejoices in the company of another
hemp-smoker. They even embrace each other. But they hide at the sight of people
not of their own kind. A cow licks the body of her calf; but she threatens a
strange cow with her horns." (All laugh.)
The pundit left the room. With a smile the MASTER
said: "He has become 'diluted' even in one day. Did you notice how modest
he was? And he accepted everything I said."
Moonlight flooded the semicircular porch. SRI RAMAKRISHNA
was still seated there. M. was about to leave.
MASTER (tenderly): "Must you go
now?"
M.: "Yes, sir. Let me say good-bye."
MASTER: "I have been thinking of
visiting the houses of the devotees. I want to visit yours also. What do you
say?"
M.: "That will be very fine."
Thursday, July 3, 1884
SRI RAMAKRISHNA was sitting in Balarām Bose's house
in Calcutta. It was the day of the "Return Car Festival". The Lord of
the Universe was worshipped in Balarām's house as Jagannath. There was a small
car in the house for use during the Car Festival.
Balarām's father
Balarām's
father was a pious Vaishnava who devoted most of his time to prayer and
meditation in his garden house at Vrindāvan. He also studied devotional books
and enjoyed the company of devotees. Balarām had brought his father to Calcutta
to meet the MASTER.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA was in a very happy mood. Seated
near him were Ram, Balarām, Balarām's father, M.,
Manomohan, and several young devotees. He was conversing with them.
Dogmatism in religion
MASTER (to Balarām's father and the
others): "The Bhaktamala is one of the Vaishnava books. It is a fine book.
It describes the lives of the various Vaishnava devotees. But it is one-sided.
At one place the author found peace of mind only after compelling Bhagavati,
the Divine Mother, to take Her initiation according to the Vaishnava
discipline.
"Once I spoke highly of Vaishnavcharan to Mathur and
persuaded him to invite Vaishnavcharan to his house. Mathur welcomed him with
great courtesy. He fed his guest from silver plates. Then do you know what
happened? Vaishnav said in front of Mathur, 'You will achieve nothing
whatsoever in spiritual life unless you accept Krishna as your Ideal.' Mathur
was a follower of the Sakta cult and a worshipper of the Divine Mother. At once
his face became crimson. I nudged Vaishnavcharan.
"I understand that the Bhagavata also contains some
statements like that. I hear that it is said there that trying to cross the
ocean of the world without accepting Krishna as the Ideal Deity is like trying
to cross a great sea by holding the tail of a dog. Each sect magnifies
its own view.
"The Saktas, too, try to belittle the Vaishnavas. The
Vaishnavas say that Krishna alone is the Helmsman to take one across the ocean
of the world. The Saktas retort: 'Oh, yes! We agree to that. Our Divine Mother is
the Empress of the Universe. Why should She bother about a ferry-boat?
Therefore She has engaged that fellow Krishna for the purpose.' (All laugh.)
"Besides, how vain people are about their own sects!
There are weavers in the villages near Kamarpukur. Many of them are Vaishnavas
and like to talk big. They say: 'Which Vishnu does he worship? The Preserver?
Oh, we wouldn't touch him!' Or: 'Which Śiva are you talking about? We accept
the Atmaramasiva.' Or again, 'Please explain to us which Hari you worship'.
They spin their yarn and indulge in talk like that.
"Rati's mother, Rani Katyayani's favourite confidante,
is a follower of Vaishnavcharan. She is a bigoted Vaishnava. She used to visit
me very frequently, and none could outdo her in devotion. One day she noticed
me eating the prasad from the Kāli temple. Since then I haven't seen even her
shadow.
MASTER's harmony of religions
"He
is indeed a real man who has harmonized everything. Most people are one-sided.
But I find that all opinions point to the One. All views-the Sakta, the
Vaishnava, the Vedānta-have that One for their centre. He who is formless is,
again, endowed with form. It is He who appears in different forms: The
attributeless Brahman is my Father. God with attributes is my Mother. Whom
shall I blame? Whom shall I praise? The two pans of the scales are equally
heavy.'
"He who is described in the Vedas is also described in
the Tantras and the Puranas. All of them speak about the one Satchidananda. The
Nitya and the Lila are the two aspects of the one Reality. It is described in
the Vedas as 'Om Satchidananda Brahman', in the Tantras as 'Om Satchidananda
Śiva', the ever-pure Śiva, and in the Puranas as 'Om Satchidananda Krishna'.
All the scriptures, the Vedas, the Puranas, and the Tantras, speak only of one
Satchidananda. It is stated in the Vaishnava scripture that it is Krishna
Himself who has become Kāli."
SRI RAMAKRISHNA went to the porch for a few minutes
and then returned. As he was going out, Vishvamvhar's daughter, six or seven
years old, saluted him. On returning to the room, the MASTER began talking to the little
girl and her companions, who were of the same age.
THE CHILD (to the MASTER): "I saluted you and you didn't even
notice it."
MASTER (smiling): "Did you? I really
didn't notice."
CHILD: "Then wait. I want to salute you again-the other foot
too."
SRI RAMAKRISHNA laughed and sat down. He returned
the salute and bowed to the child, touching the ground with his forehead. He
asked her to sing. The child said, "I.swear I don't sing." When the MASTER
pressed her again, she said, "Should you press me when I said 'I swear'?"
The MASTER
was very happy with the children and sang light and frivolous songs to
entertain them. He sang:
Come, let me braid your hair,
Lest your husband should scold you
When he beholds you!
Lest your husband should scold you
When he beholds you!
The children and the devotees laughed.
Childlike nature of a Paramahamsa
MASTER (to the devotees): "The
paramahamsa is like a five-year-old child. He sees everything filled with
Consciousness. At one time I was staying at Kamarpukur when Shivaram was four
or five years old. One day he was trying to catch grasshoppers near the pond.
The leaves were moving. To stop their rustling he said to the leaves: 'Hush!
Hush! I want to catch a grasshopper.' Another day it was stormy. It rained
hard. Shivaram was with me inside the house. There were flashes of lightning. He
wanted to open the door and go out. I scolded him and stopped him, but still he
peeped out now and then. When he saw the lightning he exclaimed, 'There, uncle!
They are striking matches again!'
"The paramahamsa is like a child. He cannot distinguish
between a stranger and a relative. He isn't particular about worldly
relationships. One day Shivaram said to me, 'Uncle, are you my father's brother
or his brother-in-law?'
"The paramahamsa is like a child. He doesn't keep any
track of his whereabouts. He sees everything as Brahman. He is indifferent to
his own movements. Shivaram went to Hriday's house to see the Durga Puja. He
slipped out of the house and wandered away. A passer-by saw the child, who was
then only four years old, and asked, 'Where do you come from?' He couldn't say
much. He only said the word 'hut'. He was speaking of the big hut in which the
image of the Divine Mother was being worshipped. The stranger asked him
further, 'Whom are you living with?' He only said the word 'brother'.
Other traits of a Paramahamsa
"Sometimes
the paramahamsa behaves like a madman. When I experienced that divine madness I
used to worship my own sexual organ as the Śiva-phallus. But I. can't do that
now. A few days after the dedication of the temple at Dakshineswar, a madman
came there who was really a sage endowed with the Knowledge of Brahman. He had
a bamboo twig in one hand and a potted mango-plant in the other, and was
wearing torn shoes. He didn't follow any social conventions. After bathing in
the Ganges he didn't perform any religious rites. He ate something that he
carried in a corner of his wearing-cloth. Then he entered the Kāli temple and
chanted hymns to the Deity. The temple trembled. Haladhāri was then in the
shrine. The madman wasn't allowed to eat at the guest-house, but he paid no
attention to this slight. He searched for food in the rubbish heap where the
dogs were eating crumbs from the discarded leaf-plates. Now and then he pushed
the dogs aside to get his crumbs. The dogs didn't mind either. Haladhāri
followed him and asked: 'Who are you? Are you a purnajnani?' The madman
whispered, 'Sh! Yes, I am a purnajnani.' My heart began to palpitate as
Haladhāri told me about it. I clung to Hriday. I said to the Divine Mother,
'Mother, shall I too have to pass through such a state?' We all went to see the
man. He spoke words of great wisdom to us but behaved like a madman before
others. Haladhāri followed him a great way when he left the garden. After
passing the gate he said to Haladhāri: 'What else shall I say to you? When you
no longer make any distinction between the water of this pool and the water of
the Ganges, then you will know that you have Perfect Knowledge.' Saying this he
walked rapidly away."
SRI RAMAKRISHNA began to talk with M. Other devotees, too, were present.
MASTER (to M.):
"How do you feel about Shashadhar?"
M: "He is very nice."
MASTER: "He is very intelligent,
isn't he?"
M: "Yes, sir. He is very erudite."
MASTER: "According to the Gitā there
is a power of God in one who is respected and honoured by many. But Shashadhar
has still a few things to do.
What will he accomplish with mere scholarship? He needs to
practise some austerity. It is necessary to practise some spiritual discipline.
"Gauri Pundit practised austerity. When he chanted a
hymn to the Divine Mother, the other pundits would seem no more than
earthworms.
"Narayan Shastri was not merely a scholar, either. He
practised sadhana as well. He studied for twenty-five years without a break.
Nyaya alone, he studied for seven years. Still he would go into ecstasy while
repeating the name of Śiva. The King of Jaipur wanted to make him his court
pundit, but Narayan refused. He used to spend much time here. He had a great
desire to go to the Vasishtha Āśrama to practise tapasya. He often spoke to me
about it, but I forbade him to go there. At that he said: 'Who knows when I
shall die? When shall I practise sadhana? Any day I may crack.' After much
insistence on his part I let him go. Some say that he is dead, that he died
while practising austerity. Others say that he is still alive and that they saw
him off on a railway train.
MASTER and Keshab
"Before
meeting Keshab, I asked Narayan Shastri to visit him and tell me what he
thought of him. Narayan reported that Keshab was an adept in japa. He knew
astrology and remarked that Keshab had been born under a good star. Then I went
to visit Keshab in the garden house at Belgharia. Hriday was with me. The
moment I saw Keshab, I said: 'Of all the people I see here, he alone has
dropped his tail. He can now live on land as well as in water, like a frog.'
"Keshab sent three members of the Brahmo Samaj to the
temple garden at Dakshineswar to test me. Prasanna was one of them. They were
commissioned to watch me day and night, and to report to Keshab. They were in
my room and intended to spend the night there. They constantly uttered the word
'Dayamaya' and said to me: 'Follow Keshab Babu. That will do you good.' I said,
'I believe in God with form.' Still they went on with their exclamations of
'Dayamaya!' Then a strange mood came over me. I said to them, 'Get out of
here!' I didn't allow them to spend the night in my room. So they slept on the
verandah. Captain also spent the night in the temple garden the first time he
visited me.
"Michael visited the temple garden when Narayan Shastri
was living with me. Dwarika Babu, Mathur's eldest son, brought him here. The
owners of the temple garden were about to get into a lawsuit with the English
proprietors of the neighbouring powder magazine; so they wanted Michael's
advice. I met him in the big room next to the manager's office. Narayan Shastri
was with me. I asked Narayan to talk to him. Michael couldn't talk very well in
Sanskrit. He made mistakes. Then they talked in the popular dialect. Narayan
Shastri asked him his reason for giving up the Hindu religion. Pointing to his
stomach, Michael said, 'It was for this.' Narayan said, 'What shall I say to a
man who gives up his religion for his belly's sake?' Thereupon Michael asked me
to say something. I said: 'I don't know why, but I don't feel like saying
anything. Someone seems to be pressing my tongue.' "
MANOMOHAN: "Mr. Choudhury will not come. He said: 'That fellow
Shashadhar from Faridpur will be there. I shall not go.' "
Mr. Choudhury had obtained his MASTER's degree from Calcutta
University. He drew a salary of three or four hundred rupees. After the death
of his first wife he had felt intense dispassion for the world, but after some
time he had married again. He frequently visited the MASTER at the temple garden.
MASTER: "How mean of him! He is vain
of his scholarship. Besides, he has married a second time. He looks on the
world as a mere mud-puddle.
(To the devotees) "This attachment to 'woman and gold'
makes a man small-minded. When I first saw Haramohan he had many good traits. I
longed to see him. He was then seventeen or eighteen years old. I used to send
for him every now and then, but he wouldn't come. He is now living away from
the family with his wife. He had been living with his uncle before. That was very
good. He had no worldly troubles. Now he has a separate home and does the
marketing for his wife daily. The other day he came to Dakshineswar. I said to
him: 'Go away. Leave this place. I don't even feel like touching you.' "
SRI RAMAKRISHNA went to the inner apartments to see
the Deity. He offered some flowers. The ladies of Balarām's family were pleased
to see him.
The MASTER came back to the drawing-room and said:
"The worldly minded practise devotions, japa, and austerity only by fits
and starts. But those who know nothing else but God repeat His name with every
breath. Some always repeat mentally, 'Om Rāma'. Even the followers of the path
of knowledge repeat, 'Soham', 'I am He'. There are others whose tongues are
always moving, repeating the name of God. One should remember and think of God
constantly."
Pundit Shashadhar entered the room with one or two friends
and saluted the MASTER.
MASTER (smiling): "We are like the
bridesmaids waiting near the bed for the arrival of the groom."
The pundit laughed. The room was filled with devotees, among
them Dr.Pratap and Balarām's father. The MASTER continued his talk.
MASTER (to Shashadhar): "The first
sign of knowledge is a peaceful nature, and the second is absence of egotism.
You have both. There are other indications of a Jnāni. He shows intense
dispassion in the presence of a sādhu, is a lion when at work, for instance,
when he lectures, and is full of wit before his wife. (All laugh.)
"But the nature of the vijnāni is quite different, as
was the case with Chaitanyadeva. He acts like a child or a madman or an inert
thing or a ghoul. While in the mood of a child, he sometimes shows childlike
guilelessness, sometimes the frivolity of adolescence, and sometimes, while
instructing others, the strength of a young man."
Three kinds of bhakti
PUNDIT:
"By what kind of bhakti does one realize God?"
MASTER: "Three kinds of bhakti are
found, according to the nature of the man: sattvic bhakti, rajasic bhakti, and
tamasic bhakti.
"Sattvic bhakti is known to God alone. It makes no
outward display. A man with such devotion loves privacy. Perhaps he meditates
inside the mosquito net, where nobody sees him. When this kind of devotion is
awakened, one hasn't long to wait for the vision of God. The appearance of the
dawn in the east shows that the sun will rise before long.
"A man with rajasic bhakti feels like making a display
of his devotion before others. He worships the Deity with 'sixteen
ingredients', enters the temple wearing a silk cloth, and puts around his neck
a string of rudrāksha beads interspersed here and there with beads of gold and
ruby.
"A man with tamasic bhakti shows the courage and
boisterousness of a highway robber. A highway robber goes on his expedition
openly, shouting, 'Kill! Plunder!' He isn't afraid even of eight police
inspectors. The devotee with tamasic bhakti also shouts like a madman:'Hara!
Hara! Vyom! Vyom! Victory to Kāli!' He has great strength of mind and burning
faith.
"A Sakta has such faith. He says: 'What? I have uttered
once the name of Kāli and of Durga! I have uttered once the name of Rāma! Can
there be any sin in me?'
"The Vaishnavas have a very humble and lowly attitude.
(Looking at Balarām's father) They tell their rosary and whine and whimper: 'O
Krishna, be gracious to us! We are wretched! We are sinners!'
Faith in God's name
"A
man should have such fiery faith as to be able to say, 'I have uttered the name
of God; how can I be a sinner?' Imagine a man repeating the name of Hari day
and night and at the same time saying that he is a sinner!"
So saying, SRI RAMAKRISHNA became overwhelmed with divine
ecstasy and 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?
I 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?
I 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.
He
sang again:
Behold my Mother playing with Śiva, lost in an
ecstasy of joy!
Drunk with a draught of celestial wine, She reels, and yet She does not fall.
Erect She stands on Śiva's bosom, and the earth trembles under Her tread;
She and Her Lord are mad with frenzy, casting aside all fear and shame!
Drunk with a draught of celestial wine, She reels, and yet She does not fall.
Erect She stands on Śiva's bosom, and the earth trembles under Her tread;
She and Her Lord are mad with frenzy, casting aside all fear and shame!
Pundit Shashadhar was weeping. Vaishnavcharan, the musician,
sang:
O tongue, always repeat the name of Mother Durga!
Who but your Mother Durga will save you in distress?
Thou art the heavens and the earth, and Thou the nether world;
From Thee have the twelve Gopalas and Hari and Śiva sprung.
The ten Embodiments of Divine Śakti art Thou,
And Thou the ten Avatars: this time, save me Thou must!
The moving and the unmoving, the gross and the subtle, art Thou;
Creation and preservation art Thou, and the last dissolution.
Thou art the Primal Root of this manifold universe;
The Mother of the three worlds, their only Saviour, art Thou;
Thou art the Śakti of all, and Thou Thine own Śakti, too.
Who but your Mother Durga will save you in distress?
Thou art the heavens and the earth, and Thou the nether world;
From Thee have the twelve Gopalas and Hari and Śiva sprung.
The ten Embodiments of Divine Śakti art Thou,
And Thou the ten Avatars: this time, save me Thou must!
The moving and the unmoving, the gross and the subtle, art Thou;
Creation and preservation art Thou, and the last dissolution.
Thou art the Primal Root of this manifold universe;
The Mother of the three worlds, their only Saviour, art Thou;
Thou art the Śakti of all, and Thou Thine own Śakti, too.
As the MASTER listened to the last few lines, he went
into an ecstatic mood. The MASTER himself sang:
O Mother, for Yaśoda Thou wouldst dance, when she
called Thee her precious "Blue Jewel";
Where hast Thou hidden that lovely form, O terrible Syama?
Dance that way once for me, O Mother! Throw down Thy sword and take the flute;
Cast off Thy garland of heads, and wear Thy wild-flower garland.
If without Śiva Thou canst not dance, then let Balarama be Thy Śiva.
Dance, O Syama, as Thou didst dance when Thou wast Krishna!
Mother, play on Thy flute again, once so full of delight for the gopis;
Play again on Thy magic flute, which called the cattle in from the pasture,
Stopping the Jamuna's murmuring flow and turning it backward.
Hot in the sky the sun would burn, when Yaśoda, restless for her Krishna,
Fondly would call: "Here, my Gopala! Cream and butter-eat them, my Darling!"
And she would comb His long black hair and carefully braid it.
Bending Thy supple body, Mother, both at the neck, the waist, and the knee,
Thou didst dance with Thy friend Sridāmā, while Thy two anklets played the music:
Ta-thaia! Ta-thaia! Ta-ta! Thaia-thaia!
Hearing their captivating sound, the gopis would rush there.
Where hast Thou hidden that lovely form, O terrible Syama?
Dance that way once for me, O Mother! Throw down Thy sword and take the flute;
Cast off Thy garland of heads, and wear Thy wild-flower garland.
If without Śiva Thou canst not dance, then let Balarama be Thy Śiva.
Dance, O Syama, as Thou didst dance when Thou wast Krishna!
Mother, play on Thy flute again, once so full of delight for the gopis;
Play again on Thy magic flute, which called the cattle in from the pasture,
Stopping the Jamuna's murmuring flow and turning it backward.
Hot in the sky the sun would burn, when Yaśoda, restless for her Krishna,
Fondly would call: "Here, my Gopala! Cream and butter-eat them, my Darling!"
And she would comb His long black hair and carefully braid it.
Bending Thy supple body, Mother, both at the neck, the waist, and the knee,
Thou didst dance with Thy friend Sridāmā, while Thy two anklets played the music:
Ta-thaia! Ta-thaia! Ta-ta! Thaia-thaia!
Hearing their captivating sound, the gopis would rush there.
Again Pundit Shashadhar shed tears of love.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA came down to consciousness of the
world. Pointing to Shashadhar, he said to M., "Why don't you prod
him?" He wanted M. or some other devotee to ask Shashadhar a question.
RAMDAYAL (to Shashadhar): "The scriptures speak of Brahman's
form as a projection of mind. Who is it that projects?"
SHASHADHAR: "It is Brahman Itself that does so. It is no
projection of a man's mind."
PRATAP: "Why does Brahman project the form?"
MASTER: "You ask why? Brahman doesn't
act in consultation with others. It is Brahman's pleasure. Brahman is self-willed.
Why should we try to know the reason for Brahman's acting this way or that? You
have come to the orchard to eat mangoes. Eat the mangoes. What is the good of
calculating how many trees there are in the orchard, how many thousands of
branches, and how many millions of leaves? One cannot realize Truth by futile
arguments and reasoning."
PRATAP: "Shouldn't we reason any more then?"
MASTER: "I am asking you not to
indulge in futile reasoning. But reason, by all means, about the Real and the
unreal, about what is permanent and what is transitory. You must reason when
you are overcome by lust, anger, or grief."
SHASHADHAR: "That is different. It is called reasoning based on
discrimination."
MASTER: "Yes, discrimination between
the Real and the unreal."
All sat in silence. Again the MASTER spoke, addressing the pundit.
MASTER: "Formerly many great men used
to come here."
SHASHADHAR: "You mean rich people?"
MASTER: "No. Great scholars."
In the mean time the small car of Jagannath had been brought
to the verandah. Inside the car were the images of Krishna, Balarama, and
Subhadra. They were adorned with flowers, garlands, jewelry, and yellow
apparel. Balarām was a sattvic worshipper: there was no outward grandeur in his
worship. Outsiders did not even know of this Car Festival at his house. The MASTER
and the devotees went to the verandah. SRI RAMAKRISHNA pulled the car by the rope. Then
he began to sing:
See how all Nadia is shaking
Under the waves of Gaurānga's love. . . .
Under the waves of Gaurānga's love. . . .
He
sang again:
Behold, the two brothers have come, who weep while
chanting Hari's name,
The brothers who, in return for blows, offer to sinners Hari's love. . . .
The brothers who, in return for blows, offer to sinners Hari's love. . . .
SRI RAMAKRISHNA danced with the devotees. The
musician and his party joined the MASTER in the music and dancing. Soon the whole
verandah was filled with people. The ladies witnessed this scene of joy from an
adjoining room. It appeared as if Chaitanya himself were dancing with his
devotees, intoxicated with divine love.
It was not yet dusk. SRI RAMAKRISHNA returned to the drawing-room with
the devotees.
MASTER (to Shashadhar): "This is
called bhajanananda, the bliss of devotees in the worship of God. Worldly
people keep themselves engrossed in the joy of sensuous objects, of 'woman and
gold'. Through worship devotees receive the grace of God, and then His vision.
Then they enjoy Brahmananda, the Bliss of Brahman."
Shashadhar and the devotees listened to these words with rapt
attention.
SHASHADHAR (humbly): "Sir, please tell us what kind of yearning
gives one this blissful state of mind."
MASTER: "One feels restless for God
when one's soul longs for His vision. The guru said to the disciple: 'Come with
me. I shall show you what kind of longing will enable you to see God.' Saying
this, he took the disciple to a pond and pressed his head under the water.
After a few moments he released the disciple and asked, 'How did you feel?' The
disciple answered: 'Oh, I felt as if I were dying! I was longing for a breath
of air.' "
SHASHADHAR: "Yes! Yes! That's it. I understand it now."
MASTER: "To love God is the essence
of the whole thing. Bhakti alone is the essence. Nārada said to Rāma, 'May I
always have pure love for Your Lotus Feet; and may I not be deluded by Your
world-bewitching māyā!' Rāma said to him, 'Ask for some other boon.' 'No,' said
Nārada, 'I don't want anything else. May I have love for Your Lotus Feet. This
is my only prayer.' "
Pundit Shashadhar was ready to leave. SRI RAMAKRISHNA asked a devotee to
bring a carriage for the pundit.
SHASHADHAR: "Don't trouble yourself. I shall walk."
MASTER (smiling): "Oh, how can that
be? 'You are beyond the reach of even Brahma's meditation.' "
SHASHADHAR: "There is no particular need of my going just now. The
only thing is that I shall have to perform my sandhya."
MASTER: "The Divine Mother has taken
away my sandhya and other devotions. The purpose of the sandhya is to purify
body and mind. I am no longer in that state."
The MASTER sang the following lines of a song:
When will you learn to lie, O mind, in the abode
of Blessedness,
With Cleanliness and Defilement on either side of you?
Only when you have found the way
To keep these wives contentedly under a single roof,
Will you behold the matchless form of Mother Syama.
With Cleanliness and Defilement on either side of you?
Only when you have found the way
To keep these wives contentedly under a single roof,
Will you behold the matchless form of Mother Syama.
Pundit Shashadhar saluted the MASTER and went away.
RAM: "I visited Shashadhar yesterday. You asked me
to."
MASTER: "Did I? I don't remember. But
it is nice that you went."
RAM: "The editor of a newspaper was abusing you."
MASTER: "Suppose he was. What does it
matter?"
RAM: "Please listen. Then I began to talk to the editor
about you. He wanted to hear more and wouldn't let me go."
It was dusk. SRI RAMAKRISHNA began to chant the names of the
Divine Mother, Krishna, Rāma, and Hari. The devotees sat in silence. The MASTER
chanted the names in such sweet tones that the hearts of the devotees were
deeply touched. That day Balarām's house was like Navadvip when Chaitanya lived
there. On the verandah it was like Navadvip, and in the parlour it was like
Vrindāvan.
That same night SRI RAMAKRISHNA was to go to Dakshineswar. Balarām
took him into the inner apartments and served him with refreshments. The ladies
of the family saluted the MASTER.
The devotees were singing kirtan in the drawing-room,
awaiting the MASTER's
coming. Presently SRI RAMAKRISHNA came and joined the singers.
The
kirtan went on:
Behold, my Gora is dancing! With the devotees
He dances in Srivas's courtyard, singing the kirtan.
Gora says to all, "Repeat the name of Hari!"
He looks at Gadadhar, and from his red eyes
Are flowing tears of love over his golden body.
He dances in Srivas's courtyard, singing the kirtan.
Gora says to all, "Repeat the name of Hari!"
He looks at Gadadhar, and from his red eyes
Are flowing tears of love over his golden body.
The MASTER improvised the lines:
Gora is dancing in the kirtan:
There he dances, Sachi's darling!
There he dances, my Gaurānga!
There he dances, my soul's beloved!
There he dances, Sachi's darling!
There he dances, my Gaurānga!
There he dances, my soul's beloved!
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