Chapter 33
WITH VARIOUS DEVOTEES
Sunday, October 26, 1884
IT WAS AFTERNOON, and many
devotees were present in the MASTER's room. Among them were Manomohan,
Mahimacharan, and M. They were joined later by Ishan and Hazra. Balarām and
Rākhāl were still staying at Vrindāvan. The many young boys who at this
time began to seek the MASTER's company later became his intimate
disciples. Lātu lived with the MASTER, and Jogin, who lived in the village, was a
frequent visitor.
SRI
RAMAKRISHNA,
happy child of the Divine Mother that he was, radiated a joy and peace that
were reflected in the hearts of his devotees and found expression in their
happy faces. They were seated on the floor and had their eyes fixed on the MASTER,
who was standing in a pensive mood, like a boy.
God in all beings
MASTER (to Manomohan): "I see Rāma in all things. You are all sitting
here, but I see only Rāma in everyone of you."
MANOMOHAN: "Yes, sir. It is Rāma
who has become everything. But, as you say, though all water is Narayana, yet
some water is fit for drinking, some for washing the hands and face, and some
only for cleaning pots and pans."
MASTER: "It is true. But I
see that it is God Himself who has become everything-the universe and its
living beings."
Presently the MASTER sat down on the small couch near his bed.
MASTER (to Mahimacharan):
"There is no question of my being truthful; but must I develop a mania for
it? If I once say that I shall not eat, then it is impossible for me to eat,
even if I am hungry. Again, if I ask a particular man to take my water-jug to
the pine-grove, he alone must carry it. If another man carries it, he will have
to take it back. What a fix I am in! Is there no way out of it?
"Besides, I can't carry anything with me,
neither food nor betel-leaf; for that means laying up for the future. I can't
carry a little clay in my hand."
Just then a man entered the room and told the MASTER
that Hriday was waiting to see him in Jadu Mallick's garden, near the gate.
The MASTER said to the devotees: "I shall have to
see Hriday. Please don't leave the room." He put on his slippers and went
toward the east gate of the temple garden, M. accompanying him. The road
through the garden was covered with red brick-dust. The manager of the temple,
who was standing on the road, saluted SRI RAMAKRISHNA. The MASTER passed the north entrance of
the temple compound, where the bearded sentries sat. On his left he passed the
kuthi, the building used by the proprietors of the temple. Then he walked on
down the road which was lined on both sides with flowering trees, passing the
reservoir on his right, and went outside the temple garden. He found Hriday
waiting for him near the gate of Jadu Mallick's garden.
God in all beings
At the sight of the MASTER,
Hriday, who had been standing there with folded hands, prostrated himself
before him. When the MASTER told him to get up, he rose and began to
cry like a child. How strange! Tears also appeared in the MASTER's eyes. He wiped them away
with his hands. Hriday had made him suffer endless agonies, yet the MASTER
wept for him.
MASTER: "Why are you here
now?"
HRIDAY (weeping): "I have
come to see you. To whom else shall I tell my sorrows?"
SRI RAMAKRISHNA smiled and said to him by way of consolation: "One cannot avoid such sorrows in the world. Pleasure and pain are inevitable in worldly life. (Pointing to M.) That is why they come here now and then. They get peace of mind by hearing about God. What is your trouble?"
HRIDAY (weeping): "I am deprived of your
company and so I suffer."
MASTER: "Why, was it not you
who said to me, 'You follow your ideal and let me follow
mine'?"
HRIDAY: "Yes, I did say that. But what did I
know?"
MASTER: "I shall say good-bye
to you now. Come another day and we shall talk together. Today is Sunday and
many people have come to see me. They are waiting in my room. Have you had a
good crop in the country?"
HRIDAY: 'It isn't bad."
MASTER: "Let me say good-bye.
Come another day."
Hriday again prostrated himself before the MASTER,
who started back to his room with M.
MASTER (to M.): "He tormented me as much as he served me. When my
stomach trouble had reduced my body to a couple of bones and I couldn't eat
anything, he said to me one day: 'Look at me-how well I eat! You've just taken
a fancy that you can't eat.' Again he said: 'You are a fool! If I weren't
living with you, where would your profession of holiness be?' One day he
tormented me so much that I stood on the embankment ready to give up my body by
jumping into the Ganges, which was then at flood-tide."
M. became speechless at these words of the MASTER.
For such a man he had shed tears a few minutes before!
MASTER (to M.): "Well, he served me a great deal; then why
should he have fallen on such evil days? He took care of me like a parent
bringing up a child. As for me, I would remain unconscious of the world day and
night. Besides, I was ill for a long time. I was completely at his mercy."
M. did not know how to answer SRI RAMAKRISHNA; so he kept silent.
SRI
RAMAKRISHNA
returned to his room and sat On the small couch. The devotees had been waiting for
him eagerly. Several devotees from Konnagar had arrived. One of them came
forward to question the MASTER.
Bhava and Mahabhava
DEVOTEE: "Sir, we hear that you
go into samādhi and experience ecstasy. Please explain why and how you
get into that mood."
MASTER: "Sri Radha used to
experience Mahabhava. If any of her companions wanted to touch her while she
was in that state, another of them would say: 'Please do not touch that body,
the playground of Sri Krishna. Krishna is now sporting in her body.' It is not
possible to experience bhava or mahabhava without the realization of God. When
a fish comes up from a great depth, you see a movement on the surface of the
water; and if it is a big one there is much splashing about. That is why a
devotee 'laughs and weeps and dances and sings in the ecstasy of God'.
"One cannot remain in bhava very long. People
take a man to be crazy if he sits before a mirror and looks at his face all the
time."
Discipline for God-vision
DEVOTEE: "Sir, we hear that you
see God. If you do, please show Him to us."
MASTER: "Everything depends
on God's will. What can a man do? While chanting God's name, sometimes tears
flow and at other times the eyes remain dry. While meditating on God, some days
I feel a great deal of inner awakening, and some days I feel nothing.
"A man must work. Only then can he see God. One
day, in an exalted mood, I had a vision of the Haldārpukur. I saw a low-caste
villager drawing water after pushing aside the green scum. Now and then he took
up the water in the palm of his hand and examined it. In that vision it
was revealed to me that the water cannot be seen without pushing aside the
green scum that covers it; that is to say, one cannot develop love of God or
obtain His vision without work. Work means meditation, japa, and the like. The
chanting of God's name and glories is work too. You may also include charity,
sacrifice, and so on.
"If you want butter, you must let the milk turn
to curd. It must be left in a quiet place. When the milk becomes curd, you must
work hard to churn it. Only then can you get butter from the milk."
Futility of mere study
MAHIMACHARAN: "That is true, sir.
Work is certainly necessary. One must labour hard. Only then does one succeed.
There is so much to read! The scriptures are endless."
MASTER (to Mahimacharan):
"How much of the scriptures can you read? What will you gain by mere
reasoning? Try to realize God before anything else. Have faith in the guru's
words, and work. If you have no guru, then pray to God with a longing heart. He
will let you know what He is like.
"What will you learn of God from books? As long
as you are at a distance from the market-place you hear only an indistinct
roar. But it is quite different when you are actually there. Then you hear and
see everything distinctly. You hear people saying: 'Here are your potatoes.
Take them and give me the money.' "From a distance you hear only the
rumbling noise of the ocean. Go near it and you will see many boats sailing
about, birds flying, and waves rolling.
"One cannot get true feeling about God from the
study of books. This feeling is something very different from book-learning.
Books, scriptures, and science appear as mere dirt and straw after the
realization of God.
"The one thing needful is to be introduced to
the MASTER
of the house. Why are you so anxious to know beforehand how many houses and
gardens, and how many government securities, the MASTER possesses? The servants of
the house would not allow you even to approach these, and they would certainly
not tell you about their MASTER's investments. Therefore, somehow or other
become acquainted with the MASTER, even if you have to jump over the fence or
take a few pushes from the servants. Then the MASTER himself will tell you all
about his houses and gardens and his government securities. And what is more,
the servants and the door-keeper will salute you when you are known
to the MASTER.'
(All laugh.)
Yearning for God
DEVOTEE: "Now the question is
how to become acquainted with the MASTER." (Laughter.)
MASTER: "That is why I say
that work is necessary. It will not do to say that God exists and then idle
away your time. You must reach God somehow or other. Call on Him in solitude
and pray to Him, 'O Lord! reveal Thyself to me.' Weep for Him with a longing
heart. You roam about in search of 'woman and gold' like a madman; now be a
little mad for God. Let people say, 'This man has lost his head for God.' Why
not renounce everything for a few days and call on God in solitude?
Work hard for His realization
"What will you achieve
by simply saying that God exists and doing nothing about it? There are big fish
in the Haldārpukur; but can you catch them by merely sitting idly on the bank?
Prepare some spiced bait and throw it into the lake. Then the fish will come
from the deep water and you will see ripples. That will make you happy. Perhaps
a fish will jump with a splash and you will get a glimpse of it. Then you will
be so glad!
"Milk must be turned to curd and the curd must
be churned. Only then will you get butter. (To Mahima) What a nuisance! Someone
must show God to a man, while he himself sits idly by all the while! Someone
must extract the butter and hold it in front of his mouth! (All laugh.) What a
bother! Someone else must catch the fish and give it to him!
"A man wanted to see the king. The king lived
in the inner court of the palace, beyond seven gates. No sooner did the
man pass the first gate than he exclaimed, 'Oh, where is the king?' But there
were seven gates, and he must pass them one after another before he could see
the king."
MAHIMACHARAN: "By what kind of work
can one realize God?"
MASTER: "It is not that God
can be realized by this work and not by that. The vision of God depends on His
grace. Still a man must work a little with longing for God in his heart. If he
has longing he will receive the grace of God.
Favourable conditions for realization of God
"To attain God a man
must have certain favourable conditions: the company of holy men,
discrimination, and the blessings of a real teacher. Perhaps his elder brother
takes the responsibility for the family; perhaps his wife has spiritual
qualities and is very virtuous; perhaps he is not married at all or entangled
in worldly life. He succeeds when conditions like these are fulfilled.
"In a certain family a man lay seriously ill.
He was at the point of death. Someone said: 'Here is a remedy: First it must
rain when the star Svati is in the ascendant; then some of that rain-water must
collect in a human skull; then a frog must come there and a snake must chase
it; and as the frog is about to be bitten by the snake, it must jump away and
the poison of the snake must drop into the skull. You must prepare a medicine
from this poison and give it to the patient. Then he will live.' The head of
the family consulted the almanac about the star and set out at the right
moment. With great longing of heart he began to search for the different
ingredients. He prayed to God, 'O Lord, I shall succeed only if You bring
together all the ingredients.' As he was roaming about he actually saw a skull
lying on the ground. Presently there came a shower of rain. Then the man
exclaimed: 'O gracious Lord, I have got the rain-water under Svati, and the
skull too. What is more, some of the rain has fallen into the skull. Now be kind
enough to bring together the other ingredients.' He was reflecting with a
yearning heart when he saw a poisonous snake approaching. His joy knew no
bounds. He became so excited that he could feel the thumping of his own heart.
'O God,' he prayed, 'now the snake has come too. I have procured most of the
ingredients. Please be gracious and give me the remaining ones.' No sooner did
he pray thus than a frog hopped up. The snake pursued it. As they came near the
skull and the snake was about to bite the frog, the frog jumped over the skull
and the snake's poison fell into it. The man began to dance, clapping his hands
for joy. So I say that one gets everything through yearning.
"A man cannot realize God unless he renounces
everything mentally. A sādhu cannot lay things up. 'Birds and wandering monks
do not make provision for the morrow.' Such is the state of my mind that I
cannot carry even clay in my hand. Once, when Hriday tormented me, I
thought of leaving this place and going to Benares. I thought of taking some
clothes with me. But how could I take money? So I could not go to Benares. (All
laugh.)
(To Mahima) "You are a householder. Therefore
you should hold bothto 'this' and to 'that'-both to the world and to God."
MAHlMA: "Sir, can one who holds to 'that' also
hold to 'this'?"
MASTER: "Once, sitting on the
bank of the Ganges neat the Panchavati, holding a rupee in one hand and clay in
the other, I discriminated, 'The rupee is the clay-the clay is verily the
rupee, and the rupee is verily the clay', and then threw the rupee into the
river. But I was a little frightened. 'How foolish of me to offend the goddess
of fortune!' I thought. 'What shall I do if she doesn't provide me with food
any more?' Then, like Hazra, I sought help in a ruse. I said to the goddess,
'Mother, may you dwell in my heart.' Once the Divine Mother was pleased with a
man's austerities and said to him, 'You may ask a favour of Me.' 'O Mother,'
said he, 'if You are so pleased. with me, then grant that I may eat from a gold
plate with my grandchildren.' Now, in one boon the man got everything:
grandchildren, wealth, and gold plate. (All laugh.)
"When the mind is freed from 'woman and gold',
it can be directed to God and become absorbed in Him. It is the bound alone who
can be freed.
The moment the mind 'turns away from God, it is
bound. When does the lower needle of a pair of scales move away from the upper
one? When one pan is pressed down by a weight. 'Woman and gold' is the weight.
"Why does a child cry on coming out of its
mother's womb? With its cry it says, as it were: 'Just see where I am now! In
my mother's womb I was meditating on the Lotus Feet of God; but see where I am
now!'
(To Mahima) "You should renounce mentally. Live
the life of a house holder in a spirit of detachment."
MAHIMA: "Can a man live in the world if his
mind is once directed to God?"
See God in the world
MASTER: "Why not? Where will he go away from the world? I realize that
wherever I live I am always in the Ayodhya of Rāma. This whole world is Rāma's
Ayodhya. After receiving instruction from His teacher, Rāma said that He would
renounce the world. Daśaratha sent the sage Vasishtha to Rāma to dissuade Him.
Vasishtha found Him filled with intense renunciation. He said to Rāma:
'First of all, reason with me, Rāma; then You may leave the world. May I ask
You if this world is outside, God? If that is so, then You may give it up.'
Rāma found that it is God alone who has become the universe and all its living
beings. Everything in the world appears real on account of God's reality behind
it. Thereupon Rāma became silent.
"In the world a man must fight against passions
like lust and anger, against many desires, against attachment. It is convenient
to fight from inside a fort-from his own home. At home he gets his food and
other help from his wife. In the Kaliyuga the life of a man depends
entirely on food. It is better to get food at one place than to knock at seven
doors for it. Living at home is like facing the battle from a fort.
"Live in the world like a cast-off leaf in a
gale. Such a leaf is sometimes blown inside a house and sometimes to a rubbish
heap. The leaf goes wherever the wind blows-sometimes to a good place and sometimes
to a bad. Now God has put you in the world. That is good. Stay here. Again,
when He lifts you from here and puts you in a better place, that will be time
enough to think about what to do then.
"God has put you in the world. What can you do
about it? Resign everything to Him. Surrender yourself at His feet. Then there
will be no more confusion. Then you will realize that it is God who
does everything. All depends on 'the will of Rāma'."
Story of "the will of Rāma"
A DEVOTEE: "What is that story
about 'the will of Rāma'?"
MASTER: "In a certain village
there lived a weaver. He was a very pious,soul. Everyone trusted him and
loved him. He used to sell his goods in the market-place. When a customer asked
him the price of a piece of cloth, the weaver would say: 'By the will of Rāma
the price of the yarn is one rupee and the labour four ānnās ; by the
will of Rāma the profit is two ānnās . The price of the cloth, by the
will of Rāma, is one rupee and six ānnās .' Such was the people's faith
in the weaver that the customer would at once pay the price and take the cloth.
The weaver was a real devotee of God. After finishing his supper in the
evening, he would spend long hours' in the worship hall meditating on God and
chanting His name and glories. Now, late one night the weaver couldn't get to
sleep. He was sitting in the worship hall, smoking now and then, when a band of
robbers happened to pass that way. They wanted a man to carry their goods and
said to the weaver, 'Come with us.' So saying, they led him off by the
hand. After committing a robbery in a house, they put a load of things on the
weaver's head, commanding him to carry them. Suddenly the police arrived and
the robbers ran away. But the weaver, with his load, was arrested. He was kept
in the lock-up for the night. Next day he was brought before the magistrate for
trial. The villagers learnt what had happened and came to court. They said to
the magistrate, 'Your Honour, this man could never commit a robbery.' Thereupon
the magistrate asked the weaver to make his statement.
'The weaver said: 'Your Honour, by the will of Rāma
I finished my meal at night. Then by the will of Rāma I was sitting in the
worship hall. It was quite late at night by the will of Rāma. By the will of
Rāma I had been thinking of God and chanting His name and glories, when by the
will of Rāma a band of robbers passed that way. By the will of Rāma they
dragged me with them; by the will of Rāma they committed a robbery in a house;
and by the will of Rāma they put a load on my head. Just then, by the will of
Rāma the police arrived, and by the will of Rāma I was arrested. Then by the
will of Rāma the police kept me in the lock-up for the night, and this morning
by the will of Rāma I have been brought before Your Honour.' The magistrate
realized that the weaver was a pious man and ordered his release. On his way
home the weaver said to his friends, 'By the will of Rāma I have been
released.'
"Whether a man should be a householder or a
monk depends on the will of Rāma. Surrender everything to God and do your
duties in the world. What else can you do? A clerk was once sent to prison.
After the prison term was over he was released. Now, what do you think he did?
Cut capers or do his old clerical work?
"If the householder becomes a jivanmukta, then
he can easily live in the world if he likes. A man who has attained Knowledge
does not differentiate between 'this place' and 'that place'. All places are
the same to him. He who thinks of 'that place' also thinks of 'this place'.
MASTER's first meeting with Keshab
"When I first met
Keshab at Jaygopal's garden house, I remarked, 'He is the only one who has
dropped his tail.' At this people laughed. Keshab said to them: 'Don't laugh.
There must be some meaning in his words. Let us ask him.' Thereupon I said to
Keshab: The tadpole, so long as it has not dropped its tail, lives only in the
water. It cannot move about on dry land. But as soon as it drops its tail it
hops out on the bank; then it can live both on land and in water. Likewise, as
long as a man has not dropped his tail of ignorance, he can live only in the
water of the world. But when he drops his tail, that is to say, when he attains
the Knowledge of God, then he can roam about as a free soul, or live as a
householder if he likes.' "
Mahimacharan and. the other devotees remained
spellbound, listening to the MASTER's words.
MASTER and Devendra Tagore
MASTER: "Once I visited Devendranath Tagore with Mathur Babu. I said to
Mathur: 'I have heard that Devendra Tagore thinks of God. I should like to see
him.' 'All right,' said Mathur, 'I will take you to him. We were fellow
students in the Hindu College and. I am very friendly with him.' We went to
Devendra's house. Mathur and Devendra had not seen each other for a long time.
Devendra said to Mathur: 'You have changed a little. You have grown fat around
the stomach.' Mathur said, referring to me: 'He has come to see you. He is
always mad about God.' I wanted to see Devendra's physical marks and said to
him, 'Let me see your body.' He pulled up his shirt, and I found that he had
very fair skin tinted red. His hair had not yet turned grey.
"At the outset I noticed a little vanity in
Devendra. And isn't that natural? He had such wealth, such scholarship, such
name and fame! Noticing that streak of vanity, I asked Mathur: 'Well, is vanity
the outcome of knowledge or ignorance? Can a knower of Brahman have such
a feeling as, "I am a scholar; I am a Jnāni; I am rich"?'
"While I was talking to Devendra, I suddenly
got into that state of mind in which I can see a man as he really is. I was
convulsed with laughter inside. In that state I regard scholars and the
book-learned as mere straw. If I see that a scholar has no discrimination and
renunciation, I regard him as worthless straw. I see that he is like a vulture,
which soars high but fixes its look on a charnel-pit down below.
"I found that Devendra had combined both yoga
and bhoga in his life. He had a number of children, all young. The family
physician was there. Thus, you see, though he was a Jnāni, yet he was
preoccupied with worldly life. I said to him: 'You are the King Janaka of this
Kaliyuga.
Holding to one as well as the other,
He drank his milk from a brimming cup!
He drank his milk from a brimming cup!
I have heard that you live in the world and think of
God; so I have come to see you. Please tell me something about God.'
"He recited some texts from the Vedas. He said,
'This universe is like a chandelier and each living being is a light in it.'
Once, meditating in the Panchavati, I too, had had a vision like that. I found
his words agreed with my vision, and I thought he must be very great man. I
asked him to explain his words. He said: 'God has created men to manifest His
own glory; otherwise, who could know this universe? Everything becomes
dark without the lights in the chandelier. One cannot even see the chandelier
itself.'
"We talked a long time. Devendra was pleased
and said to me, 'You must come to our Brahmo Samaj festival.' 'That', I said,
'depends on the will of God. You can see the state of my mind. There's no
knowing when God will put me into a particular state.' Devendra insisted: 'No,
you must come. 'But put on your cloth and wear a shawl over your body. Someone
might say something. unkind about your untidiness, and that would hurt me.'
'No,' I replied, 'I cannot promise that. I cannot be a babu.' Devendra
and Mathur laughed.
"The very next day Mathur received a letter
from Devendra forbidding me to go to the festival. He wrote that it would be
ungentlemanly of me not to cover my body with a shawl. (All laugh.)
Colonel Viswanath
"There is another big
man: Captain. Though a man of the world, he is a great lover of God. (To
Mahima) Talk to him some time. He knows the Vedas, the Vedānta , the Bhagavata,
the Gitā, the Adhyātma Rāmāyana, and other scriptures by heart. You will find
that out when you talk to him.
"He has great piety. Once I was going along a
street in Baranagore and he held an umbrella over my head. He invites me to his
house and shows me great attention. He fans me, massages my feet, and feeds me
with various dishes. Once at his house I went into samādhi in the toilet;
and he took care of me there though he is so particular about his orthodox
habits. He didn't show any abhorrence for the place.
"He has many expenses. He supports his brothers
who live in Benares. His wife was a miserly woman at first. Now she is so
burdened by the expenses of the family that she cannot spend all the money she
would like to.
"Captain's wife said to me: 'He doesn't enjoy
worldly life. That is why he once said he would renounce the world.' True,
every now and then he expressed that desire.
"Captain was born in a family of devotees. His
father was a soldier. I have heard that on the battle-field he would worship
Śiva with one hand and hold a naked sword in the other.
"Captain is a strong upholder of orthodox
conventions. Because of my visiting Keshab Chandra Sen, he stopped coming here
for a month. He said to me that Keshab had violated the social conventions: he
dined with the English, had married his daughter into another caste, and had
lost his own caste. I said to Captain: 'What do I care for such things? Keshab
chants the name of God; so I go to him to hear about God. I eat only the plum;
what do I care about the thorns?' But Captain remained stubborn. He said to me,
'Why do you see Keshab?' I answered him rather sharply: 'But I don't go to him
for money; I go there to hear the name of God; And how is it that you visit the
Viceroy's house? He is a mlechchha. How can you be in his company?' That
silenced him a little.
"But he is a great devotee. When he
worships he performs Ārati with camphor. When he recites hymns he
becomes a totally different person. He becomes absorbed.
Essence of Vedānta
(To Mahimacharan) "In
the light of Vedantic reasoning the world is illusory, unreal as a dream. The
Supreme Soul is the Witness-the witness of the three states of waking, dream,
and deep sleep. These things are in your line of thought. The waking state is
only as real as the dream. Let me tell you a story that agrees with your
attitude.
"There was a farmer. who lived in the
countryside. He was a real Jnāni. He earned his living by farming. He was
married, and after many years a son was born to him, whom he named Haru. The
parents loved the boy dearly. This was natural, since he was the one precious
gem in the family. On account of his religious nature the farmer was loved by
the villagers. One day he was working in the field when a neighbour came and
told him that Haru had had an attack of cholera. The farmer at once returned
home and arranged for treatment for the boy. But Haru died. The other members
of the family were grief-stricken, but the farmer acted as if nothing had
happened. He consoled his family and told them that grieving was futile. Then
he went back to his field. On returning home he found his wife weeping even
more bitterly. She said to him: "How heartless you are! You haven't shed
one tear for the child.' The farmer replied quietly: 'Shall I tell you why I
haven't wept? I had a very vivid dream last night. I dreamt I had become a
king; I was the father of eight sons and was very happy with them. Then I woke
up. Now I am greatly perplexed. Should I weep for those eight sons or for this
one Haru?'
'The farmer was a Jnāni; therefore he realized
that the waking state is as unreal as the dream state. There is only one
eternal Substance, and that is the Ātman.
"But for my part I accept everything: Turiya
and also the three states of waking, dream; and deep sleep. I accept all three
states. I accept all- Brahman and also māyā, the universe, and its living
beings. If I accepted less I should not get the full weight."
A DEVOTEE: "The full weight? How
is that?" (All laugh.)
Qualified Advaita
MASTER: " Brahman is qualified by the universe and its living beings.
Atthe beginning, while following the method of 'Not this, not this', one has to
eliminate the universe and its living beings. But as long as 'I-consciousness'
remains, one cannot but feel that it is God Himself who has become everything.
He alone has become the twenty-four cosmic principles.
"When a man speaks of the essential part of the
bel-fruit, he means its flesh only, and not the seeds and shell. But if he
wants to speak of the total weight of the fruit, it will not do for him to
weigh only the flesh. He must accept the whole thing: seeds and shell and
flesh. Seeds and shell and flesh belong to one and the same fruit.
Synthesis of Sankara and Ramanuja
"The Nitya and the Lila
belong to the same Reality. Therefore I accept everything, the Relative as well
as the Absolute. I don't explain away the world as māyā. Were I to do that I
should get short weight."
MAHIMACHARAN: "It is a good
synthesis: from the Absolute to the Relative, and from the Relative to the
Absolute."
MASTER: 'The jnanis regard
everything as illusory, like a dream; but the bhaktas accept all the states.
The milk flows only in dribblets from the Jnāni. (All laugh.) There are
some cows that pick and choose their fodder; hence their milk flows only in
dribblets. But cows that don't discriminate so much, and eat whatever they get,
give milk in torrents. A superior devotee of God accepts both the Absolute and
the Relative; therefore he is able to enjoy the Divine even when his mind comes
down from the Absolute. Such a devotee is like the cows that give milk in
torrents." (All laugh.)
MAHIMA: "But the milk of a cow that eats
without discrimination smells a little." (Laughter.)
MASTER (with a smile):
"That's true, no doubt: Therefore that milk should be boiled. One should
boil such milk over the fire a little while; there will be no smell whatever if
you boil the milk over the fire of Knowledge. (All laugh.)
Explanation of "Aum"
(To Mahima) "You
explain 'Aum' with reference to 'a', 'u', and 'm' only."
AHIMA: "'A', 'u', and 'm' mean creation,
preservation, and destruction."
MASTER: "But I give the
illustration of the sound of a gong: 'tom', t-o-m. It is the merging of
the Lila in the Nitya: the gross, the subtle, and the causal merge in the
Great Cause; waking, dream, and deep sleep merge in Turiya. The striking of the
gong is like the falling of a heavy weight into a big ocean. Waves begin to
rise: the Relative rises from the Absolute; the causal, subtle, and gross
bodies appear out of the Great Cause; from Turiya emerge the states of deep
sleep, dream, and waking. These waves arising from the Great Ocean merge again
in the Great Ocean. From the Absolute to the Relative, and from the Relative to
the Absolute. Therefore I give the illustration of the gong's sound, 'tom'. I
have clearly perceived all these things. It has been revealed to me that there
exists an Ocean of Consciousness without limit. From It come all things of the
relative plane, and in It they merge again. Millions of Brahmandas rise
in that Chidakasa and merge in It again. All this has been revealed to me; I
don't know, much about what your books say."
MAHlMA: "Those to whom such things were
revealed did not write the scriptures. They were rapt in their own experiences;
when would they write? One needs a somewhat calculating mind to write. Others
learnt these things from the seers and wrote the books."
MASTER: "Worldly people ask
why one does not get rid of attachment to 'woman and gold'. That attachment
disappears after the realization of God. If a man once tastes the Bliss
of Brahman, then his mind no longer runs after the enjoyment of sense
pleasures or wealth or name and fame. If the moth once sees the light, it no
longer goes into the darkness.
"Some friends said to Ravana: You have been
assuming different forms for Sita . Why don't you go to her in the form of
Rāma?' Ravana replied: 'When I contemplate Rāma, even the position
of Brahma appears insignificant to me, not to speak of the company of another
man's wife! How could I take the form of Rāma for such a purpose?'
"All worship and spiritual discipline are
directed to one end alone, namely, to get rid of worldly attachment. The more
you meditate on God, the less you will be attached to the trifling things of
the world. The more you love the Lotus Feet of God, the less you will crave the
things of the world or pay heed to creature comforts. You will look on another
man's wife as your mother and regard your own wife as your companion in
spiritual life. You will get rid of your bestial desires and acquire godly
qualities. You will be totally unattached to the world. Though you may still
have to live in the world, you will live as a jivamnukta. The disciples of Sri
Chaitanya lived as householders in a spirit of detachment. "You may quote
thousands of arguments from Vedānta philosophy to a true lover of God,
and try to explain the world as a dream, but you cannot shake his devotion to
God. In spite of all your efforts he will come back to his devotion.
"A man born with an element of Śiva becomes
a Jnāni; his mind is always inclined to the feeling that the world is
unreal and Brahman alone is real. But when a man is born with an element
of Vishnu he. develops ecstatic love of God. That love can never be destroyed.
It may wane a little now and then, when he indulges in philosophical reasoning,
but it ultimately returns to him increased a thousandfold."
After the devotees had left the MASTER, Mahimacharan brought Hazra
to the room. M. was present. Mahima said to SRI RAMAKRISHNA:
"Sir, I have a complaint against you. Why have you asked Hazra to go home?
He has no desire to return to his family."
Duty to one's mother
MASTER: "His mother has told Ramlal how much she is suffering on account
of his being away from home; so I have asked Hazra to go home, at least for
three days, and see her. Can anyone succeed in spiritual discipline if it
causes suffering for, his mother? While visiting Vrindāvan, I had almost made
up my mind to live there. But, when I remembered my mother, I said to myself,
'My mother will weep if I stay away from her.' So I returned here
with Mathur Babu. Besides, why should a Jnāni like Hazra be afraid of
going back to the world?"
MAHIMA, (with a smile): "Sir, that would be a
pertinent question if Hazra were a Jnāni."
MASTER (smiling): "Oh, Hazra
has attained everything. He has just a little attachment to the world because
of his children and a small debt. As people say, my aunt is now in perfect
health, only she is slightly ill!"
MAHIMA: "Where, sir, is Hazra's
knowledge?"
MASTER (smiling): "Oh, you
don't know! Everybody says Hazra is quite a man.
Everybody knows that he lives in the Dakshineswar
temple garden. People talk of nothing but Hazra. Who would bother to mention my
name?" (All laugh.)
AZRA: "You, sir, are incomparable. You have
no peer in the world.Therefore nobody understands you."
MASTER: "There you are! To be
sure, no one can have dealings with the incomparable. So why should people
mention me at all?"
MAHIMA: "What does he know, sir? He will do
your bidding."
MASTER: "That is not so. You
had better ask him about it. He said to me, 'You and I are on even
terms.'"
MAHIMA: "He argues a great deal."
MASTER: "Now and then he
teaches me a lesson. (All laugh.) Sometimes I scold him when he argues too
much. Later, when I am lying in bed inside the mosquito curtain, I feel unhappy
at the idea of having offended him. So I leave the bed, go to Hazra, and salute
him. Then I feel peace of mind.
(To Hazra) "Why do you address the Pure Ātman
as 'Isvara'? The Pure Ātman is inactive and is the Witness of the three states.
When I think of the acts of creation, preservation, and destruction, then I
call the Pure Ātman 'Isvara'. What is the Pure Ātman like? It is like a magnet lying
at a great distance from a needle. The needle moves, but the magnet lies
motionless, inactive."
Toward evening SRI RAMAKRISHNA was pacing the room. M. was
sitting alone, thinking. Suddenly the MASTER said to him tenderly: "Please give me
a couple of linen shirts. As you know, I cannot use everybody's things. I
thought of asking Captain for the shirts, but you had better give them to
me." M. felt highly gratified and said, "As you please, sir."
At dusk incense was burnt in SRI RAMAKRISHNA's room, and, as
usual, he bowed before the pictures of gods and goddesses on the walls and
chanted their names softly. From outside one could hear the murmuring of the
Ganges and the music of the evening worship in the temples of Kāli,
Vishnu, and Śiva. Through the door one could see the priest at a distance
moving from one temple to another, a bell in his left hand and a light in his
right, an attendant carrying the gong. The evening melody was in harmony with
the spirit of the hour and place and with the innermost thoughts of the
worshippers. For the time being the sordid things of daily life were forgotten.
Later SRI RAMAKRISHNA was seated in his room in his
usual blissful mood. Ishan had come from Calcutta. He had burning faith in God.
He used to say, "If a man leaves the house with the hallowed name of Durga
on his lips, then Śiva Himself protects him with His celestial weapons."
MASTER (to Ishan): "You have
great faith. But I haven't so much. (All laugh.) God can be realized only
through faith."
ISHAN; "Yes, sir."
MASTER: "You practise
religious rites-japa, fasting, and the like. That is very good. If a man feels
sincerely drawn to God, then God makes him practise all these disciplines. The
devotee will certainly realize God if he practises them without desiring their
results. A devotee observes many rites because of the injunctions of the
scriptures. Such devotion is called vaidhibhakti. But there is a higher form of
devotion known as raga-bhakti, which springs from yearning and love for
God. Prahlada had such devotion. When the devotee develops that love, he
no longer needs to perform prescribed rites.
November 9, 1884
SRI RAMAKRISHNA was in his room, seated on the small couch and
facing the east. The devotees were sitting on the floor. It was about midday
when M. arrived and took a seat after saluting the MASTER. Gradually other devotees
began to gather. VIJAYkrishna Goswami was
there with several Brahmo devotees. The priest Ram Chakravarty was present
also. Mahimacharan, Narayan, and Kishori arrived a few minutes later.
It was the beginning of winter. SRI RAMAKRISHNA had felt the need of
some shirts and had asked M. to bring them.
Besides two broad cloth shirts, M. had brought another of a heavy material, for
which SRI
RAMAKRISHNA had not asked.
MASTER (to M.): "You had better take that one back with you. You can
use it yourself. There is nothing wrong in that. Tell me, what kind of shirt
did I ask you to bring?"
M: "Sir, you told me to get you plain ones. You
didn't ask me to buy the heavier one."
MASTER: "Then please take
that one back. (To VIJAY and the others) You
see, Dwarika Babu gave me a shawl. The Mārwāri devotees also brought one
for me. I couldn't accept."
VIJAY interrupted the MASTER, saying: "That is right,
sir. If a man needs a thing, he must accept it. And there must be a man to give
it. Who but a man will give?"
God supplies the needs of devotees
MASTER: 'The giver is the Lord Himself. The mother-in-law said to her
daughter-in-law: 'My child, I see that everybody has someone to render him a little
personal service. It would be so nice if you could find someone to massage your
feet.' The daughter-in-law said: 'Mother, God Himself will massage my feet. I
don't need anyone else.' She spoke thus because she was a sincere lover of God.
"Once a fakir went to the Emperor Akbar to ask
for money. The Emperor was saying his prayers. He prayed, 'O Lord, give me
money; give me wealth.' The fakir started to leave the palace, but the Emperor
motioned to him to wait. After finishing his prayers, Akbar came to the holy
man and said, 'Why were you going away?' The fakir replied, 'You yourself were
begging for money and wealth; so I thought that if I must beg, I would beg of
God and not of a beggar.'"
VIJAY: "I saw a sādhu at Gaya. He did not
take the initiative in anything. One day he wanted to feed some devotees.
Suddenly we found that butter, flour, fruits, and other food-stuff had arrived
from no one knew where."
Three classes of sādhus
MASTER (to VIJAY and the others): 'There
are three classes of sādhus: good, mediocre, and bad. The good sādhu makes no
effort to get his food. The dandis, among others, belong to the mediocre and
bad classes. To get food the mediocre sādhu will knock at the door of a house
and say, 'Namo Narayana'. The bad sādhu starts a quarrel if he doesn't get his
alms.
"The good sādhu behaves like a python. He sits
in one place and the food comes to him. The python doesn't move from where it
is. A young sādhu, who had been a am Brahmachari from his boyhood, went out to
beg. A young girl offered him alms. The sādhu saw her breasts and thought she
had abscesses. He asked about them. The elderly women of the family explained
that she would some day be a mother and that God had given her breasts to give
milk to her children; God had provided for all this beforehand. At these words
the sādhu was struck with wonder. He said: Then 1 don't need to beg. God must
have provided for me too."
Some of the devotees thought that in that case they
should not take any initiative either.
MASTER: "But those who think
that an effort is needed must make the effort."
VIJAY: 'There is a nice story about that in the
Bhaktamala."
MASTER: "Tell it to us."
VIJAY: "Please tell us yourself."
MASTER: "No, you tell it. 1
don't remember it very well. "One should hear these things at the
beginning. That is why I listened to them years ago. But now I am no longer in
that mood. Hanuman said: 'I don't know the position of the stars or the phase
of the moon. I only think of Rāma.'
'The chatak bird craves only
rain-water. Even when it is dying of thirst, it turns its beak upward and wants
only water from the sky. The Ganges, the Jamuna, and the seven oceans are
filled to the brim, but still it will not touch the water of the earth.
'Rāma and Lakshmana visited Pampa Lake. Lakshmana saw a crow very eager for water. Again and again it went to the edge of the water but would not drink. Lakshmana asked Rāma about it. Rāma said: 'Brother, this crow is a great devotee of God. Day and night it repeats the name of Rāma. Its throat is parched with thirst, but still it won't drink for fear of missing a repetition of Rāma's name.'
"On a full-moon night I said to Haladhāri,
'Brother, is it the night of the new moon?' (All laugh.)
(Smiling) "Yes, it is true. Once I was told
that a characteristic of a man of Perfect Knowledge is that he cannot
distinguish between the full moon and the new moon. But how could one convince
Haladhāri of that? He said: This is certainly the dark Kaliyuga. He
cannot distinguish the full moon from the new moon! And people respect
him!"
Mahimacharan entered the room.
MASTER (respectfully): "Come
in. Come in, sir. Please take a seat.
(To VIJAY and the
other devotees) "In the ecstatic state of mind I cannot remember a date.
The other day there was a religious festival at Beni Pāl's garden. I forgot the
date. I can no longer remember the last day of the month, when it is very
auspicious to repeat the name ofGod."
SRI
RAMAKRISHNA
remained thoughtful a few minutes.
MASTER: "But I remember if a
man makes an engagement to visit me.
"A man attains this state when his mind
is one hundred per cent absorbed in God. When Hanuman returned from Ceylon,
Rāma said to him: 'You have seen Sita . Tell me, how did you find her?' Hanuman
said: 'O Rāma, I saw that only the body of Sita lay there; it held
neither her mind nor her soul. She has indeed consecrated her mind and soul to
Your Lotus Feet. Therefore I saw only her body in Ceylon. Further, I saw the
King of Death prowling about. But what could he do? It was only a body; it had
neither mind nor soul.'
"If you meditate on an ideal you will acquire
its nature. If you think of God day and night, you will acquire the nature of
God. A salt doll went into the ocean to measure its depth. It became one with
the ocean. What is the goal of books or scriptures? The attainment of God. A
man opened a book belonging to a sādhu. He saw the word 'Rāma' written on every
page. There was nothing else.
"If a man loves God, even the slightest thing
kindles spiritual feeling in him. Then, repeating the name of Rāma but once, he
gets the fruit of ten million sandhyas. At the sight of a cloud the
peacock's emotion is awakened: he dances, spreading his. tail. Radha had
the same experience. Just the sight of a cloud recalled Krishna to her mind.
"Chaitanyadeva was passing a village. He heard
that drums were made from the earth of that place. At once he was overwhelmed
with ecstasy because drums are used in kirtan.
"But who can have this spiritual awakening?
Only he who has renounced his attachment to worldly things. If the sap of
attachment is totally dried up in a man, the slightest suggestion kindles his
spiritual emotion. Though you strike a wet match a thousand times, it will not
produce a spark. But if it is dried, the slightest rubbing will set it aflame.
"Pain and pleasure are inevitable in a body. He
who has realized God dedicates his mind and life, his body and soul, to God.
When Rāma and Lakshmana went to take their bath in Pampa Lake, they thrust
their bows into the ground. Coming out of the water, Lakshmana took out his bow
and found its tip stained with blood. Rāma said to him: 'Look, brother! Look.
Perhaps we have hurt some creature." Lakshmana dug in the earth and found
a big bullfrog. It was dying. Rāma said to the frog in a sorrowful voice: 'Why
didn't you croak? We should have tried to save you. You croak lustily enough
when you are in the jaws of a snake.' The frog said: 'O Lord, when I am
attacked by a snake I croak, saying: "O Rāma, save me! O Rāma, save
me!" This time I found that it was Rāma who was killing me; so I kept
still.'"
SRI
RAMAKRISHNA
remained silent a few moments watching the devotees. He had heard that
Mahimacharan did not believe in following a guru. He began the conversation
again.
Faith in guru
MASTER: "A man should have faith in the words of his guru. He doesn't
have to look into his guru's character. 'Though my guru visits the grog-shop,
still he is the Embodiment of Eternal Bliss.'
"A man who used to give recitals of the Chandi
and the Bhagavata once said, 'A broomstick is itself unclean, but it cleans
dirty places.' "
Mahimacharan studied the Vedānta. His aim was to
attain Brahmajnana. He followed the path of knowledge and was always
reasoning.
MASTER (to Mahima): "The aim
of the Jnāni is to know the nature of his own Self. This is Knowledge;
this is liberation. The true nature of the Self is that It is the Supreme
Brahman: I and the Supreme Brahman are one. But this Knowledge is hidden
on account of māyā.
"I said to Harish; 'This is the whole thing:
the gold is hidden under a few basketfuls of earth, and you must remove the
earth.'
"I-consciousness"
"The bhaktas retain
'I-consciousness'; the jnanis do not. Nangta used to teach how to
establish oneself in the true Self, saying, 'Merge the mind in the buddhi and
the buddhi in the Ātman; then you will be established in your true Self."
"But the 'I' persists. It cannot be got rid of.
Imagine a limitless expanse of water: above and below, before and behind, right
and left, everywhere there is water. In that water is placed a jar filled with
water. There is water inside the jar and water outside, but the jar is still
there. The 'I' is the jar.
"Even after attaining Knowledge, the
Jnāni keeps his body as before. But the fire of Knowledge burns away his lust
and other passions. Many days ago, during an electric storm, a thunderbolt
struck the Kāli temple. We saw that no injury had been done to the doors;
only the points of the screws were broken. The doors are the body, and the
passions-lust and so forth-are the screws.
"A Jnāni loves to talk only about God. He feels
pained if one talks about worldly things. But a worldly man belongs to a different
class. He always has the turban of ignorance on his head. He always comes back
to worldly topics.
"The Vedas speak of the 'seven planes' of mind.
When the Jnāni's mind ascends to the fifth plane, he cannot listen to anything
or talk of anything but God. At that stage only words of wisdom come from his
lips.
"The Vedas speak of Satchidananda
Brahman. Brahman is neither one nor two; It is between one and two. It
cannot be described either as existence or as non-existence; It is between
existence and non-existence.
Sincere and formal devotion
"When the devotee
develops raga-bhakti, passionate love of God, he realizes Him. But one loses
vaidhi-bhakti, formal devotion, as easily as one gains it. This is formal
devotion: so much japa, so much meditation, so much sacrifice and homa, so many
articles of worship, and the recitation of so many mantras, before the Deity.
Such devotion comes in a moment and goes in a moment. Many people say: 'Well,
friend, we have lived on havishya for so many days! How many times we have
worshipped the Deity at our home! And what have we achieved?' But there is no
falling away from raga-bhakti. And who gets this passionate love for God? Those
who have performed many meritorious deeds in their past births, or those who
are eternally perfect. Think of a dilapidated house, for instance: while
clearing away the undergrowth and rubbish one suddenly discovers a fountain
fitted with a pipe. It has been covered with earth and bricks, but as soon as
they are removed the water shoots up.
Sign of a true devotee
"Those who have
passionate love for God do not say any such thing as: 'O brother, how strict I
have been about food! But what have I achieved?' New farmers give up
cultivating if their fields do not yield any crops. But hereditary farmers will
continue to cultivate their fields whether they get a crop or not. Their
fathers and grandfathers were farmers; they know that they too must accept
farming as their means of livelihood.
"Only those who have developed raga-bhakti for
God may be called His sincere devotees. God becomes responsible for them. If
you enter your name in a hospital register, the doctor will not discharge you
until you are cured. Those who are held by God have nothing to fear. The son
who holds to his father, while walking along the narrow ridge of a paddy-field,
may slip if he absent-mindedly lets go his father's hand; but if the father
holds the son by the hand, there is no such danger.
"Is there anything that is impossible for
faith? And a true devotee has faith in everything: the formless Reality, God
with form, Rāma, Krishna and the Divine Mother.
"Once, while going to Kamarpukur, I was
overtaken by a storm. I was in the middle of a big meadow. The place was
haunted by robbers. I began to repeat the names of all the deities: Rāma,
Krishna, and Bhagavati. I also repeated the name of Hanuman. I chanted the
names of them all. What does that mean? Let me tell you. While the
servant is counting out the money to purchase supplies, he says, 'These pennies
are for potatoes these for egg-plants, these for fish.' He counts the money
separately, but after the list is completed, he puts the coins together.
"When one develops love of God, one likes to
talk only of God. If you love a person, you love to talk and hear about him. A
worldly persn's mouth waters while he talks about his son. If someone praises
his son, he will at once say to the boy, 'Go and get some water for your uncle
to wash his feet.
"Those who love pigeons are highly pleased if
you praise pigeons before them. But if you speak ill of pigeons, they will at
once exclaim, 'Has anyone in your line for fourteen generations ever raised
pigeons?'"
Advantage of a householder's life
SRI RAMAKRISHNA now addressed Mahimacharan, who was a
householder.
MASTER: "What need is there
of renouncing the world altogether? It is enough if you can rid yourself of
attachment. But you must have sādhanā you have to fight the
sense-organs.
"It is a great advantage to fight from inside a
fort. You get much help from the fort. The world is the place for enjoyment.
After enjoying different things, you should give them up one by one. Once I had
a desire to put a gold chain around my waist. I obtained one at last and put it
on, but I had to take it off immediately.
"Once I ate some onion. While eating it I
discriminated, 'O mind, this is onion.' Then I moved it to different places in
my mouth and at last spat it out."
A musician was expected. He was to sing with his
party. SRI
RAMAKRISHNA asked the devotees every now and then, "Where is
the musician?"
MAHIMA: "We are quite all right as we
are."
MASTER: "No, sir. You get
this all through the year."
A devotee outside the room said, "The musician
has come."
SRI
RAMAKRISHNA
was filled with joy and said, "Ah! Has he?"
Mats were spread on the floor of the long verandah
northeast of the MASTER's room. SRI RAMAKRISHNA said: "Sprinkle a little
Ganges water on the mats. Many worldly people have sat on them."
The ladies of Pyari Babu's family, from Bali, had
come to visit the temples. They wanted to listen to the kirtan. A devotee said
to SRI
RAMAKRISHNA: "These ladies have been inquiring whether there
would be any place in the room for them. Can they have seats?" The kirtan
had already begun. The MASTER said, "No, no! Where is any room
here?"
MASTER and Narayan
Narayan arrived and saluted SRI RAMAKRISHNA.
The latter said tenderly: "Why have you come? Your people at home have
beaten you so much!" He signed to Baburam to give Narayan something
to eat. Narayan entered the MASTER's room. Suddenly SRI RAMAKRISHNA followed him. He
wanted to feed Narayan with his own hands. Afterwards he returned to the
verandah.
Many devotees were present, including VIJAY, Mahimacharan, Narayan, M., and the younger Gopal. Soon Narayan came back
to the verandah and took his seat by the MASTER.
About three o'clock Adhar arrived. At the sight of
him SRI
RAMAKRISHNA appeared excited. The devotee saluted the MASTER
and sat on the floor. SRI RAMAKRISHNA beckoned to him to come nearer.
When the music was over the
gathering of devotees broke up. Some began to stroll in the garden and some
went to the temples to watch the evening service.
In the evening arrangements
were made for kirtan inside the MASTER's room. SRI RAMAKRISHNA eagerly asked a
devotee to have an extra lamp. The two lamps lit the room brightly.
SRI
RAMAKRISHNA
said to VIJAY: "Why are you sitting
there? Come nearer to me." This time the kirtan created an intense
atmosphere. The MASTER
danced in an ecstasy of joy; the devotees also danced encircling him. While VIJAY was dancing his cloth dropped. He was
unconscious.
When the music was over, VIJAY
began to look for his key, which had fallen somewhere. The MASTER said to him with a laugh,
"Why bother about it any more?"
He meant that VIJAY should have nothing more to do with boxes
and keys.
Kishori saluted SRI RAMAKRISHNA and was about to take his leave. The MASTER blessed him, touching his chest tenderly, and bade him good-bye. His words were full of love. M. and Gopal saluted the MASTER. They too were about to take their leave. He said to them with the same affection: "Couldn't you go tomorrow morning? You may catch cold at night."
M. and Gopal decided to spend the night with SRI RAMAKRISHNA.
They sat on the floor with a few other devotees.
SRI
RAMAKRISHNA
had had no rest the whole day: the devotees had been with him all the time. He
went out for a few minutes. Returning to the room he saw M. taking down a song
from Ramlal.
MASTER: "What are you
doing?"
M. said that he was writing down a song. On being told
what the song was, the MASTER remarked that it was a rather long song. M. wrote a line or two and then stopped writing.
A little later SRI RAMAKRISHNA took his supper of farina pudding
and one or two luchis. A lighted lamp stood on a stand by his side. M. sat near him. The MASTER asked if there were any
sweets in the room. M. had brought some
sandesh which he had put on the shelf. SRI RAMAKRISHNA asked M. to give him a
sweet. M. searched for the sweets but could
not find them. He was embarrassed. They had been given to the devotees.
After finishing his supper, SRI RAMAKRISHNA sat on the small
couch and M. seated himself on the foot-rug.
The MASTER,
talking about Narayan, was overcome with emotion.
MASTER: "I saw Naran
today."
M: "Yes, sir. His eyes were moist. When I looked
at his face I felt like weeping."
MASTER: 'The sight of him arouses
a mother's love in me, as it were. His relatives beat him at home because he
comes here. There is none to defend him."M :
'The other day he left his books at Haripada's house and fled to you.
MASTER: "It was not good for
him to do that."
SRI
RAMAKRISHNA
was silent. After a few minutes he continued.
MASTER: "You see, he has much
substance in him. Otherwise, how could I be attracted to him even though I was
listening to the kirtan at the time? I had to leave the music and go into the
room. That never happened before."
Again SRI RAMAKRISHNA fell silent. A few minutes later
he began to talk.
MASTER: "In an ecstatic state
I asked him how he was feeling. He just said he was happy. (To M.) Feed him now and then-as parents do their
child."
SRI
RAMAKRISHNA
then spoke about Tejchandra.
MASTER (to M.): "Please ask him what he thinks of me. Does he thinkof
me as a Jnāni? Or what does he say about me? I understand that he is very
reticent. (To Gopal) Ask Tejchandra to come here Saturdays and Tuesdays. (To M.) Suppose I go to your school and look
for-"
M. thought that SRI RAMAKRISHNA wanted to go to his school to see
Narayan. He said to the MASTER, "You might as well wait at our
house."
MASTER: "No, I have something
else in mind. I should like to see whetherthere are other worth-while boys in
the school."
M: "Of course you can go. Other visitors come to
the school. You cancome too."
SRI RAMAKRISHNA was smoking. M. and Gopal finished their supper. They decided to sleep in the nahabat. M. again sat on the floor near SRI RAMAKRISHNA.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA was smoking. M. and Gopal finished their supper. They decided to sleep in the nahabat. M. again sat on the floor near SRI RAMAKRISHNA.
MASTER (to M.): 'There may be some pots and pans in the nahabat.Why not
sleep here in this room?"
M: "Very well, sir."
It was ten or eleven o'clock at night. SRI RAMAKRISHNA
was sitting on the small couch, resting against a pillow. M. sat on the floor.
The MASTER
was conversing with him. A lamp burnt on a stand near the wall. The MASTER
felt great compassion for his devotees. He wanted to bless M. by accepting his
personal service.
MASTER: "My feet ache. Please
rub them gently."
M. seated himself on the small couch and took the MASTER's
feet on his lap. He stroked them. Now and then SRI RAMAKRISHNA would ask his
disciple a question.
MASTER (smiling): "How did
you like today's conversation?"
M: "Very much indeed."
MASTER (smiling): "How I
spoke about the Emperor Akbar!"
M: "It was very good."
MASTER: "Repeat it to
me."
M: "A fakir came to visit Akbar. The Emperor was
saying his prayers. In his prayers he was asking God to give him wealth
and riches. Thereupon the fakir was about to leave the. room quietly. Later,
when the Emperor asked him about it, the fakir said, 'If I must beg, why should
I beg of a beggar?'"
MASTER: "What else did we
talk about?"
M: "You told us a great deal about saving up for
the future."
MASTER (smiling): "What did I
say?"
M: "As long as a man feels that he must try, he
should make an effort. How well you told us about it at Sinthi!"
MASTER: "What did I
say?"
M: "God takes upon Himself complete
responsibility for one who totally depends upon Him. It is like a guardian
taking charge of a minor. You also told us that at a feast a child cannot by
himself find a place to eat his meal; someone finds a place for him."
MASTER: "No, that is not
quite to the point. I said that the child doesn't fall if the father leads him
and holds his hand."
M: "You also described the three classes of
sādhus. The best sādhu does not move about to get his food; he lives in one
place and gets his food there, You told us about that young sādhu who said,
when he saw the breasts of a young girl, 'Why has she those abscesses?' You
told us many other things."
MASTER (smiling): "What
else?"
M: "About the crow of Pampa Lake. He repeated the
name of Rāma day and night. That is why he couldn't drink the water though he
went to its edge. And about the holy man in whose book was written only 'Om
Rāma'. And what Hanuman said to Rāma."
MASTER: "What did he
say?"
M: "Hanuman said to Rāma: 'I saw Sita in
Ceylon; but it was only her body. Her mind and soul were lying at Your feet.'
"And about the chatak bird. He will not drink
anything but rain-water. And about jnanayoga and bhaktiyoga."
MASTER: "What did I say about
them?"
M: "As long as one is conscious of the 'jar', the
ego will certainly remain. As long as one is conscious of 'I', one cannot get
rid of the idea, 'I am the devotee and Thou art God'."
MASTER: "No, it is not that;
the 'jar' doesn't disappear whether one is conscious of it or not. One cannot
get rid of the 'I'. You may reason a thousand times; still it will not
go."
M. remained silent a few moments.
M: "You had that talk with Ishan Mukherji in the
Kāli temple. We were very lucky to be there."
MASTER (smiling): "Yes, yes.
Tell me, what did I say?"
M: "You said that work is only the first step.
You told us that you said to Sambhu Mallick, 'If God appears before you, will
you ask Him for a number of hospitals and dispensaries?'
"You said another thing: God does not reveal
Himself to a person as long as he is attached to work. You said that to Keshab
Sen."
MASTER: "What did I
say?"
M: "As long as the baby
plays with the toy and forgets everything else, its mother looks after her
cooking and other household duties; but when the baby throws away the toy and
cries, then the mother puts down the rice-pot and comes to the baby.
"You said another thing
that day: Lakshmana asked Rāma where one could find God; after a great deal of
explanation, Rāma said to him, 'Brother, I dwell in the man in whom you find
ecstatic love-a love which makes him laugh and weep and dance and sing.' "
MASTER: "Ah me! Ah me!"
SRI
RAMAKRISHNA
sat in silence a few minutes.
M: "That day you spoke only words of renunciation
to Ishan. Since then many of us have come to our senses. Now we are eager to
reduce our duties. You said that day, 'Ravana died in Ceylon and Behula
wept bitterly for him.'"
SRI
RAMAKRISHNA
laughed aloud.
M. (humbly): "Sir, isn't it desirable to reduce
the number of one's duties and entanglements?"
MASTER: "Yes. But it is a
different thing if you happen to come across a sādhu or a poor man. Then you
should serve him."
M: "And. that day you spoke very rightly to Ishan
about flatterers. They are like vultures on a carcass. You once said that to
Padmalochan also."
MASTER: "No, to Vamandas of
Ulo."
After a while M.
sat on the floor near the small couch. SRI RAMAKRISHNA felt sleepy; he said
to M.: "Go to sleep. Where is Gopal?
Please shut the door."
Next morning SRI RAMAKRISHNA left his bed very early. As usual,
he chanted the holy names of the different gods and goddesses. Now and then he
looked at the sacred river. The morning worship began in the temples of
Radhakanta and Mother Kāli. M. had
spent the night on the floor of the MASTER's room. He left his bed and watched the
worship in. the different temples.
SRI
RAMAKRISHNA
finished his bath and went with M. to
the Kāli temple. He asked the disciple to lock the door of his room.
In the temple he took the
seat in front of the image of Kāli and offered flowers, sometimes at Her
feet and sometimes on his own head. He fanned the Deity. Then he returned to
his room and asked M. to unlock the door.
Entering the room, he sat on the small couch. He was completely overwhelmed
with divine fervour and began to chant the name of God. M. sat alone on the
floor. SRI
RAMAKRISHNA began to sing about the Divine Mother:
Who is there that can understand what Mother Kāli is?
Even the six darsanas are powerless to reveal Her.
It is She, the scriptures say, that is the Inner Self
Of the yogi, who in Self discovers all his joy;
She that, of Her own sweet will, inhabits every living thing. .
Even the six darsanas are powerless to reveal Her.
It is She, the scriptures say, that is the Inner Self
Of the yogi, who in Self discovers all his joy;
She that, of Her own sweet will, inhabits every living thing. .
Then he sang:
All creation is the sport of my mad Mother Kāli;
By Her māyā the three worlds are bewitched. . . .
By Her māyā the three worlds are bewitched. . . .
He continued:
Kāli, who can know Thee? Numberless are Thy forms. . .
Again he sang:
O Mother, redeem me speedily!
From terror of the King of Death I am about to die.
M. said to himself, "I wish he would sing:
Mother, Thou canst not trick me any more,
For I have seen Thy crimson Lotus Feet."
From terror of the King of Death I am about to die.
M. said to himself, "I wish he would sing:
Mother, Thou canst not trick me any more,
For I have seen Thy crimson Lotus Feet."
Strangely enough, no sooner had the thought passed
through M.'s mind than SRI RAMAKRISHNA sang the song. A few
minutes later he said to M., "What do
you think of the present state of my mind?"
M. (smiling): "It is your simple and natural
state."
SRI
RAMAKRISHNA
sang to himself the following refrain of a song:
Unless a man is simple, he cannot recognize God, the Simple One.
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