CAR FESTIVAL AT BALARĀM'S HOUSE
Monday,
July 13, 1885
SRI RAMAKRISHNA was sitting in Balarām's
drawing-room with the devotees. It was nine o'clock in the morning. Balarām was
going to celebrate the Car Festival the following day. The Deity Jagannath was
worshipped daily at his house. He had a small car which would be drawn along
the verandah to celebrate the festival. The MASTER had been specially invited
for the occasion.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA
and M. were talking together. Narayan,
Tejchandra, Balarām, and other devotees were in the room. The MASTER
was talking about Purna, a lad of fifteen. He was very eager to see the
boy.
MASTER
(to M.): Well, by which road will he
come to see me? Please have Purna and Dwija meet each other.
"When two people are of the
same age and have the same inner nature, I bring them together. There is a
meaning in this. In this way both make progress. Have you noticed Purna's
longing for God?"
M: "Yes, sir. One day I was
riding on a tram. He saw me from the room of his house and ran down to the
street. With great fervour he saluted me from the street."
MASTER
(with tears in his eyes): "Ah! Ah! It is because you have helped him make
the contact through which he will find out the supreme ideal of his life. One
doesn't act like that unless one longs for God.
"NARENDRA, the younger Naren, and
Purna-these three have a manly nature. It is not so with Bhavanāth. He has a
womanly nature.
MASTER on Purna
"Purna
is in such an exalted state that either he will very soon give up his body-the
body is useless after the realization of God-or his inner nature will within a
few days burst forth.
Purna's divine traits
"He
has a divine nature-the traits of a god. It makes a person less fearful of men.
If you put a garland of flowers round his neck or smear his body with
sandal-paste or burn incense before him, he will go into samādhi; for then he
will know beyond the shadow of a doubt that Narayana Himself dwells in his
body, that it is Narayana who has assumed the body. I have come to know about
it.
A few days after my first
experience of the God-intoxicated state at Dakshineswar, a lady of a brahmin
family arrived there. She had many good traits. No sooner was a garland put
round her neck and incense burnt before her than she went into samādhi. A few
moments later she experienced great bliss; tears streamed from her eyes. I
saluted her and said, 'Mother, shall I succeed?' 'Yes', she replied.
"I want to see Purna once
more. But how will it be possible for me? It seems he is a part. How amazing!
Not a mere particle, but a part very intelligent, too. I understand that he is
very clever in his studies. Therefore I have hit it right.
"By dint of austerity, a man,
may obtain God as his son. By the roadside on the way to Kamarpukur is Ranjit
Raya's lake. Bhagavati, the Divine Mother, was born as his daughter. Even now
people hold an annual festival there in the month of Chaitra, in honour of this
divine daughter. I feel very much like going there.
Story of Ranjit Raya
"Ranjit
Raya was the landlord of that part of the country. Through the power of his tapasya
he obtained the Divine Mother as his daughter. He was very fond of her, and she
too was much attached to him; she hardly left his presence. One day Ranjit Raya
was engaged in the duties of his estate. He was very busy. The girl, with her
childlike nature, was constantly interrupting him, saying: 'Father, what is
this? What is that?' Ranjit Raya tried, with sweet words, to persuade her not
to disturb him, and said: 'my child, please leave me alone. I have much work to
do.' But the girl would not go away. At last, absent-mindedly, the father said,
'Get out of here!' On this pretext she left home. A pedlar of conch-shell
articles was going along the road. From him she took a pair of bracelets for
her wrists. When he asked for the price, she said that he could get the money
from a certain box in her home. Then she disappeared. Nobody saw her again. In
the mean time the pedlar came to the house and asked for the price of his
bracelets. When she was not to be found at home, her relatives began to run about
looking for her. Ranjit Raya sent people in all directions to search for her.
The money owed to the pedlar was found in the box, as she had indicated. Ranjit
Raya was weeping bitterly, when people came running to him and said that they
had noticed something in the lake. They all ran there and saw an arm, with
conch-shell bracelets on the wrist, being waved above the water. A moment
afterwards it disappeared. Even now people worship her as the Divine Mother at
the time of the annual festival. (To M.) All this is true.
M: "Yes, sir."
MASTER:
"NARENDRA
now believes these things.
"Purna was born with an element
of Vishnu. I worshipped him mentally with bel-leaves; but the offering was not
accepted. Then I worshipped him with tulsi-leaves and sandal-paste. That proved
to be all right. God reveals Himself in many ways: sometimes as man, sometimes
in other divine forms made of Spirit. One must believe in divine forms. What do
you say?"
M: "It is true,
sir!"
Gopal Ma
MASTER: "The brahmani of Kamarhati
sees many visions. She lives all by herself in a lonely room in a garden on the
bank of the Ganges. She spends her time in japa. Gopala with her. (The MASTER
gives a start.) It is not imagination, but fact. She saw that Gopala's palms
were red. He walks with her. She suckles Him at her breast. They talk to each
other. When NARENDRA
heard the story he wept. Formerly I too used to see many visions, but now in my
ecstatic state I don't see so many. I am gradually getting over my feminine
nature; I feel nowadays more like a man. Therefore I control my emotion; I
don't manifest it outwardly so much.
"The younger Naren has the
nature of a man. Therefore in meditation his mind completely merges in the
Ideal. He does not show emotion. Nitya-gopal has a feminine nature. Therefore
while he is in a spiritual mood his body becomes distorted and twisted; it
becomes flushed.
(To M.)
"Well, people renounce grain by grain, but what a mood these youngsters
are in!
"Binode said: 'I have to sleep
with my wife. That makes me feel very bad.' It is bad for an aspirant to sleep
with his wife, whether he has intercourse with her or not. There is the
friction of the body and also the physical warmth.
"What a state Dwija is passing through! In my presence he only sways his body and fixes his glance on me. Is that a trifling thing? If a man gathers his whole, mind and fixes it on me, then, indeed, he achieves everything.
God dwelling in the MASTER
"But
what am I? It is all He. I am the machine and He is its Operator. It is God
alone who exists in this [meaning his body]. That is why so many people are
feeling more and more attracted to it. A mere touch is enough to awaken their
spirituality. This attraction, these pull, is the attraction of God and of none
else.
"Tārak of Belgharia was going
home from Dakshineswar. I dearly noticed that a flame-like thing came out of
this [meaning his body] and followed him. A few days later Tārak came back to
Dakshineswar. In a state of samādhi He Who dwells in this body placed his foot
on Tārak's chest.
"Well, are there more
youngsters like these?"
M: "Mohit is very nice. He came
to you once or twice. He is studying enough books to pass two university
examinations. He has great longing for God."
MASTER:
"That maybe. But he doesn't belong to a high plane. His physical traits
are not so good; he has a puggish face. But these other youngsters belong to a
high plane.
Worries associated with human birth
"Many
troubles and worries follow in the wake of a birth in a physical body. Further,
if a person is cursed, he may have to be born seven times. One must be very
careful. One has to assume a human body if one cherishes the slightest
desire."
A DEVOTEE: "What are the desires of those
who are Incarnations of God?"
MASTER
(smiling): "I find that I have not got rid of all my desires. Once I saw a
holy man with a shawl, and I too wanted to put on one like it. Even now I have
that desire. I don't know whether I shall have to be born again for it."
BALARĀM (smiling): "Then will
you be born again just for a shawl?" (All laugh.)
MASTER
(smiling): "One has to keep a good desire so that one may give up the body
meditating on it. There are four holy places for the sādhus to visit. They
visit three and leave out one. Many of them leave out Puri, the place of
Jagannath, so that they can give up their bodies meditating on Jagannath."
A man dressed in an ochre robe
entered the room and greeted the MASTER. Privately he was in the habit of
criticizing SRI
RAMAKRISHNA; so at the sight of him Balarām laughed. SRI RAMAKRISHNA
could read a man's mind. He said to Balarām: "Never mind. Let him say I am
a cheat."
SRI RAMAKRISHNA
was talking to Tejchandra.
MASTER:
"I send for you so often. Why don't you come? If you practise meditation
and prayer it will make me happy. I look on you as my own; that is why I send
for you."
TEJCHANDRA: "Sir, I have to go to the
office. I am very busy with my duties."
M. (smiling): "There was a
marriage ceremony at his home and he got leave from his office for ten
days."
MASTER:
"Well, well! You say you have no leisure. You told me just now that you
were going to renounce the world."
NARAYAN: "M.
said to us one day that this world, is a wilderness."
MASTER
(to M.): "Please tell them that story of the disciple who became
unconscious after taking the medicine. His teacher arrived at the house and
said he would revive if someone else swallowed a pill that he would prescribe.
The disciple would get back his life, but the man who, swallowed the pill would
die.
"Please tell the other one, too,
of the hathayogi who thought that his wife and children were his very own, and
who feigned death with his limbs stretched out. It will do them good to hear
those stories."
It was noon. SRI RAMAKRISHNA partook of the food
that had been offered to the Family Deity, Jagannath. The MASTER often used to say that the
food at Balarām's house was very pure. Afterwards he rested awhile.
Late in the afternoon SRI RAMAKRISHNA sat with the devotees in the
drawing-room of Balarām's house. Chandra Babu, of the Kartabhaja sect, and a
witty brahmin were there. The brahmin was something of a buffoon; his words
made everybody laugh.
About six o'clock Girish's brother
Atul and Tejchandra's brother arrived. SRI RAMAKRISHNA was in samādhi. A few minutes
later he said, still in theecstatic mood: "Can one become unconscious by
meditating on Conscious-ness? Can one lose one's mind by thinking of God? God
is of the very nature of Knowledge; He is of the very nature of Eternity,
Purity, and Consciousness.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA
said to the witty brahmin: "Why do you waste your time with these
frivolous jokes about insignificant worldly things? Direct your mind to God. If
a man can calculate about salt, he can also calculate about sugar candy."
BRAHMIN (smiling): "Please
attract me."
MASTER:
"What can I do? Everything depends on your effort. Your mind is your own.
Give up this trifling buffoonery and go forward toward God. You can go farther
and farther along that way. The brahmachari asked the wood-cutter to go
forward. At first the wood-cutter found a sandal-wood forest; next, a
silver-mine; next, a gold-mine; and then gems and diamonds."
BRAHMIN: "There is no end to this
path."
MASTER:
"Where you find peace, there is the end."
About a new visitor SRI RAMAKRISHNA
said: "I didn't find any substance in him. He seemed worthless."
It was dusk. Lamps were lighted in
the room. SRI
RAMAKRISHNA was meditating on the Divine Mother and chanting Her
name in his melodious voice. The devotees sat around him. Since Balarām was
going to celebrate the Car Festival at his house the following day, SRI RAMAKRISHNA
intended to spend the night there.
After taking some refreshments in
the inner apartments, SRI RAMAKRISHNA returned to the parlour. It was
about ten o'dock. The MASTER said to M., "Please bring my towel
from the other room." A bed was made for SRI RAMAKRISHNA in the adjoining
small room. About half past ten SRI RAMAKRISHNA lay down to sleep. It was
summertime. He said to M., "You had better bring a fan." He asked the
disciple to fan him. At midnight SRI RAMAKRISHNA woke up. He said to M.,
"Don't fan me any more; I feel chilly."
Tuesday, July 14, 1885
It
was the day of the Car Festival. SRI RAMAKRISHNA left his bed very early in the
morning. He was alone in the room, dancing and chanting the name of God. M.
entered and saluted the MASTER. Other devotees arrived one by one. They
saluted the MASTER
and took seats near him. SRI RAMAKRISHNA was longing intensely for Purna.
He was talking to M. about him.
MASTER:
"Did you give Purna any instruction?"
M: "I asked him to read the life
of Chaitanya. He is familiar with the incidents of his life. I told him further
that you ask people to stick to the truth."
MASTER:
"How did he take it when you said about me, 'He is an Incarnation of
God'?"
M: "I said to him, 'Come with me
If you want to see a person like Chaitanya.'"
MASTER:
"Anything else?"
M: "Also that remark of yours
that when an elephant enters a small pool there is a great splashing of water
all around; likewise, in the case of a 'small receptacle', emotion overflows.
"About his giving up of fish, I said to him: 'Why have you done that? Your
family will make a great fuss about it.' "
MASTER:
"That's good. One should keep one's feelings and emotions to
oneself."
It was about half past six in the
morning. M. was going to bathe in the
Ganges, when suddenly tremors of an earthquake were felt. At once he
returned to SRI
RAMAKRISHNA's room. The MASTER stood in the drawing room. The devotees
stood around him. They were talking about the earthquake. The shaking had been
rather violent, and many of the devotees were frightened.
M: "You should all have gone
downstairs."
MASTER:
"Such is the fate of the house under whose roof one lives; and still
people are so egotistic. (To M.) Do you
remember the great storm of the month of Āświn?"
M: "Yes, sir. I was very young at
that time-nine or ten years old. I was alone in a room while the storm was
raging, and I prayed to God."
M. was surprised and said to himself:
"Why did the MASTER suddenly ask me about the great storm of
Āświn? Does he know that I was alone at that time earnestly praying to God with
tears in my eyes? Does he know all this? Has he been protecting me as my guru
since my very birth?"
MASTER:
"It was quite late in the day at Dakshineswar when the storm broke, but
somehow they managed to cook the meals. The trees were uprooted. You see, this
is the fate of the house one lives in.
Nitya and Lila
"But
when one attains Perfect Knowledge, then one finds that dying and killing are
one and the same thing; that is to say, both are unreal. When one is dead, one
has not really died; and when one has killed another, the man is not really
dead. Both the Lila and the Nitya belong to the same Reality. In one form It is
the Absolute, and in another, the Lila . Even though the Lila is destroyed, the
Nitya always exists. Water is water, whether it is still or in waves; it is the
same water when the waves quiet down."
SRI RAMAKRISHNA
sat in the drawing-room with the devotees. Mahendra Mukherji, Hari, the younger
Naren, and many other devotees were there. Hari lived alone and studied
Vedānta. He was about twenty-three years old, and unmarried. SRI RAMAKRISHNA
was very fond of him. He wanted Hari to visit him frequently. But since Hari
loved solitude he did not often come to the MASTER.
MASTER
(to Hari): "Well, I haven't seen you for a long time."
Essence of Vedānta & Absolute and Relative are
correlatives
"You
see, in one form He is the Absolute and in another He is the Relative. What
does Vedānta teach? Brahman alone is real and the world illusory. Isn't that
so? But as long as God keeps the 'ego of a devotee' in a man, the Relative is
also real. When He completely effaces the ego, then what is remains. That
cannot be described by the tongue. But as long as God keeps the ego, one must
accept all. By removing the outer sheaths of the plantain-tree, you reach the
inner pith. As long as the tree contains sheaths, it also contains pith. So too,
as long as it contains pith, it also contains sheaths. The pith goes with the
sheaths and the sheaths go with the pith. In the same way, when you speak of
the Nitya, it is understood that the Lila also exists; and when you speak
of the Lila, it is understood that the Nitya also exists.
Brahman and Śakti
"It
is He alone who has become the universe, living beings, and thetwenty-four
cosmic principles. When He is action less, I call Him Brahman; when He creates,
preserves, and destroys, I call Him Śakti. Brahman and Śakti are not different
from each other. Water is water, whether it is still or moving.
"It is not possible to rid
oneself of 'I-consciousness'. and as long as one is aware of this
'I-consciousness', one cannot speak of the universe and its living beings as
unreal. You cannot get the correct weight of the bel-fruit if you leave out its
shell and pits.
"The brick, lime, and
brick-dust of which the stairs are made are the same brick, lime, and
brick-dust of which the roof is made. The universe and its living beings exist
on account of the Reality of Him who is known as Brahman.
Synthesis of the formless Reality and God with
form
"The
devotees-I mean the vijnanis-accept both God with form and the Formless, both
the Personal God and the Impersonal. In a shoreless ocean-an infinite expanse
of water-visible blocks of ice are formed here and there by intense cold.
Similarly, under the cooling influence, so to say, of the deep love of Its
worshipper, the Infinite reduces Itself to the finite and appears before
the worshipper as God with form. Again, as, on the rising of the sun, the
ice melts away, so, on the awakening of Knowledge, God with form melts away
into the same Infinite and Formless.
"As long as a man analyses with
the mind, he cannot reach the Absolute. As long as you reason with your mind,
you have no way of getting rid of the universe and the objects of the
senses-form, taste, smell, touch, and sound. When reasoning stops, you attain
the Knowledge of Brahman. Ātman cannot be realized through this mind; Ātman is
realized through Ātman alone. Pure Mind, Pure Buddhi, Pure Ātman-all these are
one and the same.
"Just think how many things you need to perceive an object. You need eyes; you need light; you need mind. You cannot perceive the object if you leave out anyone of these three. As long as the mind functions how can you say that the universe and the 'I' do not exist?
"Just think how many things you need to perceive an object. You need eyes; you need light; you need mind. You cannot perceive the object if you leave out anyone of these three. As long as the mind functions how can you say that the universe and the 'I' do not exist?
"When the mind is annihilated,
when it stops deliberating pro and con, then one goes into samādhi, one attains
the Knowledge of Brahman. You know the seven notes of the scale: sa, re, ga,
ma, pa, dha, ni. One cannot keep one's voice on 'ni' very long."
Intimate Knowledge of God
Looking
at the younger Naren, SRI RAMAKRISHNA said: "What will you gain by
merely being intuitively aware of God's existence? A mere vision of God is by
no means everything. You have to bring Him into your room. You have to talk to
Him.
"Some have heard of milk, some
have seen milk, and some have drunk milk. Some have seen the king, but only one
or two can bring the King home and entertain him."
M. went to the Ganges to take his bath. It was ten o'clock. SRI RAMAKRISHNA was still talking with the devotees. After finishing his bath, M. returned to Balarām's house. He saluted the MASTER and sat down near him.
M. went to the Ganges to take his bath. It was ten o'clock. SRI RAMAKRISHNA was still talking with the devotees. After finishing his bath, M. returned to Balarām's house. He saluted the MASTER and sat down near him.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA
was filled with intense spiritual fervour. Words of wisdom flowed from him. Now
and then he narrated his profound mystical experiences to the devotees.
MASTER's spiritual experiences
MASTER: "I went to Benares with
Mathur Babu. Our boat was passing the Manikarnika Ghat on the Ganges, when
suddenly I had a vision of Śiva. I stood near the edge of the boat and went
into samādhi. The boatman, fearing that I might fall into the water, cried to
Hriday: 'Catch hold of him! Catch hold of him!' I saw Śiva standing on that
Ghat, embodying in Himself all the seriousness of the world. At first I saw Him
standing at a distance; then I saw Him approaching me. At last he merged in
me.
"Another time, in an
ecstatic mood, I saw that a sannyāsi was leading me by the hand. We
entered a temple and I had a vision of Annapurna made of gold.
"God alone has become all this;
but He manifests Himself more in certain things than in others.
(To M.)
"Perhaps you do not believe in the salagram. 'Englishmen' do not believe
in it. It doesn't matter whether you believe in it or not. A salagram should
contain the mark of a disc and other signs; only then can it be worshipped as
an emblem of God."
M: "Yes, sir. It is like the
fuller manifestation of God in a man with good physical traits.' "
MASTER:
"At first NARENDRA
used to say that these were figments of my imagination; but now he accepts
everything."
SRI RAMAKRISHNA
was describing the vision of God, when he went into samādhi. The devotees
looked at him with fixed gaze. After a long time he regained consciousness of
the world and talked to the devotees.
MASTER
(to M.): "What do you think I saw? I
saw the whole universe as a salagram, and in it I saw your two eyes."
In silent wonder M. and the devotees listened to these words about
his inner experience. At this moment Sarada, another' young disciple of the MASTER,
entered the room and saluted him.
MASTER
(to Sarada): "Why don't you come to Dakshineswar? Why don't you see me
when I come to Calcutta?"
SARADA: "Nobody tells me about
it."
MASTER:
"Next time I shall let you know. (To M., smiling) Make a list of these
youngsters." (M. and the devotees laugh.)
SARADA: "My relatives at home
want me to marry. (pointing to M.) How many
times he has scolded me about marriage!"
MASTER:
"Why should you marry just now? (To M.) Sarada is now in a very good state
of mind. Formerly he had a hesitant look; now his face beams with joy."
SRI RAMAKRISHNA said to a devotee, "Will you kindly fetch Purna?"
SRI RAMAKRISHNA said to a devotee, "Will you kindly fetch Purna?"
NARENDRA
arrived. SRI
RAMAKRISHNA asked a devotee to give him some refreshments. He was
greatly pleased at the sight of NARENDRA. When he fed NARENDRA, he felt that he was
feeding Narayana Himself. He stroked NARENDRA's body affectionately.
Spiritual fervour of Gopal Ma
Gopal
Ma entered the room. She was a great devotee of Gopala and was blessed with
many lofty spiritual visions. SRI RAMAKRISHNA had asked Balarām to send a man to
bring her from Kamarhati. As soon as she entered the room she said, "I am
shedding tears of joy." With these words she bowed before the MASTER,
touching the ground with her forehead.
MASTER:
"What is this? You address me as 'Gopala' and still you salute me! Now go
into the inner apartments and cook some curry for me. Put some spicy seasoning
in it so that I may get the smell from here." (All laugh.
GOPAL MA: "What will they
[meaning the members of the household] think of me?"
Before she left the room she said to
NARENDRA
in a very fervent voice, "My child, have I reached the goal, or have I
farther to go?"
It was the day of the Car Festival;
so there was some delay in the worship of the Family Deity. When the worship
was finished SRI
RAMAKRISHNA was asked to have his meal. He went to the inner
apartments. The woman devotees were anxious to see him.
Man and woman devotees
SRI RAMAKRISHNA had many woman devotees, but he did
not talk much about them to his man devotees. He would warn the men against
visiting woman devotees. He would say: "Don't overdo it. Otherwise you
will slip." To some of his man devotees he would say, "Don't go near
a woman even if she rolls on the ground with devotion." The MASTER
wanted the men to live apart from woman devotees; only thus would the two
groups make progress. He did not like the woman devotees to caress the men as
"Gopala"; for too much of this motherly affection was not good; it
degenerated in time into a harmful relationship.
After his midday meal SRI RAMAKRISHNA
sat in the drawing-room with the devotees. It was one o'clock. A devotee
brought Purna from his home. With great joy the MASTER exclaimed to M.: "Here
he is! Purna has come." NARENDRA, the younger Naren, Narayan,
Haripada, and other devotees were talking with the MASTER.
Free will
THE
YOUNGER NAREN: "Sir, have we any free
will?"
MASTER:
"Just try to find out who this 'I' is. While you are searching for 'I',
'He' comes out. 'I am the machine and He is the Operator.' You have heard of a
mechanical toy that goes into a store with a letter in its hand. You are like
that toy. God alone is the Doer. Do your duties in the world as if you were the
doer, but knowing all the time that God alone is the Doer and you are the
instrument.
"As long as the Upādhi
exists there is ignorance. 'I am a scholar', 'I am a Jnāni', 'I am wealthy', 'I
am honourable', 'I am the MASTER, father, and teacher' -all these ideas are
begotten of ignorance. 'I am the machine and You are the Operator' - that is
Knowledge. In the state of Knowledge all Upādhis are destroyed. When the
log is burnt up entirely, there is no more sound; no heat either. Everything
cools down. Peace! Peace! Peace! (To NARENDRA) Sing a little."
NARENDRA
"I must go home. I have many things to do."
MASTER:
"Yes, yes, my child! Why should you listen to us? 'The words of those who
have gold in their ears are valuable; no one listens to him who hasn't even a
rag round his waist.' (All laugh.) You frequent the garden house of the Guhas.
I always hear about it. Whenever I ask, 'Where is NARENDRA today?' I am told, 'Oh,
he has gone to the Guhas.' I should not have said all these things, but you
have wrung them out of me."
NARENDRA
kept quiet a few moments. Then he said: "There are no instruments to
accompany me. Shall I just sing?"
MASTER:
"My child, this is all we have. Please sing if it suits you. You must know
how Balarām arranges things. "Balarām says to me, 'Please come to
Calcutta by boat; take a carriage only if you must.' (All laugh.) You see, he
has given us a feast today; so this afternoon he will make us all dance! (All
laugh.) One day he hired a carriage for me from here to Dakshineswar. He said
that the carriage hire was twelve ānnās. I said to him, 'Will the
coachman take me to Dakshineswar for twelve ānnās?' 'Oh, that will be
plenty', he replied. One side of the carriage broke down before we reached
Dakshineswar. (All laugh.) Besides, the horse stopped every now and then; it
simply would not go. Once in a while the coachman whipped the horse, and then
it ran a short distance. (All laugh.) The program for the evening is that Ram
will play on the drum and we shall all dance. Ram has no sense of rhythm. (All
laugh.) Anyhow, that is Balarām's attitude-sing yourselves, dance yourselves,
and make yourselves happy!" (All laugh.)
Other devotees were arriving.
Mahendra Mukherji saluted the MASTER from a distance. The MASTER returned the salute. Then he
salaamed to Mahendra like a Musslman.
The MASTER said to a young devotee who
sat next to him: "Why don't you tell him I have salaamed to him? He will
appreciate it (All laugh.)
Many of the householder devotees
were accompanied by their wives and other woman relatives. They wanted to
salute the MASTER
and watch his dancing before the car. Ram, Girish, and other devotees gradually
assembled. Many young devotees were present.
NARENDRA
sang:
Oh, when will dawn the
blessed day
When Love will waken in my heart?
When will my tears flow uncontrolled
As I repeat Lord Hari's name,
And all my longing be fulfilled?
When will my mind and soul be pure?
Oh, when shall I at last repair
Unto Vrindāvan's sacred groves?
When will my worldly bonds fall off
And my imperfect sight be healed
By Wisdom's cool collyrium?
When shall I learn true alchemy
And, touching the Philosopher's Stone,
Transmute my body's worthless iron
Into the Spirit's purest gold?
When shall I see this very world
As God, and roll on Love's highway?
When shall I give up piety
And duty and the thought of caste?
When shall I leave behind all fear,
All shame, convention, worry, pride?
Oh, I shall smear my body then
With dust from the feet of devotees;
Across my shoulders I shall sling
Renunciation's pack, and drink
From my two hands a cooling draught
Of Jamunas life-renewing stream.
Oh, then I shall be mad with love;
I shall both laugh and weep for joy!
Then I shall swim, upon the Sea,
Of blessed Satchidananda;
Drunk with His love, I shall make all
When Love will waken in my heart?
When will my tears flow uncontrolled
As I repeat Lord Hari's name,
And all my longing be fulfilled?
When will my mind and soul be pure?
Oh, when shall I at last repair
Unto Vrindāvan's sacred groves?
When will my worldly bonds fall off
And my imperfect sight be healed
By Wisdom's cool collyrium?
When shall I learn true alchemy
And, touching the Philosopher's Stone,
Transmute my body's worthless iron
Into the Spirit's purest gold?
When shall I see this very world
As God, and roll on Love's highway?
When shall I give up piety
And duty and the thought of caste?
When shall I leave behind all fear,
All shame, convention, worry, pride?
Oh, I shall smear my body then
With dust from the feet of devotees;
Across my shoulders I shall sling
Renunciation's pack, and drink
From my two hands a cooling draught
Of Jamunas life-renewing stream.
Oh, then I shall be mad with love;
I shall both laugh and weep for joy!
Then I shall swim, upon the Sea,
Of blessed Satchidananda;
Drunk with His love, I shall make all
As drunk as I! Oh, I shall
sport
At Hari's feet for evermore!
At Hari's feet for evermore!
He sang again:
In dense darkness, O Mother,
Thy formless beauty sparkles;
Therefore the, yogis meditate in a dark mountain cave
Therefore the, yogis meditate in a dark mountain cave
Balarām had arranged for kirtan with
Vaishnavcharan, the musician Vaishnavcharan sang:
O tongue, always repeat,
the name of Mother Durga;
Who but your Mother Durga will save you in distress? . . .
Who but your Mother Durga will save you in distress? . . .
When SRI RAMAKRISHNA had heard a line or
two of the song he went into samādhi. He stood up in that ecstatic mood, The
younger Naren supported him. The MASTER's face was lighted with a smile. Gradually
his body became motionless; his mind appeared to have gone to another realm.
All the devotees in the room
looked at him in amazement.
The woman devotees watched the scene from behind the screen. After a long time
he came down from samādhi, chanting the holy name of God.
As the MASTER sat down, Vaishnavcharan sang
again:
O vina, sing Lord Hari's
name!
Without the blessing of His feet
You cannot know the final Truth,
The name of Hari slays all grief:
Sing Hari's name! Sing Krishna's name! . . .
Without the blessing of His feet
You cannot know the final Truth,
The name of Hari slays all grief:
Sing Hari's name! Sing Krishna's name! . . .
Then he sang:
O vina, forgetting to
worship Hari,
I pass the days of my life in vain. . . .
I pass the days of my life in vain. . . .
The Car Festival
It
was afternoon. In the mean time the small car of Jagannath, decorated with
flowers, flags, and bunting, had been brought to the inner verandah. The images
of Jagannath, Subhadra, and Balarama, were adorned with sandal-paste, flower
garlands, robes and jewelry. SRI RAMAKRISHNA left the room where the
professional musicians were singing and came to the verandah, accompanied by
the devotees. He stood in front of the car and pulled it by the rope. He began
to sing and dance with the devotees in front of the car.
The MASTER sang :
Behold, the two brothers
have come, who weep
while chanting Hari's name. . . .
while chanting Hari's name. . . .
He sang again:
See how all Nadia is
shaking
Under the waves of Gaurānga's love! . . .
Under the waves of Gaurānga's love! . . .
The music and dancing went on in the
verandah as the car was pulled to and fro. A large crowd entered the house on
hearing the loud music and the beating of the drums. SRI RAMAKRISHNA was completely
intoxicated with divine love. The devotees felt its contagion and danced
with the MASTER
in an ecstasy of love.
Afterwards SRI RAMAKRISHNA returned to the
drawing-room. M. and other devotees stroked his feet.
Filled with divine fervour, NARENDRA
sang to the accompaniment of the Tānpura:
Come! Come, Mother! Doll
of my soul! My heart's' Delight!
In my heart's lotus come and sit, that I may see Thy face
In my heart's lotus come and sit, that I may see Thy face
Then he sang:
Mother, Thou art our sole
Redeemer,
Thou the Support of the three Gunās,
Higher than the most high.
Thou art compassionate, I know;
Who takest away our bitter grief.
Sandhya art Thou, and Gayatri;
Thou dost sustain this universe.
Mother, the Help art Thou
Of those that have no help but thee,
O Eternal Beloved of Śiva!
Thou art in earth, in water Thou;
Thou liest at the root of all.
In me, in every creature,
Thou hast Thy home; though clothed with form,
Yet art Thou formless Reality
Thou the Support of the three Gunās,
Higher than the most high.
Thou art compassionate, I know;
Who takest away our bitter grief.
Sandhya art Thou, and Gayatri;
Thou dost sustain this universe.
Mother, the Help art Thou
Of those that have no help but thee,
O Eternal Beloved of Śiva!
Thou art in earth, in water Thou;
Thou liest at the root of all.
In me, in every creature,
Thou hast Thy home; though clothed with form,
Yet art Thou formless Reality
He sang another song:
I have made Thee, O Lord,
the Pole-star of my life;
No more shall I lose my way on the world's trackless sea.
Wherever I wander here, Thy brilliance shines undimmed;
With Thy serene and gracious light
Thou drivest all the tears out of my troubled soul.
No more shall I lose my way on the world's trackless sea.
Wherever I wander here, Thy brilliance shines undimmed;
With Thy serene and gracious light
Thou drivest all the tears out of my troubled soul.
In my heart's inmost
shrine Thy face for ever beams;
If, for a moment even, I cannot find it there,
My soul is overwhelmed with woe;
And when my witless mind strays from the thought of Thee,
The vision of Thy face strikes me with deepest shame.
If, for a moment even, I cannot find it there,
My soul is overwhelmed with woe;
And when my witless mind strays from the thought of Thee,
The vision of Thy face strikes me with deepest shame.
A devotee said to NARENDRA,
"Will you sing that one - 'O Mother, Thou my Inner Guide, ever awake
within my heart'?"
MASTER:
"Oh, no! Why that song now? The proper thing now is to sing of divine
bliss-a song like 'O Mother Syama, full of the waves of drunkenness
divine'."
NARENDRA sang:
O Mother Syama, full of
the waves of drunkenness divine!
Who knows how Thou dost sport in the world?
Thy fun and frolic and Thy glances put to shame the god of love.
O Wielder of the sword! O Thou of terrifying face!
The earth itself is shaken under Thy leaps and strides!
Who knows how Thou dost sport in the world?
Thy fun and frolic and Thy glances put to shame the god of love.
O Wielder of the sword! O Thou of terrifying face!
The earth itself is shaken under Thy leaps and strides!
O Thou Abode of the three
Gunās! O Redeemer! Fearsome One!
Thou who art the Consort of Śiva!
Many the forms Thou dost assume, fulfilling Thy bhaktas' prayers.
Thou dancest in the Lotus of the Heart,
O Mother, Eternal Consort of Brahman!
Thou who art the Consort of Śiva!
Many the forms Thou dost assume, fulfilling Thy bhaktas' prayers.
Thou dancest in the Lotus of the Heart,
O Mother, Eternal Consort of Brahman!
Full of divine ecstasy, NARENDRA
sang again and again the lines:
Thou dancest in the Lotus
of the Heart,
O Mother, Eternal Consort of Brahman!
O Mother, Eternal Consort of Brahman!
SRI RAMAKRISHNA
was dancing, drunk with divine love, and he sang again and again, "O
Mother, Eternal Consort of Brahman!"
After dancing a long time SRI RAMAKRISHNA
resumed his seat. He was very much pleased to see NARENDRA in a spiritual mood,
singing with tears in his eyes.
It was about nine o'clock in the evening. The devotees still sat around the MASTER. Vaishnavcharan sang about Gaurānga:
The beautiful Gaurānga,
the youthful dancer, fair as molten gold. . . .
Next he sang about Sri Krishna.
Krishna had left His pastoral life in Vrindāvan and become the king of Mathura.
A gopi met Him there and said:
O Hari, how shall we know
You now?
In Mathura's royal splendour you have forgotten us.
Now, in your kingly robes, you ride an elephant;
Have you utterly forgotten how in Vrindāvan You tended cows?
O Hari, have you forgotten how you would steal the butter
From Braja's innocent gopi maids?
In Mathura's royal splendour you have forgotten us.
Now, in your kingly robes, you ride an elephant;
Have you utterly forgotten how in Vrindāvan You tended cows?
O Hari, have you forgotten how you would steal the butter
From Braja's innocent gopi maids?
About eleven o'clock the devotees saluted the MASTER and were departing one by one.
MASTER: "You may all go.
(Pointing to NARENDRA
and the younger Naren) It will be enough if these two stay. (To Girish) Will
you eat your supper at home? You may stay a few minutes if you want to. You
want a smoke! But Balarām's servant is just like his MASTER. Ask him for a smoke; he
won't give it! (All laugh.) But don't go away without having your smoke."
Girish had brought with him a
respectable friend. The latter observed all these things and left the place. SRI RAMAKRISHNA
said to GIRISH: "I say this to you and
to everyone: Please do not force anybody to come here. Nothing happens except
at the right time."
Before leaving, a devotee saluted
the MASTER.
He had a young boy with him. SRI RAMAKRISHNA said to him affectionately,
"It is getting late, and you have this boy with you." NARENDRA,
the younger Naren, and a few other devotees stayed awhile and then took their
leave.
Wednesday, July 15, 1885
It
was four, o'clock in the morning. SRI RAMAKRISHNA was in bed in the small room next
to the drawing-room. M. was sitting on a bench on the outer verandah to the
south of the room. A few minutes later SRI RAMAKRISHNA came out to the verandah. M. saluted
him.
MASTER:
"I have already been up once. Well, shall we go to Dakshineswar this
morning?"
M: "The Ganges is less choppy in
the morning."
Day was gradually breaking. The
devotees had not yet arrived. SRI RAMAKRISHNA had washed his mouth and was
chanting the names of God in his sweet voice. He stood near the north door of
the room. M. was by his side. A few minutes later Gopal Ma arrived and stood
near him. One or two woman devotees were looking at the MASTER from behind the doors of the
inner apartments. They were like the gopis of Vrindāvan looking at Sri Krishna,
or the woman devotees of Nadia looking at Gaurānga from behind the screen.
After chanting the name of Rāma, SRI RAMAKRISHNA
chanted the name of Krishna: "Krishna! Krishna! Krishna of the gopis!
Gopi! Gopi! Krishna, the Life of the cowherd boys of Vrindāvan! Krishna, the
son of Nanda! Govinda! Govinda!"
Next he chanted the name of
Gaurānga. Then he repeated, "Ālekh Niranjana", which is a name of
God. Saying, "Niranjana", he wept. The devotees wept too. With tears
in his eyes the MASTER
said: "O Niranjan! O my child! Come! Eat this! Take this! When shall I
make my life blessed by feeding you? You have assumed this human form for my
sake."
He prayed to Jagannath in a very
touching voice:
"O Jagannath, Lord of the
Universe! O Friend of the world! O Friend of the poor! I am not, O Lord,
outside Thy universe. Be gracious to me!"
While he sang in praise of
Jagannath he was beside himself with divine love.
Now he chanted the name of Narayana
. He danced and sang:
"O Narayana ! O
Narayana ! Narayana ! Narayana !"
He danced and sang again:
Ah, friend! I have not
found Him yet, whose love has driven me mad. . . .
Afterwards the MASTER
sat in the small room with the devotees. He was completely stripped of his
clothes, like a five-year-old child. M., Balarām, and a few other devotees were
in the room.
MASTER:
"One can see God's form. One sees God when all Upādhis disappear
and reasoning stops. Then a man becomes speechless and goes into samādhi.
Coming to the theatre, people indulge in all kinds of gossip. But the moment
the curtain goes up, all conversation stops; the spectators become fully
absorbed in what they see on the stage.
MASTER's love for young disciples
"I
want to tell you something very secret. Why do I love boys like Purna and NARENDRA
so much? Once, in a spiritual mood, I felt intense love for Jagannath, love
such as a woman feels for her sweetheart. In that mood I was about to embrace
Him; when I broke my arm. It was then revealed to me: 'You have assumed this
human body. Therefore establish with human beings the relationship of friend,
father, mother, or son.'
"I now feel for Purna and the
other young boys as I once felt for Rāmlāla. I used to bathe Rāmlāla, feed Him,
put Him to bed, and take Him wherever I went. I used to weep for Rāmlāla. Now I
have the same feeling for these young boys. Look at Niranjan. He is not
attached to anything. He spends money from his own pocket to take poor patients
to the hospital. At the proposal of marriage he says, 'Goodness! That is the
whirlpool of the Visalaks! I see him seated on a light. "Purna
belongs to the realm of the Personal God. He was born with an element of
Vishnu. Ah, what yearning he has!
(To M.)
"Didn't you notice that he looked at you as if you were his spiritual
brother, his very own? He said he would visit me again, at Captain's house.
MASTER's praise of NARENDRA
"NARENDRA
belongs to a very high plane-the realm of the Absolute. He has a manly nature.
So many devotees come here, but there is not one like him.
"Every now and then I take
stock of the devotees. I find that some are like lotuses with ten petals, some
like lotuses with sixteen petals, some like lotuses with a hundred petals. But
among lotuses NARENDRA
is a thousand-petalled one.
"Other devotees may be like
pots or pitchers; but NARENDRA is a huge water-barrel.
"Others may be like pools or
tanks; but NARENDRA
is a huge reservoir like the Haldārpukur.
"Among fish, NARENDRA
is a huge red-eyed carp; others are like minnows or smelts or sardines. Tārak
of Belgharia may be called a bass.
"NARENDRA is a 'very big
receptacle', one that can hold many things. He is like a bamboo with a big
hollow space inside.
"NARENDRA is not under the
control of anything. He is not under the control of attachment or sense
pleasures. He is like a male pigeon. If you hold a male pigeon by its beak, it
breaks away from you; but the female pigeon keeps still. NARENDRA has the nature of a
man; so he sits on the right side in a carriage. Bhavanāth has a woman's
nature; so I make him sit on the other side. I feel great strength when NARENDRA
is with me in a gathering."
About eight o'clock in the morning
Mahendra Mukherji arrived and saluted the MASTER. Haripada, Tulsiram and other devotees
arrived one by one and saluted him. Baburam was laid up with fever and could
not come.
MASTER
(to M. and the others): "Hasn't the
younger Naren come? Perhaps he thought I had left. (To Mukherji) How amazing!
Even during his boyhood, on returning from school, he cried for God. Is it a
small thing to cry for God? He is very intelligent, too. He is like a bamboo
with a big hollow space inside. All of his mind is fixed on me.
Girish Ghosh said to me: The younger
Naren went to Navagopal's house when a kirtan was going on. On entering the
house he inquired about you and exclaimed, "Where is he?" He was
totally unconscious of his surroundings and practically walked over the
people.' He has no fear of his relatives' threats. Sometimes he spends three
nights at a stretch at Dakshineswar."
MUKHERJI: "Hari became simply speechless
at what you said yesterday. He said to me: 'Such wisdom can be found only in
the philosophical systems of Samkhya, Yoga, and Vedānta. He is no ordinary
person.'"
MASTER:
"But I have never studied Samkhya or Vedānta.
Knowledge of God is the same as love of Him &
Divine love leads to union with God.
Perfect
Jnāna and perfect bhakti are one and the same thing. A man reasons, saying,
'Not this, not this'; he rejects the unreal. When his reasoning comes to an
end, he attains the Knowledge of Brahman. Then he accepts what he rejected
before. A man carefully climbs to the roof, rejecting the steps one by one.
After reaching the roof he realizes that the steps are made of the same
materials as the roof, namely, brick, lime, and brick-dust.
"He who is aware of the high is
also aware of the low. After the attainment of knowledge one looks alike on
high and low.
"While Prahlada dwelt on the
plane of the Supreme Reality, he maintained the attitude of 'I am He'; but when
he climbed down to the physical plane, he would look on himself as the servant
of God.
"Hanuman also sometimes said,
'I am He', sometimes, 'I am the servant of God', sometimes, 'I am a part of
God.'
"Why should a man cherish love
of God in his heart? How else will he live? How else will he spend his days?
"To be sure, the ego does not
disappear altogether. As long as the pot of 'I' persists, one cannot realize 'I
am He.' In samādhi the ego totally disappears; then what is remains. Ramprasad
says: 'O Mother, when I shall attain Knowledge, then You alone will know
whether I am good or You are good.'
"As long as 'I-consciousness'
exists, one should have the attitude of a bhakta; one should not say, 'I am
God.' A man aware of his body should feel that he is not Krishna Himself, but
His devotee. But if God draws the devotee to Himself, then it is different. It
is like the MASTER
saying to his beloved servant: 'Come, take your seat near me. You are the same
as I.'
"The waves are part of the
Ganges, but the Ganges is not part of the waves.
"Śiva experiences two states of
mind. When He is completely absorbed in His own Self, He feels, 'I am He.' In
that union neither body nor mind functions. But when He is conscious of His
separate ego, He dances, exclaiming, 'Rāma! Rāma!'
"That which is unmoving also
moves. Just now you are still, but a few moments later the same you will be
engaged in action.
"Jnāna and bhakti are one and
the same thing. The difference is like this: one man says 'water', and another,
'a block of ice'.
Two kinds of samādhi
"Generally
speaking there are two kinds of samādhi. First, sthita or jada samādhi: one
attains it by following the path of knowledge-as a result of the destruction of
the ego through reasoning. Second, bhava samādhi: one attains this by following
the path of bhakti. In this second samādhi a trace of ego remains, like a line,
in order to enable the devotee to enjoy God, to taste His Lila. But one cannot
understand all this if one is attached to 'woman and gold'.
"I said to KEDĀR, 'You will never succeed if your mind dwells
on "woman and gold".' I wanted to pass my hand over his chest, but I
could not. He has knots and twists inside. It was like a room smelling of
filth, which I could not enter. His attachment to the world is very deep; it is
like a natural emblem of Śiva, whose root spreads as far as Benares. One will
never succeed if one is attached to the world-to 'woman and gold'.
MASTER praises his young disciples
"The
youngsters are yet untouched by 'woman and gold'. That is why I love them so
dearly. Hazra says to me, 'You love a boy if he comes from a wealthy family or
if he is handsome.' If that is so, then why do I love Harish, Lātu, and NARENDRA?
NARENDRA
hasn't a penny to buy salt to season his rice.
"The youngsters' minds are not
yet coloured by worldliness. That is why they are so pure in heart. Besides,
many of them are eternally perfect; they have been drawn to God from their very
birth. It is like a garden in which, while cleaning it, you suddenly discover
water-pipes. The water gushes forth without any effort on your part."
BALARĀM: "Sir, how was it possible for
Purna to know all of a sudden that the world is illusory?"
MASTER:
"He has inherited that knowledge from his previous births. In his past
lives he practised many disciplines. It is the body alone that is small
or grows big, and not the Ātman.
"Do you know what these
youngsters are like? They are like certain plants that grow fruit first and
then flowers. These devotees first of all have the vision of God; next they
hear about His glories and attributes; and at last they are united with Him.
Look at Niranjan. He always keeps his accounts clear. He will be able to go
whenever he hears the call.
Respect for one's own mother
But
one should look after one's mother as long as she is alive. I used to worship
my mother with flowers and sandal-paste. It is the Mother of the Universe who
is embodied as our earthly mother.
"As long as you look after your
own body, you must look after your mother too. Therefore I said to Hazra: 'when
you have a cold, you procure black pepper, sugar candy, and salt. As long as
you feel you must look after your body, you must look after your mother too.'
"But it is quite different when
you completely forget your body. Then God Himself assumes your
responsibilities. A minor cannot look after himself; therefore a guardian is
appointed for him. Chaitanyadeva, like a minor, could not look after
himself."
M. went to the Ganges to bathe.
MASTER's spiritual experiences
SRI RAMAKRISHNA was talking with the devotees in
the small room in Balarām's house. Mahendra, Balarām, Tulasi, Haripada, Girish,
and other devotees were sitting on the floor. M. returned from the Ganges.
After saluting the MASTER he took a seat near him. SRI RAMAKRISHNA
was recounting to the devotees some of his spiritual experiences.
MASTER:
"One day in the Kāli temple Haladhāri and Nangta were reading the Adhyātma
Rāmāyana. Suddenly I had a vision of a river with woods on both sides.
The trees and plants were green. Rāma and Lakshmana were walking along wearing
their shorts. One day, in front of the kuthi, I saw Arjuna's chariot. Sri
Krishna was seated in it as the charioteer. I still remember it. Another day,
while listening to kirtan at Kamarpukur, I saw Gaurānga in front of me.
"At that time a naked person,
emerging from my body, used to go about with me. I used to joke with him. He
looked like a boy and was a paramahamsa. I can't describe to you all the divine
forms I saw at that time. I was suffering then from indigestion, which would
become worse when I saw visions; so I would try to shun these divine forms and
would spit on the ground when I saw them. But they would follow me and obsess
me like ghosts. I was always overwhelmed with divine ecstasy and couldn't tell the
passing of day and night. On the day after such a vision I would have a severe
attack of diarrhoea, and all these ecstasies would pass out through my
bowels."
GIRISH (smiling): "I am
examining your horoscope."
MASTER
(smiling): "I was born on the second day of the bright fortnight of the
moon. My horoscope shows the positions of the sun, the moon, and Mercury at the
time of my birth. There are not many more details."
GIRISH: "You were born under Kumbha.
Rāma and Krishna were born under Karkat and Brisha, and Chaitanya under
Simha."
MASTER:
"I had two desires: first, that I should be the king of the devotees, and
second, that I should not be a dry sādhu."
GIRISH (smiling): "Why did you
have to practise spiritual discipline?"
MASTER
(smiling): "Even the Divine Mother had to practise austere sādhanā
to obtain Śiva as Her husband. She practised the panchatapa. She would also
immerse Her body in water in wintertime, and look fixedly at the sun. Krishna
Himself had to practise much sādhanā. I had many mystic experiences, but
I cannot reveal their contents. Under the bel-tree I had many flaming visions.
There I practised the various sadhanas prescribed in the Tantra. I needed many
articles-human skulls, and so forth and so on. The Brahmani used to collect
these things for me. I practised a number of mystic postures.
"I had another strange
experience: if I felt egotistic on a particular day, I would be sick the
following day."
M. sat motionless as a picture on
canvas, hearing about these unique visions of the MASTER. The other devotees also were
spellbound. There was a dead silence in the room.
TULASI (pointing to M.): "He never laughs."
MASTER:
"But he laughs inside. The surface of the river Phalgu is covered with
sand; but if you dig into the sand, water comes up.
(To M.)
"Don't you scrape your tongue? Scrape it every day."
BALARĀM: "Well, Purna has heard much
about you from M."
MASTER:
"Perhaps the account of my early spiritual experiences."
BALARĀM: "If Purna is perfect by
nature, then what is M.'s function?"
MASTER:
"A mere instrument."
It was nine o'clock. SRI RAMAKRISHNA
was about to leave for Dakshineswar. Arrangements were being made for his
departure. A boat had been hired at Baghbazar. The devotees saluted the MASTER.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA
went to the boat with one or two devotees. Gopal Ma accompanied them. She
intended to spend the morning at Dakshineswar and go to Kamarhati in the
afternoon. The camp cot generally used by Rākhāl at Dakshineswar had been
sent to Calcutta for repair. It was put in the boat, and the boat left for
Dakshineswar.
According to the Hindu almanac the day was not auspicious. So SRI RAMAKRISHNA decided to return to Balarām's house the next Saturday and start again for Dakshineswar on an auspicious day.
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