THE MASTER AND DR.
SARKAR
Friday,
October 23, 1885
IT
WAS THE DAY of the full moon following the Durga Puja, the worship of the
Divine Mother. At ten o'clock in the morning SRI RAMAKRISHNA
was talking to M., who was helping him with his socks.
MASTER
(smiling): "Why can't I cut my woolen scarf into two pieces and wrap them
around my legs like socks? They will be nice and warm."
M. Smiled. The previous evening SRI RAMAKRISHNA
had had a long conversation with Dr. Sarkar. Referring to it, the MASTER
said laughingly, "I told him the story of the calf, and about egotism
being the cause of all suffering."
The younger Naren reminded SRI RAMAKRISHNA
that he, the MASTER,
had told the doctor about people's suffering from the threefold misery of the
world and still bragging of their well-being. The disciple said, "That was
very nice thing you said yesterday about the thorn, and also about burning it
in the fire of Knowledge."
MASTER's visions
MASTER: "I had direct visions of
those things. One day, I was passing back of the Kuthi when my whole body burst
into flames, as it were, like the fire in a homa. Padmalochan once said to me,
'I shall convene an assembly of pundits and proclaim your spiritual experiences
before all.' But he died shortly after."
The doctor and M.
At eleven
o'clock M. went to Dr. Sarkar's house to
report SRI
RAMAKRISHNA's condition. The doctor showed great eagerness to hear
about him.
DOCTOR (laughing): "How well I
told him yesterday that in order to be able to say 'Tuhu! Tuhu!', 'Thou!
Thou!', one must fall into the hands of an expert carder!"
M: "It is true, sir. One cannot
get rid of egotism without the help of a capable teacher. How well he spoke
last night of bhakti! Bhakti, like a woman, can go into the inner court."
DOCTOR: "Yes, that is very nice. But
still one cannot give up Jnāna."
M: "But he does not say that. He
accepts both knowledge and love, the Impersonal Truth and the Personal God. He
says that through the cooling influence of bhakti a part of the Reality takes
the solid form of the Personal God; and with the rise of the sun of Jnāna
the ice of form melts again into the formless water of the Absolute. In other
words, you realize God with form through bhaktiyoga, and the formless Absolute
through Jnāna yoga.
"You must have noticed that he
sees God so near him that he always converses with Him. When suffering from
illness, he says to God, like a small child, 'Oh, Mother, it is hurting
me!'
Influence of holy company
"How
wonderful his power of observation is! He saw a fossil in the museum. At once
he gave it as an example of the effect of companionship with holy persons. Just
as an object is turned into stone by remaining near stone, so does a man become
holy by living with a holy man."
DOCTOR: "Yesterday Ishan Babu talked
of the Incarnation of God. What is that? To call man God!"
M: "Everyone has his own faith.
What is the use of interfering with it?"
DOCTOR: "Yes, what is the use?"
M: "How the MASTER made us laugh when he told us
about a certain man who refused to believe that a house had collapsed, because
it was not published in the news paper!"
Doctor Sarkar remained silent. SRI RAMAKRISHNA
had said to him, "Your 'science' does not speak of God's Incarnation;
therefore you say that God cannot incarnate Himself as man."
It was midday. Doctor Sarkar took M.
with him in his carriage. He was going to visit SRI RAMAKRISHNA after seeing his
other patients.
A few days before, at Girish's
invitation, Doctor Sarkar had seen his play about Buddha's life. He said to M.: "It would have been better to speak of
Buddha as the Incarnation of Compassion. Why did he speak of him as an
Incarnation of Vishnu?"
The doctor set M. down at the corner of Cornwallis Square.
It was three o'clock in the
afternoon. One or two devotees were seated near SRI RAMAKRISHNA. He became
impatient, like a child. Repeatedly he asked the devotees, "When is the
doctor coming?" "What time is it now?" Doctor Sarkar was
expected in the evening.
Suddenly SRI RAMAKRISHNA was overwhelmed with
a strange mood. He placed his pillow on his lap. Filled with maternal love, he
began to caress it and hold it to his breast as if it were his child. He was in
an ecstatic mood. His face was lighted with a childlike smile. He put on his
cloth in a strange manner. The devotees looked at him in amazement.
A little later SRI RAMAKRISHNA was in his normal
mood. It was time for his meal. He ate a little boiled farina.
He was talking to M. about his mystic experiences.
MASTER's mystic experiences
MASTER (to M.,
aside): "Do you know what I saw just now in my ecstatic state? There was a
meadow covering an area of seven or eight miles, through which lay the road to
Sihore. I was alone in that meadow. I saw a sixteen year-old paramahamsa boy
exactly like the one I had seen in the Panchavati.
"A mist of bliss lay all around.
Out of it emerged a boy thirteen or fourteen years old. I saw his face. He
looked like Purna. Both of us were naked. Then we began to run around joyfully
in the meadow. Purna felt thirsty. He drank some water from a tumbler and
offered me what was left. I said to him, 'Brother, I cannot take your
leavings.' Thereupon he laughed, washed the glass, and brought me fresh
water."
SRI RAMAKRISHNA
was again in samādhi. He regained consciousness and began to talk to M.
MASTER:
"My mind is undergoing a change. I cannot take prasad any more. The Real
and the Appearance are becoming one to me. Do you know what I saw just now? A
divine form-a vision of the Divine Mother. She had a child in Her womb. She
gave birth to it and the next instant began to swallow it; and as much of it as
went into Her mouth became void. It was revealed to me that everything is void.
The Divine Mother said to me, as it were: 'Come confusion! Come delusion!
Come!'
This reminded M. of SRI RAMAKRISHNA's saying that the magician alone
is real and all else unreal.
MASTER:
"Well, how is it that the other time I tried to attract Purna but failed?
This weakens my faith a little."
M: "But to attract a person is to
work a miracle."
MASTER:
"Yes, a downright miracle."
About miracles
M:
"You remember, one day we were returning to Dakshineswar in a carriage
from Adhar's house, when a bottle broke. One of us said to you: 'Does this mean
that any harm will befall us? What do you think?' You said: 'what do I care?
Why should I bother about it? That would be miracle working.'"
MASTER:
"Yes, people lay ailing children down on the ground where men chant the
name of God, in order that they may be cured; or people cure disease through
occult powers. All this is miracle-working. Only those whose spiritual
experience is extremely shallow call on God for the healing of disease."
It was evening. SRI RAMAKRISHNA was seated on his
bed, thinking of the Divine Mother and repeating Her hallowed name. The
devotees sat near him in silence. Lātu, Śaśi, Sarat, the younger Naren, Paltu,
Bhupati, Girish, and others were present. Ramtaran of the Star Theatre had come
with Girish to entertain SRI RAMAKRISHNA with his singing. A few minutes
later Dr. Sarkar arrived.
DOCTOR (to the MASTER): "I was much worried
about you last night at three o'clock. It was raining. I said to myself, 'Who
knows whether or not the doors and windows of his room are shut?' "
"Really?" said SRI RAMAKRISHNA.
He was much pleased at the doctor's love and thoughtfulness for him.
Soul is different from body
MASTER: "As long as there is the
body, one should take care of it. But I find that the body is quite separate
from the Self. When a man rids himself entirely of his love for 'woman and
gold', then he clearly perceives that the body is one thing and the Self
another. When the milk inside the coconut is all dried up, then the kernel
becomes separated from the shell; you feel the kernel rattling inside when you
shake the coconut. Or it is just like a sword and its sheath. The sword is one
thing and the sheath is another.
"Therefore I cannot speak much
to the Divine Mother about the illness of the body."
GIRISH (to the devotees):
"Pundit Shashadhar said to him [meaning the MASTER]: 'Please bring your mind to
bear on the body during samādhi. That will cure your illness.' And he,
the MASTER,
saw in a vision that the body was nothing but a loose mass of flesh and
bones."
MASTER:
"Once, a long time ago, I was very ill. I was sitting in the Kāli temple.
I felt like praying to the Divine Mother to cure my illness, but couldn't do so
directly in my own name. I said to Her, 'Mother, Hriday asks me to tell You
about my illness.' I could not proceed any farther. At once there flashed into
my mind the Museum of the Asiatic Society, and a human skeleton strung together
with wire. I said to Her, 'Please tighten the wire of my body like that, so
that I may go about singing Your name and glories.' It is impossible for me to
ask for occult powers.
"At first Hriday asked me-I was
then under his control-to pray to the Mother for powers. I went to the temple.
In a vision I saw a widow thirty or thirty-five years old, covered with filth.
It was revealed to me that occult powers are like that filth. I became angry
with Hriday because he had asked me to pray for powers."
Ramtaran began to sing:
Behold my vina, my dearly
beloved,
My lute of sweetest tone;
If tenderly you play on it,
The strings will waken, at your touch,
To rarest melodies.
Tune it neither low nor high,
And from it in a hundred streams
The sweetest sound will flow;
But over-slack the strings are mute,
And over-stretched they snap in twain.
My lute of sweetest tone;
If tenderly you play on it,
The strings will waken, at your touch,
To rarest melodies.
Tune it neither low nor high,
And from it in a hundred streams
The sweetest sound will flow;
But over-slack the strings are mute,
And over-stretched they snap in twain.
DOCTOR (to Girish): "Is it an
original song?"
GIRISH: "No, it is an adaptation from
Edwin Arnold."
Ramtaran sang from the play, The
Life of Buddha :
We moan for rest, alas!
but rest can never find;
We know not whence we come, nor where we float away.
Time and again we tread this round of smiles and tears;
In vain we pine to know whither our pathway leads,
And why we play this empty play.
We know not whence we come, nor where we float away.
Time and again we tread this round of smiles and tears;
In vain we pine to know whither our pathway leads,
And why we play this empty play.
We sleep, although awake,
as if by a spell bewitched;
Will darkness never break into the light of dawn?
As restless as the wind, life moves unceasingly:
We know not who we are, nor whence it is we come;
We know not why we come, nor where it is we drift;
Sharp woes dart forth on every side.
How many drift about, now gay, now drowned in tears!
One moment they exist; the next they are no more.
We know not why we come, nor what our deeds have been,
Nor, in our bygone lives, how well we played our parts;
Will darkness never break into the light of dawn?
As restless as the wind, life moves unceasingly:
We know not who we are, nor whence it is we come;
We know not why we come, nor where it is we drift;
Sharp woes dart forth on every side.
How many drift about, now gay, now drowned in tears!
One moment they exist; the next they are no more.
We know not why we come, nor what our deeds have been,
Nor, in our bygone lives, how well we played our parts;
Like water in a stream, we
cannot stay at rest;
Onward we flow for evermore.
Burst Thou our slumber's bars, O Thou that art awake!
How long must we remain enmeshed in fruitless dreams?
Are you indeed awake? Then do not longer sleep!
Thick on you lies the gloom fraught with a million woes.
Raise, dreamer, from your dream, and slumber not again!
Shine forth, O Shining One, and with Thy shafts of light
Slay Thou the blinding dark! Our only Saviour Thou!
We seek deliverance at Thy feet.
Onward we flow for evermore.
Burst Thou our slumber's bars, O Thou that art awake!
How long must we remain enmeshed in fruitless dreams?
Are you indeed awake? Then do not longer sleep!
Thick on you lies the gloom fraught with a million woes.
Raise, dreamer, from your dream, and slumber not again!
Shine forth, O Shining One, and with Thy shafts of light
Slay Thou the blinding dark! Our only Saviour Thou!
We seek deliverance at Thy feet.
As SRI RAMAKRISHNA listened to the
song, he went into samādhi.
Ramtaran sang again:
Blow, storm! Rage and
roar! . . .
When the song was over, SRI RAMAKRISHNA
said to the singer: "What is this? Why this decoction of bitter
neem-leaves after the rice pudding? The moment you sang, Shine forth, O
Shining One, and with Thy shafts of light; Slay Thou the blinding dark!, I
had a vision of the Sun. As He arose, the darkness vanished, and all men took
refuge at His feet."
Ramtaran sang again:
O Mother, Saviour of the
helpless, Thou the Slayer of sin!
In Thee do the three Gunās dwell-sattva, rajas, and tamas.
Thou dost create the world: Thou dost sustain it and destroy it;
Binding Thyself with attributes, Thou yet transcendest them;
For Thou, O Mother, art the All.
Kāli Thou art, and Tara, and Thou the Ultimate Prakriti;
Thou art the Fish, the Turtle, the Boar, and all other Avatars
Earth, water, air, and fire art Thou, and Thou the sky,
O Mother of the Absolute!
In Thee do the three Gunās dwell-sattva, rajas, and tamas.
Thou dost create the world: Thou dost sustain it and destroy it;
Binding Thyself with attributes, Thou yet transcendest them;
For Thou, O Mother, art the All.
Kāli Thou art, and Tara, and Thou the Ultimate Prakriti;
Thou art the Fish, the Turtle, the Boar, and all other Avatars
Earth, water, air, and fire art Thou, and Thou the sky,
O Mother of the Absolute!
The Samkhya, Patanjala,
Mimamsaka, and Nyaya
For ever seek to fathom Thee and know Thine inmost nature;
Vedānta and Vaiseshika are searching after Thee;
But none of them has found Thee out.
Though free of limitations, beginningless and without end,
Yet for Thy loving bhaktas' sake Thou wearest varying forms.
The terrors of this world Thou dost remove, and Thou dost dwell
Alike in present, past, and future.
For ever seek to fathom Thee and know Thine inmost nature;
Vedānta and Vaiseshika are searching after Thee;
But none of them has found Thee out.
Though free of limitations, beginningless and without end,
Yet for Thy loving bhaktas' sake Thou wearest varying forms.
The terrors of this world Thou dost remove, and Thou dost dwell
Alike in present, past, and future.
Thou dost appear with
form, to him who loves Thee as a Person;
Thou art the Absolute, to him who worships formless Truth.
Some there are who speak alone of the resplendent Brahman;
Even this, O Blissful Mother, is nothing else but Thee!
Each man, according to his measure, makes his image of the Truth,
Calling it the Highest Brahman.
Beyond this does Turiya shine, the Indescribable:
O Mother of all things, who dost pervade the universe,
Everyone of these art Thou!
Thou art the Absolute, to him who worships formless Truth.
Some there are who speak alone of the resplendent Brahman;
Even this, O Blissful Mother, is nothing else but Thee!
Each man, according to his measure, makes his image of the Truth,
Calling it the Highest Brahman.
Beyond this does Turiya shine, the Indescribable:
O Mother of all things, who dost pervade the universe,
Everyone of these art Thou!
Then he sang:
Dear friend, my religion
and piety have come to an end:
No more can I worship Mother Syama; my mind defies control.
Oh, shame upon me! Bitter shame!
I try to meditate on the Mother with sword in hand,
Wearing Her garland of human heads;
But it is always the Dark One, wearing His garland of wild wood - flowers
And holding the flute to His tempting lips,
That shines before my eyes.
No more can I worship Mother Syama; my mind defies control.
Oh, shame upon me! Bitter shame!
I try to meditate on the Mother with sword in hand,
Wearing Her garland of human heads;
But it is always the Dark One, wearing His garland of wild wood - flowers
And holding the flute to His tempting lips,
That shines before my eyes.
I think of the Mother with
Her three eyes, but alas! I see
Him alone with the arching eyes, and I forget all else!
Oh, shame upon me! Bitter shame!
I try to offer fragrant flowers at the Mother's feet,
But the ravishing thought of His graceful form unsettles my helpless mind,
And all my meditations meant for the Naked One are drawn away
By the sight of His yellow scarf.
Him alone with the arching eyes, and I forget all else!
Oh, shame upon me! Bitter shame!
I try to offer fragrant flowers at the Mother's feet,
But the ravishing thought of His graceful form unsettles my helpless mind,
And all my meditations meant for the Naked One are drawn away
By the sight of His yellow scarf.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA
was in an ecstatic mood, as he listened to the song. The musician sang again:
O Mother, who has offered
these red hibiscus flowers at Thy feet?
I beg of Thee, O Mother, place one or two upon my head.
Then I shall cry aloud to Thee, "Oh, Mother! Mother!"
And I shall dance around Thee and clap my hands for joy,
And Thou wilt look at me and laugh, and tie the flowers in my hair.
I beg of Thee, O Mother, place one or two upon my head.
Then I shall cry aloud to Thee, "Oh, Mother! Mother!"
And I shall dance around Thee and clap my hands for joy,
And Thou wilt look at me and laugh, and tie the flowers in my hair.
The singing was over. Many of the
devotees were in a rapturous mood. There was a deep silence in the room.
Guilelessness of the young devotees
The
younger Naren was absorbed in meditation. He sat like a stump. Pointing him out
to the doctor, SRI
RAMAKRISHNA said, "A very pure soul, unstained by the slightest
touch of worldliness.
MANOMOHAN (to the doctor): "He
(pointing to the MASTER) says of your son, 'I don't care for the father if I
have the son.' "
DOCTOR: "Ah, you see! That is why I say
that you forget everything else when you have the 'Son'."
MASTER
(smiling): "I don't say that I do not want the Father."
DOCTOR: "Yes, I understand you. How
can you save your face unless you say a few things like that?"
MASTER:
"Your boy is quite guileless. One day Sambhu's face became red as he said,
'God will surely listen to a man's prayer if he prays to Him with sincerity.'
"Why am so fond of the
boys? They are like unadulterated milk: only a little boiling is needed.
Moreover It can be offered to the Deity. But milk adulterated with water needs
much boiling. It consumes a large quantity of fuel.
"The boys are like fresh
earthen pots, good vessels in which one can keep milk without any worry.
Spiritual instruction arouses their inner consciousness without delay. But it
is not so with the worldly-minded. One is afraid to keep milk in a pot that has
been used for curd. The milk may turn sour.
"Your boy is still free from
worldliness, untouched by 'woman and gold'."
DOCTOR: "That is because he is living
on his father's earnings. I should love to see how free he would keep himself
from worldliness if he had to earn his own livelihood."
MASTER:
"Yes, yes. That is true. But God is far, far away from the worldly-minded.
For those who have renounced the world He is in the palm of the hand.
(To Dr. Sarkar and Dr. Dukari)
"But renunciation of 'woman and gold' is not meant for you. You may
renounce these mentally. That is why I said to the goswamis: 'Why do you speak
of renunciation?' That will not do for you. You have to attend the daily
worship of Syamasundar.'
Hard rules for sannyāsis
"Total
renunciation is for sannyāsis. They must not look even at the picture of a
woman. To them a woman is poison. They must keep themselves at least ten cubits
away from her; and if that is not possible, at least one cubit. And they must
not talk much with a woman, no matter how devout she may be. Further, they
should choose their dwelling at a place where they will never, or scarcely
ever, see the face of a woman.
"Money, too, is like poison to
a sannyāsi . If he keeps money with him, he has worries, pride, anger, and the
desire for physical comforts. Money inflames his rajas, which brings tamas in
its train. Therefore a sannyāsi must not touch 'gold'. 'Woman and gold'
makes him forget God.
"For householders money is a
means of getting food, clothes, and a dwelling place, worshipping the Deity,
and serving holy men and devotees.
"It is useless to try to hoard
money. With great labour the bees build a hive; but a man breaks it and takes
the honey away."
DOCTOR: "Whom shall we hoard for?- For
a wicked son, perhaps."
MASTER:
"It is not a wicked son alone. Perhaps the wife is unchaste. She may have
a secret lover. Perhaps she will give him your watch and chain!
"You should not renounce woman,
completly. It is not harmful for a householder to live with his wife. But after
the birth of one or two children, husband and wife should live as brother and
sister.
"Woman and gold"
"It
is attachment to 'woman and gold' that begets pride of learning, pride of
money, and pride of social position.
"One cannot attain divine
knowledge till one gets rid of pride. Water does not stay on the top of a
mound; but into low land it flows in torrents from all sides."
DOCTOR: "But the water that flows into
the low land from all sides contains good water and bad water, muddy water and
ditch-water. Again, there are hollows on mountain-tops as well, as at Nainital
and Manasoravar. These contain only Pure water from the sky."
MASTER;
"Only pure water from the sky-that is good!"
DOCTOR: "Further, from an elevated
place the water can be distributed on all sides."
MASTER
(smiling): "A certain man came to possess a siddha mantra. He then went to
the top of a hill and cried aloud. 'Repeat this mantra and you will realize
God.'"
DOCTOR: "Yes."
MASTER:
"But you must remember one thing. When his soul feels restless for God, a
man forgets the difference between good water and ditch-water. In order to know
God, he sometimes goes to good men, sometimes to imperfect men. Dirty water
cannot injure an aspirant if God's grace descends on him. When God grants him
Knowledge, He reveals to the aspirant what is good and what is bad.
"There may be hollows on the
top of a hill, but they cannot exist on the hill of the 'wicked ego'. Only if
it is an 'ego of Knowledge' or an 'ego of bhakti', does the pure water from the
sky collect there.
"It is true that the water from
a hill-top may flow in all directions, but that is possible only from the hill
of the 'ego of Knowledge'.
Preaching without God's command
"One
cannot teach men without the command of God. After attaining Knowledge,
Sankaracharya retained the 'ego of Knowledge' in order to teach mankind. But to
lecture without realizing God! What good will that do?
"I went to the Nandanbagan
Brahmo Samaj . After the worship the preacher gave a lecture from the raised
platform. He had written it at home. As he read from the manuscript he looked
around. While meditating he opened his eyes from time to time to look at
people.
Confusion of mere scholars
"The instruction of a man who has not seen God does not
produce the right effect. He may say one thing rightly, but he becomes confused
about the next.
"Samadhyayi delivered a
lecture. He said: 'God is beyond words and mind; He is dry. Worship Him through
the bliss of your love and devotion.' Just see, he thus described God, whose
very nature is Joy and Bliss! What will such a lecture accomplish? Can it teach
people anything? Such a lecturer is like the man who said, 'my uncle's cow-shed
is full of horses.' Horses in the cow-shed! (All laugh.) From that you can
understand that there were no horses at all."
DOCTOR (smiling): "Nor cows
either!" (All laugh.)
In the mean time the devotees who
had been in a rapturous state had regained their normal mood. The doctor was
highly pleased with them and asked M. about them. M. introduced to him Paltu,
the younger Naren, Bhupati, Sarat, Śaśi, and the other youngsters. About Śaśi,
M. said, "He is going to appear for the B.A. examination."
The doctor was a little inattentive.
MASTER
(to the doctor): "Look here! Listen to what he is saying."
The doctor heard from M. about Śaśi.
MASTER
(to the doctor, pointing to M.): "He
instructs the school-boys."
DOCTOR: "So I have heard."
MASTER:
"I am unlettered and yet educated people come here. How amazing! You must
admit that it is the play of God."
It was nine o'clock in the evening.
The doctor had been sitting there since six o'clock, watching all these
things.
GIRISH (to the doctor): "Well,
sir, does it ever happen to you that, though you do not intend to come here,
you are drawn as if by a subtle force? I feel that way; that is why I am asking
you."
DOCTOR: "I don't know whether I feel
that. But the heart alone knows the promptings of the heart. (To SRI RAMAKRISHNA)
Besides, there isn't much use in speaking about it."
October 24, 1885
It
was about one o'clock in the afternoon. SRI RAMAKRISHNA was seated on the second floor of
the house at Syampukur. Dr. Sarkar, NARENDRA, Mahimacharan, M., and other devotees
were in the room. Referring to the homeopathic system of medicine, the MASTER
said to Dr. Sarkar, "This treatment of yours is very good."
DOCTOR: "According to homeopathy the
physician has to check up the symptoms of the disease with the medical book. It
is like Western music. The singer follows the score.
"Where is Girish Ghosh? Never
mind. Don't trouble him. He didn't sleep last night."
Dr. Sarkar explains samādhi
MASTER:
"Well, when I am in samādhi I feel intoxicated as if I were drunk with
siddhi. What have you to say about that?"
DOCTOR (to M.):
"In that state the nerve centres cease to function. Hence the limbs become
numb. Again, the legs totter because all the energy rushes toward the brain.
Life consists of the nervous system. There is a nerve centre in the nape of the
neck called the medulla oblongata. If that is injured, one may die."
Mahima Chakravarty began to describe
the Kundalini. He said: "The Sushumna nerve runs through the spinal cord
in a subtle form. None can see it. That is what Śiva says."
DOCTOR: "Śiva examined man only in his
maturity. But the Europeans have examined man in all stages of his life from
the embryo to maturity. It is good to know comparative history. From the
history of the Sonthals one learns that Kāli was a Santhāl woman. She
was a valiant fighter. (All laugh.)
"Don't laugh, please. Let me
tell you how greatly the study of comparative anatomy has benefited men. The
difference between the actions of the pancreatic juice and bile was at first
unknown. But later Claude Bernard examined the stomach, liver, and other paits
of the rabbit and demonstrated that the action of bile is different from the
action of the pancreatic juice. Therefore It stands to reason that we should
watch the lower animals as well. The study of man alone is not enough.
"Similarly, the study of
comparative religion is highly beneficial.
"Why do his [meaning the MASTER's]
words go straight to our hearts? He has experienced the truths of different
religions. He himself has practised the disciplines of the Hindu, Christian,
Musslman, Sakta, and Vaishnava religions. The bees can make good honey only if
they gather nectar from different flowers."
M. (to Dr. Sarkar): "He (pointing
to Mahimacharan) has studied science a great deal"
DOCTOR (smiling): "What
science? Do you mean Max Muller's Science of Religion?"
MAHIMA (to the MASTER): "You are ill. But what
can the doctor do about it? When I heard of your illness, I thought that you
were only going to pamper the doctor's pride."
MASTER
(pointing to Dr. Sarkar): "But he is a very good physician. He is very
learned too."
MAHIMA: "Yes, sir. He is a ship and we
are only small boats."
Dr. Sarkar folded his hands in
humility.
MAHIMIA: "But here in the MASTER's
presence all are equal"
NARENDRA's music
SRI RAMAKRISHNA asked NARENDRA to sing. NARENDRA
sang:
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. . . .
No more shall I lose my way on the world's trackless sea. . . .
Then he sang:
Ever insane with pride am
I, and many the cravings of my heart! . . .
He sang again:
This universe, wondrous
and infinite,
O Lord, is Thy handiwork;
And the whole world is a treasure house
Full of Thy beauty and grace.
O Lord, is Thy handiwork;
And the whole world is a treasure house
Full of Thy beauty and grace.
NARENDRA
continued:
O Father of the Universe,
upon Thy lofty throne,
Thou dost enjoy the music of the worlds,
As Thy creation's praise they sweetly sing.
Behold, I too, though born of earth, have come with feeble voice
Before the portal of Thy House.
I seek alone Thy vision, Lord! I crave no other boon.
Here I have come to sing my song for Thee;
From a far comer of the mighty throng
Where sun and moon are hymning Thee, I too would sing Thy praise:
This is Thy lowly servant's prayer.
Thou dost enjoy the music of the worlds,
As Thy creation's praise they sweetly sing.
Behold, I too, though born of earth, have come with feeble voice
Before the portal of Thy House.
I seek alone Thy vision, Lord! I crave no other boon.
Here I have come to sing my song for Thee;
From a far comer of the mighty throng
Where sun and moon are hymning Thee, I too would sing Thy praise:
This is Thy lowly servant's prayer.
He sang another song:
O King of Kings, reveal
Thyself to me!
I crave Thy mercy. Cast on me Thy glance!
At Thy dear feet I dedicate my life,
Seared in the fiery furnace of this world.
My heart, alas, is deeply stained with sin;
Ensnared in māyā, I am all but dead.
Compassionate Lord! Revive my fainting soul
With the life-giving nectar of Thy grace.
I crave Thy mercy. Cast on me Thy glance!
At Thy dear feet I dedicate my life,
Seared in the fiery furnace of this world.
My heart, alas, is deeply stained with sin;
Ensnared in māyā, I am all but dead.
Compassionate Lord! Revive my fainting soul
With the life-giving nectar of Thy grace.
Again:
Be drunk, O mind, be drunk
with the Wine of Heavenly Bliss!
Roll on the ground and weep, chanting Hari's sweet name! . . .
Roll on the ground and weep, chanting Hari's sweet name! . . .
MASTER:
"And sing that one- 'All that exists art Thou.'
DOCTOR: "Ah!"
NARENDRA
sang:
I have joined my heart to
Thee: all that exists art Thou;
Thee only have I found, for Thou art all that exists. .. . .
Thee only have I found, for Thou art all that exists. .. . .
The singing was over. Dr. Sarkar sat
there almost spellbound. After a time, with folded hands, he said very humbly
to SRI
RAMAKRISHNA: "Allow me to take my leave now. I shall come again
tomorrow."
MASTER:
"Oh, stay a little. Girish Ghosh has been sent for. (Pointing to Mahima)
He is a scholar, yet he dances in the name of Hari. He has no pride. He went to
Konnagar just because we were there. He is wealthy; he is free; he serves
nobody. (Pointing to NARENDRA) What do you think of him?"
DOCTOR: "Excellent!"
MASTER
(pointing to a devotee) : "And him?"
DOCTOR: "Splendid!"
MAHlMA : "It can by no means be said
that one knows philosophy unless one has read Hindu philosophy. The European
philosophers do not know the twenty-four cosmic principles of the Samkhya
philosophy. They cannot even grasp them."
Mahima's three paths
MASTER (smiling): "What are the three
paths you speak of?"
MAHIMA: "The path of Sat, which is the
path of knowledge. Next, the path of Chit, of yoga, of karma yoga, which
includes the duties and functions of the four stages of life. Last, the path of
Ānanda, the path of devotion and ecstatic love. You are an adept in all three
paths; you can speak of them all with authority."
SRI RAMAKRISHNA
laughed.
Dr. Sarkar took his leave. It was
evening, the first night after the full moon. SRI RAMAKRISHNA stood up, lost in
samādhi. Nityagopal stood beside him in a reverent attitude.
SRI RAMAKRISHNA
took his seat. Nityagopal was stroking his feet. Devendra, Kalipada, and many
other devotees were seated by his side.
MASTER
(to the devotees): "My mind tells me that Nityagopal's present state will
undergo a change. His entire mind will be concentrated on me-on Him who dwells
in me. Don't you see how NARENDRA's whole mind is being drawn toward
me?"
Many of the devotees were taking their leave. SRI RAMAKRISHNA stood up.
Many of the devotees were taking their leave. SRI RAMAKRISHNA stood up.
On japa
Referring
to japa, he said to A DEVOTEE: "Japa
means silently repeating God's name in solitude. When you chant His name with
single-minded devotion you can see God's form and realize Him. Suppose there is
a piece of timber sunk in the water of the Ganges and fastened with a chain to
the bank. You proceed link by link, holding to the chain, and you dive into the
water and follow the chain. Finally you are able to reach the timber. In the
same way, by repeating God's name you become absorbed in Him and finally
realize Him."
KALIPADA (smiling, to the devotees):
"Ours is a grand teacher! We are not asked to practise meditation,
austerity, and other disciplines."
Suddenly SRI RAMAKRISHNA said, "This is
troubling me." The MASTER's throat was hurting him. Devendra said,
"Your words cannot fool us any more." He thought that the MASTER
feigned illness to hoodwink the devotees.
Most of the devotees departed. It
was arranged that a few of the younger men should stay to nurse the MASTER
by turns. M. also was going to spend the night there.
Sunday, October 25,1885
It
was about half past six in the morning when M. arrived at Syampukur and asked SRI RAMAKRISHNA
about his health. He was on his way to Dr. Sarkar to report the MASTER's
condition. The MASTER
said to M: 'Tell the doctor that during the early hours of the morning my mouth
becomes filled with water and I cough. Also ask him if I may take a bath."
After seven o'clock M. came to Dr. Sarkar's house and told him about
the MASTER's
condition. The physician's old teacher and one or two friends were in the room.
Dr. Sarkar said to his teacher, "Sir, I have been thinking of the
Paramahamsa since three in the morning. I couldn't sleep at all. Even now he is
in my mind."
One of the doctor's friends said to
him: "Sir, I hear that some speak of the Paramahamsa as an Incarnation of
God. You see him every day. How do you feel about it?"
DOCTOR: "I have the greatest regard for
him as a man."
M. (to the doctor's friend): "It
is very kind of Dr. Sarkar to treat him."
DOCTOR. "Kindness? What do you
mean?"
M: "Not toward him, but toward
us."
DOCTOR: "You see, you don't know my
actual loss on account of the Paramahamsa, Every day I fail to see two or three
patients. When the next day I go to their houses, of my own accord, I cannot
accept any fee since I am seeing them without being called. How can I charge
them for my visit?"
Dr. Sarkar on Mahima
The
conversation turned to Mahima Chakravarty. He had been with the MASTER
when Dr. Sarkar had visited him the previous Saturday. Pointing to the doctor,
Mahima had said to SRI RAMAKRISHNA, "Sir, you yourself have
created this disease in order to pamper the doctor's pride."
M. (to the doctor): "Mahima
Chakravarty used to come to your place to attend your lectures on medical
science."
DOCTOR: "Is that so? How full of tamas
he is! Didn't you notice it? I saluted him as 'God's Lower Third'. There exist
in God sattva, rajas, and tamas. Tamas is the third and an inferior quality.
Didn't you hear him say to the Paramahamsa, 'You yourself have created this
disease in order to pamper the doctor's pride'?"
M: "Mahima Chakravarty believes
that the Paramahamsa can cure his disease himself, if he wants to."
DOCTOR: "What? Cure that disease
himself? Is that possible? We are physicians; we know what cancer is. We
ourselves cannot cure it. And he to cure himself! Why, he doesn't know anything
about cancer. (To his friends )The illness is no doubt incurable, but these
gentlemen have been nursing him with sincere devotion."
M. requested the doctor to visit SRI RAMAKRISHNA
and returned home.
In the afternoon, about three
o'clock, M. came to the MASTER and repeated the conversation
he had had with Dr. Sarkar. He said to SRI RAMAKRISHNA, "Today the doctor
embarrassed me."
MASTER:
"What happened?"
M: "Yesterday he heard here that
you yourself had created this illness in order to pamper the doctor's
pride."
MASTER:
"Who made that remark?"
M: "Mahima Chakravarty."
MASTER:
"What did the doctor say to you?'
M: "He described Mahima
Chakravarty as 'God's Lower Third'. Now he admits that all the
qualities-sattva, rajas, and tamas-exist in God. (The MASTER laughs.) Then he told me that
he had waked at three in the morning and had been thinking of you ever since.
When I saw him it was eight o'clock. He said to me, 'Even now the Paramahamsa
is in my mind.' "
MASTER
(laughing): "You see, he has studied English. I cannot ask him to meditate
on me; but he is doing it all the same, of his own accord."
M: "He also said about you, 'I
have the greatest regard for him as a man.'
MASTER:
"Did you talk of anything else?"
M: "I asked him, 'What is your
suggestion today about the patient?' He said: 'Suggestion? Hang it! I shall
have to go to him again myself. What else shall I suggest?' (SRI RAMAKRISHNA
laughs.) Further he said: 'You don't know how much money I am losing every day.
Every day I miss two or three calls.' "
Vijay Goswami
There were many devotees, including NARENDRAnath,
in the room; Vijaykrishna Goswami arrived and respectfully took the dust of the
MASTER's
feet. Several Brahmo devotees came with him. VIJAY
had cut off his connection with the Brahmo Samaj and was practising
spiritual discipline independently. SRI RAMAKRISHNA was very fond of him on account of
his piety and devotion. Though not a disciple of the MASTER, VIJAY
held him in very high respect. He had lived in Dāccā a long time. Recently he
had visited many sacred places in upper India.
MAHIMA CHAKRAVARTY (to VIJAY): "Sir, you have visited many holy
places and new countries. Please tell us some of your experiences."
VIJAY: "What shall I say? I realize
that everything is here where we are sitting now. This roaming about is
useless. At other places I have seen two, five, ten, or twenty-five per cent of
him [meaning the MASTER], at the most. Here alone I find the full one hundred
per cent manifestation of God."
MAHIMA: "You are right, sir. Again, It
is he [the MASTER]
who makes us, roam about or remain in one place."
MASTER
(to NARENDRA):
"See what a change has come over VIJAY's
mind. He is an altogether different person. He is like thick milk from which
all the water has been boiled off. You see, I can recognize a paramahamsa by
his neck and forehead. Yes, I can recognize a paramahamsa."
MAHIMA (to VIJAY):
"Sir, you seem to eat less now. Isn't that so?"
VIJAY: "Perhaps you are right. (To
the MASTER)
I heard about your illness and have come to see you. Again, in Dāccā-"
MASTER:
"What about Dāccā?"
VIJAY did not reply and was silent a few
moments.
VIJAY; "It is difficult to
understand him [meaning the MASTER] unless he reveals himself. Here alone is
the one hundred per cent manifestation of God."
MASTER:
"KEDĀR said the other day, at other
places we don't get anything to eat, but here we get a stomachful!'"
MAHIMA: "Why a stomachful? It
overflows the stomach."
MASTER in ecstasy
VIJAY
(to the MASTER,
with folded hands): "I have now realized who you are. You don't have to
tell me."
MASTER
(in a state of ecstasy): "If so, then so be it!"
Saying, "Yes, I have
understood", VIJAY fell prostrate
before the MASTER.
He held the MASTER's
feet on his chest and clung to them. The MASTER was in deep samādhi, motionless as a
picture. The devotees were overwhelmed by this sight. Some burst into tears and
some chanted sacred hymns. All eyes were riveted on SRI RAMAKRISHNA. They viewed him in
different ways, according to their spiritual unfoldment: some as a great
devotee, some as a holy man, and some as God Incarnate.
Mahimacharan sang, with tears in his
eyes:
"Behold, behold the
embodiment of Love Divine!"
Now and then he chanted, as if
enjoying a glimpse of Brahman:
The Transcendental, beyond
the One and the many, Existence-Knowledge-Bliss Absolute.
NavaGopal was weeping. Bhupati sang:
Hallowed be Brahman, the
Absolute, the Infinite, the Fathomless!
Higher than the highest, deeper than the deepest depths!
Thou art the Light of Truth, the Fount of Love, the Home of Bliss!
This universe with all its manifold and blessed modes
Is but the enchanting poem of Thine inexhaustible thought;
Its beauty overflows on every side.
Higher than the highest, deeper than the deepest depths!
Thou art the Light of Truth, the Fount of Love, the Home of Bliss!
This universe with all its manifold and blessed modes
Is but the enchanting poem of Thine inexhaustible thought;
Its beauty overflows on every side.
O Thou Poet, great and
primal, in the rhythm of Thy thought
The sun and moon arise and move toward their setting;
The stars, shining like bits of gems, are the fair characters
In which Thy song is written across the blue expanse of sky;
The year, with its six seasons, in tune with the happy earth,
Proclaims Thy glory to the end of time.
The sun and moon arise and move toward their setting;
The stars, shining like bits of gems, are the fair characters
In which Thy song is written across the blue expanse of sky;
The year, with its six seasons, in tune with the happy earth,
Proclaims Thy glory to the end of time.
The colours of the flowers
reveal Thy sovereign Beauty,
The waters in their stillness, Thy deep Serenity;
The thunder-clap unveils to us the terror of Thy Law.
Deep is Thine Essence, truly; how can a foolish mind perceive it?
The waters in their stillness, Thy deep Serenity;
The thunder-clap unveils to us the terror of Thy Law.
Deep is Thine Essence, truly; how can a foolish mind perceive it?
Wondering, It meditates on
Thee from yuga to yuga's end
Millions upon millions of suns and moons and stars
Bow down to Thee, O Lord, in rapturous awe!
Beholding Thy creation, men and women weep for joy;
The gods and angels worship Thee, O All-pervading Presence!
O Thou, the Fount of Goodness, bestow on us Thy Knowledge;
Bestow on us devotion, bestow pure love and perfect peace;
And grant us shelter at Thy hallowed feet!
Millions upon millions of suns and moons and stars
Bow down to Thee, O Lord, in rapturous awe!
Beholding Thy creation, men and women weep for joy;
The gods and angels worship Thee, O All-pervading Presence!
O Thou, the Fount of Goodness, bestow on us Thy Knowledge;
Bestow on us devotion, bestow pure love and perfect peace;
And grant us shelter at Thy hallowed feet!
Bhupati sang again:
Upon the Sea of Blissful
Awareness waves of ecstatic love arise:
Rapture divine! Play of God's Bliss!
Oh, how enthralling! . . .
Rapture divine! Play of God's Bliss!
Oh, how enthralling! . . .
He sang a third song:
Here vanish my fear and my
delusion, my piety, rituals, and good works;
Here vanish my pride of race and caste! Where am I? Where art Thou, O Hari?
Thou hast stolen my life and soul, and now, O Friend, Thou dost desert me:
Ah, what a fool I was to come here to the shore of this Sea of Love!
Full to the brim with heavenly bliss is filled this little soul of mine;
Premdas says: Hearken, one and all! This in truth is the way of God!
Here vanish my pride of race and caste! Where am I? Where art Thou, O Hari?
Thou hast stolen my life and soul, and now, O Friend, Thou dost desert me:
Ah, what a fool I was to come here to the shore of this Sea of Love!
Full to the brim with heavenly bliss is filled this little soul of mine;
Premdas says: Hearken, one and all! This in truth is the way of God!
After a long time SRI RAMAKRISHNA
regained consciousness of the world.
MASTER
(to M.): "Something happens to me in
that state of intoxication. Now I feel ashamed of myself. In that state I feel
as if I were possessed by a ghost. I cease to be my own self. While coming down
from that state I cannot count correctly. Trying to count, I say, 'One, seven,
eight', or some such thing."
NARENDRA:
"It is because everything is one."
MASTER:
"No, It is beyond one and two."
MAHIMA: "Yes, you are right. 'It is
neither one nor two.'"
MASTER:
"There reason withers away. God cannot be realized through scholarship. He
is beyond the scriptures-the Vedas, Puranas, and Tantras. If I see a man with
even one book in his hand, I call him a rajarshi though he is a Jnāni. But the
brahmarshi has no outer sign whatsoever.
Use of scriptures
"Do
you know the use of the scriptures? A man once wrote a letter to a relative,
asking him to send five seers of sweetmeats and a piece of cloth.
The relative received the letter,
read it, and remembered about the sweetmeats and the cloth. Then, he threw the
letter away. Of what further use was it?"
VIJAY: "I see that the sweetmeat has
been sent."
God's Incarnation as man
MASTER: "God incarnates Himself on
earth in a human body. He is, no doubt, present everywhere and in all beings,
but man's longing is not satisfied unless he sees God in a human form. Man's
need is not satisfied without the Divine Incarnation. Do you know what it is
like? By touching any part of a cow you undoubtedly touch the cow herself. Even
by touching her horns you touch the cow. But the milk comes through the cow's
udder."
MAHIMA: "If a man wants milk he must
put his mouth to the udder. What will he get by sucking the horns?" (All
laugh.)
VIJAY: "But a calf at first licks
other parts of the cow."
MASTER
(smiling): "True. But seeing the calf doing so, someone perhaps puts its
mouth to the udder." (All laugh.)
The conversation was thus going on,
when Dr. Sarkar came into the room and took a seat. He said to the MASTER:
"I woke up at three this morning, greatly worried that you might catch
cold. Oh, I thought many other things about you."
MASTER:
"I have been coughing and my throat is sore. In the small hours of the
morning my mouth was filled with water. My whole body is aching."
DOCTOR: "Yes, I heard all about it
this morning."
Mahimacharan told of his trip to
various parts of the country and said that in Ceylon no man laughed. Dr. Sarkar
said, "It may be so; but I shall have to inquire about it." (All
laugh.)
The conversation turned to the
duties of life.
The duty of a physician
MASTER (to the doctor): "Many think
that the duty of a physician is a very noble one. The physician is undoubtedly
a noble man if he treats his patients free, out of compassion and moved by
their suffering. Then his work may be called very uplifting. But a physician
becomes cruel and callous if he carries on his profession for money. It is very
mean to do such things as examine urine and stool in order to earn money, like
a business man carrying on his trade."
DOCTOR: "You are right. It is
undoubtedly wrong for a physician to perform his duties in that spirit. But I
don't like to brag before you."
MASTER:
"But the medical profession is certainly very noble if the physician
devotes himself to the welfare of others in an unselfish spirit.
Cultivating holy company
"Whatever
may be a householder's profession, It is necessary for him to live in the
company of holy men now and then. If a man loves God, he will himself seek the
company of holy men. I give the illustration of the hemp-smoker. One
hemp-smoker loves the company of another hemp-smoker. At the sight of a person
who does not smoke, he goes away with downcast eyes or hides himself in a
comer; but his joy is unbounded if he meets a hemp addict. Perhaps they embrace
each other. (All laugh.) Again, a vulture loves the company of another
vulture."
DOCTOR: "It has also been
noticed that a vulture runs away for fear of a crow. In my opinion one should
serve all creatures, not men alone. Often I feed the sparrows with flour. I
throw small pellets of flour to them and they come in swarms. They love to eat
them."
MASTER:
Bravo! That's grand. Holy men should feed other creatures.They feed ants with
sugar."
DOCTOR: "Will there be no singing
today?"
MASTER
(to NARENDRA):
"Why don't you sing a little?"
NARENDRA sings
NARENDRA
sang to the accompaniment of the Tānpura and other instruments:
Sweet is Thy name, O
Refuge of the humble!
It falls like sweetest nectar on our ears
And comforts us, Beloved of our souls!
The priceless treasure of Thy name alone
Is the abode of Immortality,
And he who chants Thy name becomes immortal.
Falling upon our ears, Thy holy name
Instantly slays the anguish of our hearts,
Thou Soul of our souls, and fills our hearts with bliss!
It falls like sweetest nectar on our ears
And comforts us, Beloved of our souls!
The priceless treasure of Thy name alone
Is the abode of Immortality,
And he who chants Thy name becomes immortal.
Falling upon our ears, Thy holy name
Instantly slays the anguish of our hearts,
Thou Soul of our souls, and fills our hearts with bliss!
NARENDRA
sang again:
O Mother, make me mad with
Thy love!
What need have I of knowledge or reason?
Make me drunk with Thy love's Wine;
O Thou who stealest Thy bhaktas' hearts,
Drown me deep in the Sea of Thy love!
Here in this world, this madhouse of Thine,
Some laugh, some weep, some dance for joy:
Jesus, Buddha, Moses, Gaurānga,
All are drunk with the Wine of Thy love
O Mother, when shall I be blessed
By joining their blissful company?
What need have I of knowledge or reason?
Make me drunk with Thy love's Wine;
O Thou who stealest Thy bhaktas' hearts,
Drown me deep in the Sea of Thy love!
Here in this world, this madhouse of Thine,
Some laugh, some weep, some dance for joy:
Jesus, Buddha, Moses, Gaurānga,
All are drunk with the Wine of Thy love
O Mother, when shall I be blessed
By joining their blissful company?
A strange transformation came over
the devotees. They all became mad, as it were, with divine ecstasy. The pundit
stood up, forgetting the pride of his scholarship, and cried:
O Mother, make me mad with
Thy love!
What need have I of knowledge or reason?
What need have I of knowledge or reason?
VIJAY was the first on his feet, carried
away by divine intoxication. Then SRI RAMAKRISHNA stood up, forgetting all about his
painful and fatal illness. The doctor, who had been sitting in front of him,
also stood up. Both patient and physician forgot themselves in the spell
created by NARENDRA's
music. The younger Naren and Lātu went into deep samādhi. The atmosphere of the
room became electric. Everyone felt the presence of God. Dr. Sarkar, eminent
scientist that he was stood breathless, watching this strange scene. He noticed
that the devotees who had gone into samādhi were utterly unconscious of the
outer world. All were motionless and transfixed. After a while, as they came
down a little to the plane of the relative world, some laughed and some wept.
An outsider, entering the room, would have thought that a number of drunkards
were assembled there.
A little later SRI RAMAKRISHNA resumed his
conversation, the devotees taking their seats. It was about eight o'clock in
the evening.
MASTER:
"You have just noticed the effect of divine ecstasy. What does your
'science' say about that? Do you think it is a mere hoax?"
Doctor suppresses his emotion
DOCTOR
(to the MASTER):
"I must say that this is all natural, when so many people have experienced
it. It cannot be a hoax. (To NARENDRA)
When you sang the lines:
O Mother, make me mad with
Thy love!
What need have I of knowledge or reason?
What need have I of knowledge or reason?
I could hardly control myself. I was
about to jump to my feet. With great difficulty I suppressed my emotion. I said
to myself, 'No, I must not display my feelings.' "
MASTER
(with a smile, to the doctor): "You are unshakable and motionless, like
Mount Sumeru. You are a very deep soul. Nobody could perceive the deep emotion
of Rupa and Sanatana. If an elephant enters a small pool, there is a splashing
of water on all sides. But this does not happen when it plunges into a big
lake; hardly anyone notices it. Radha once said to her companion: 'Friend, you
are weeping so much at our separation from Sri Krishna. But look at me. How
stony my heart is! There is not a tear in my eyes.' Brinde, her friend,
replied: 'yes, your eyes are dry. But there is a deep meaning in it. A fire of
grief is constantly raging in your heart because of your separation from
Krishna. No sooner do the tears gather in your eyes than they are dried up in the
heat of that fire.'
DOCTOR: "Nobody can beat you in
talk!" (Laughter.)
The conversation turned to other
things. SRI
RAMAKRISHNA described to the doctor his ecstasies at Dakshineswar.
He also told him how to control anger,lust, and the other passions.
DOCTOR: "I have heard the story that
you were once lying on the ground unconscious in samādhi when a wicked man
kicked you with his boots"
MASTER:
"You must have heard it from M. The man was Chandra Haldar, a priest of
the Kāli temple at KaliGhat; he often came to Mathur Babu's house. One day I
was lying on the ground in an ecstatic mood. The room was dark. Chandra Haldar
thought I was feigning that state in order to win Mathur's favour. He entered
the room and kicked me several times with his boots. It left black marks on my
body. Everybody wanted to tell Mathur Babu about it, but I forbade them."
DOCTOR: "This is also due to the will
of God. Thus you have taught people how to control anger and practise
forgiveness."
In the mean time VIJAY had become engaged in conversation with the
other devotees.
VIJAY: "I feel as if someone were
always moving with me. He shows me what is happening even at a distance."
NARENDRA:
"Like a guardian angel"
VIJAY: "I have seen him [meaning the
MASTER]
in Dāccā. I even touched his body."
MASTER
(with a smile): "It must have been someone else."
NARENDRA:
"I too have seen him many a time. (To VIJAY)
How can I say I do not believe your words?"
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