"Master, a gift for you! These six huge cauliflowers
were planted with my hands; I have watched over their growth with the
tender care of a mother nursing her child." I presented the basket of
vegetables with a ceremonial flourish.
"Thank you!" Sri Yukteswar's smile was warm with appreciation.
"Please keep them in your room; I shall need them tomorrow for a special
dinner."
I had just arrived in Puri1
to spend my college summer vacation with my guru at his seaside
hermitage. Built by Master and his disciples, the cheerful little
two-storied retreat fronts on the Bay of Bengal.
I awoke early the following morning, refreshed by the salty sea
breezes and the charm of my surroundings. Sri Yukteswar's melodious
voice was calling; I took a look at my cherished cauliflowers and stowed
them neatly under my bed.
"Come, let us go to the beach." Master led the way; several young
disciples and myself followed in a scattered group. Our guru surveyed us
in mild criticism.
"When our Western brothers walk, they usually take pride in unison.
Now, please march in two rows; keep rhythmic step with one another." Sri
Yukteswar watched as we obeyed; he began to sing: "Boys go to and fro,
in a pretty little row." I could not but admire the ease with which
Master was able to match the brisk pace of his young students.
"Halt!" My guru's eyes sought mine. "Did you remember to lock the
back door of the hermitage?"
"I think so, sir."
Sri Yukteswar was silent for a few minutes, a half-suppressed smile
on his lips. "No, you forgot," he said finally. "Divine contemplation
must not be made an excuse for material carelessness. You have neglected
your duty in safeguarding the ashram; you must be punished."
I thought he was obscurely joking when he added: "Your six
cauliflowers will soon be only five."
We turned around at Master's orders and marched back until we were
close to the hermitage.
"Rest awhile. Mukunda, look across the compound on our left; observe
the road beyond. A certain man will arrive there presently; he will be
the means of your chastisement."
I concealed my vexation at these incomprehensible remarks. A peasant
soon appeared on the road; he was dancing grotesquely and flinging his
arms about with meaningless gestures. Almost paralyzed with curiosity, I
glued my eyes on the hilarious spectacle. As the man reached a point in
the road where he would vanish from our view, Sri Yukteswar said, "Now,
he will return."
The peasant at once changed his direction and made for the rear of
the ashram. Crossing a sandy tract, he entered the building by the back
door. I had left it unlocked, even as my guru had said. The man emerged
shortly, holding one of my prized cauliflowers. He now strode along
respectably, invested with the dignity of possession.
The unfolding farce, in which my role appeared to be that of
bewildered victim, was not so disconcerting that I failed in indignant
pursuit. I was halfway to the road when Master recalled me. He was
shaking from head to foot with laughter.
"That poor crazy man has been longing for a cauliflower," he
explained between outbursts of mirth. "I thought it would be a good idea
if he got one of yours, so ill-guarded!"
I dashed to my room, where I found that the thief, evidently one with
a vegetable fixation, had left untouched my gold rings, watch, and
money, all lying openly on the blanket. He had crawled instead under the
bed where, completely hidden from casual sight, one of my cauliflowers
had aroused his singlehearted desire.
I asked Sri Yukteswar that evening to explain the incident which had,
I thought, a few baffling features.
My guru shook his head slowly. "You will understand it someday.
Science will soon discover a few of these hidden laws."
When the wonders of radio burst some years later on an astounded
world, I remembered Master's prediction. Age-old concepts of time and
space were annihilated; no peasant's home so narrow that London or
Calcutta could not enter! The dullest intelligence enlarged before
indisputable proof of one aspect of man's omnipresence.
The "plot" of the cauliflower comedy can be best
understood by a radio analogy. Sri Yukteswar was a perfect human radio.
Thoughts are no more than very gentle vibrations moving in the ether.
Just as a sensitized radio picks up a desired musical number out of
thousands of other programs from every direction, so my guru had been
able to catch the thought of the half-witted man who hankered for a
cauliflower, out of the countless thoughts of broadcasting human wills
in the world.2
By his powerful will, Master was also a human broadcasting station,
and had successfully directed the peasant to reverse his steps and go to
a certain room for a single cauliflower.
Intuition3
is soul guidance, appearing naturally in man during those instants when
his mind is calm. Nearly everyone has had the experience of an
inexplicably correct "hunch," or has transferred his thoughts
effectively to another person.
The human mind, free from the static of restlessness, can perform
through its antenna of intuition all the functions of complicated radio
mechanismssending and receiving thoughts, and tuning out undesirable
ones. As the power of a radio depends on the amount of electrical
current it can utilize, so the human radio is energized according to the
power of will possessed by each individual.
All thoughts vibrate eternally in the cosmos. By deep concentration,
a master is able to detect the thoughts of any mind, living or dead.
Thoughts are universally and not individually rooted; a truth cannot be
created, but only perceived. The erroneous thoughts of man result from
imperfections in his discernment. The goal of yoga science is to calm
the mind, that without distortion it may mirror the divine vision in the
universe.
Radio and television have brought the instantaneous sound and sight
of remote persons to the firesides of millions: the first faint
scientific intimations that man is an all-pervading spirit. Not a body
confined to a point in space, but the vast soul, which the ego in most
barbaric modes conspires in vain to cramp.
"Very strange, very wonderful, seemingly very improbable phenomena
may yet appear which, when once established, will not astonish us more
than we are now astonished at all that science has taught us during the
last century," Charles Robert Richet, Nobel Prizeman in physiology, has
declared. "It is assumed that the phenomena which we now accept without
surprise, do not excite our astonishment because they are understood.
But this is not the case. If they do not surprise us it is not because
they are understood, it is because they are familiar; for if that which
is not understood ought to surprise us, we should be surprised at
everythingthe fall of a stone thrown into the air, the acorn which
becomes an oak, mercury which expands when it is heated, iron attracted
by a magnet, phosphorus which burns when it is rubbed. . . . The science
of today is a light matter; the revolutions and evolutions which it will
experience in a hundred thousand years will far exceed the most daring
anticipations. The truthsthose surprising, amazing, unforeseen
truthswhich our descendants will discover, are even now all around us,
staring us in the eyes, so to speak, and yet we do not see them. But it
is not enough to say that we do not see them; we do not wish to see
them; for as soon as an unexpected and unfamiliar fact appears, we try
to fit it into the framework of the commonplaces of acquired knowledge,
and we are indignant that anyone should dare to experiment further."
A humorous occurrence took place a few days after I had been so
implausibly robbed of a cauliflower. A certain kerosene lamp could not
be found. Having so lately witnessed my guru's omniscient insight, I
thought he would demonstrate that it was child's play to locate the
lamp.
Master perceived my expectation. With exaggerated gravity he
questioned all ashram residents. A young disciple confessed that he had
used the lamp to go to the well in the back yard.
Sri Yukteswar gave the solemn counsel: "Seek the lamp near the well."
I rushed there; no lamp! Crestfallen, I returned to my guru. He was
now laughing heartily, without compunction for my disillusionment.
"Too bad I couldn't direct you to the vanished lamp; I am not a
fortune teller!" With twinkling eyes, he added, "I am not even a
satisfactory Sherlock Holmes!"
I realized that Master would never display his powers when
challenged, or for a triviality.
Delightful weeks sped by. Sri Yukteswar was planning a religious
procession. He asked me to lead the disciples over the town and beach of
Puri. The festive day dawned as one of the hottest of the summer.
"Guruji, how can I take the barefooted students over the fiery
sands?" I spoke despairingly.
"I will tell you a secret," Master responded. "The Lord will send an
umbrella of clouds; you all shall walk in comfort."
I happily organized the procession; our group started
from the ashram with a Sat-Sanga banner.4
Designed by Sri Yukteswar, it bore the symbol of the single5
eye, the telescopic gaze of intuition.
No sooner had we left the hermitage than the part of the sky which
was overhead became filled with clouds as though by magic. To the
accompaniment of astonished ejaculations from all sides, a very light
shower fell, cooling the city streets and the burning seashore. The
soothing drops descended during the two hours of the parade. The exact
instant at which our group returned to the ashram, the clouds and rain
passed away tracelessly.
"You see how God feels for us," Master replied after I
had expressed my gratitude. "The Lord responds to all and works for all.
Just as He sent rain at my plea, so He fulfills any sincere desire of
the devotee. Seldom do men realize how often God heeds their prayers. He
is not partial to a few, but listens to everyone who approaches Him
trustingly. His children should ever have implicit faith in the
loving-kindness of their Omnipresent Father."6
Sri Yukteswar sponsored four yearly festivals, at the equinoxes and
solstices, when his students gathered from far and near. The winter
solstice celebration was held in Serampore; the first one I attended
left me with a permanent blessing.
The festivities started in the morning with a barefoot
procession along the streets. The voices of a hundred students rang out
with sweet religious songs; a few musicians played the flute and khol
kartal (drums and cymbals). Enthusiastic townspeople strewed the
path with flowers, glad to be summoned from prosaic tasks by our
resounding praise of the Lord's blessed name. The long tour ended in the
courtyard of the hermitage. There we encircled our guru, while students
on upper balconies showered us with marigold blossoms.
Many guests went upstairs to receive a pudding of
channa and oranges. I made my way to a group of brother disciples
who were serving today as cooks. Food for such large gatherings had to
be cooked outdoors in huge cauldrons. The improvised wood-burning brick
stoves were smoky and tear-provoking, but we laughed merrily at our
work. Religious festivals in India are never considered troublesome;
each one does his part, supplying money, rice, vegetables, or his
personal services.
Master was soon in our midst, supervising the details of the feast.
Busy every moment, he kept pace with the most energetic young student.
A sankirtan (group chanting), accompanied by the
harmonium and hand-played Indian drums, was in progress on the second
floor. Sri Yukteswar listened appreciatively; his musical sense was
acutely perfect.
"They are off key!" Master left the cooks and joined the artists. The
melody was heard again, this time correctly rendered.
In India, music as well as painting and the drama is
considered a divine art. Brahma, Vishnu, and Shivathe Eternal
Trinitywere the first musicians. The Divine Dancer Shiva is scripturally
represented as having worked out the infinite modes of rhythm in His
cosmic dance of universal creation, preservation, and dissolution, while
Brahma accentuated the time-beat with the clanging cymbals, and Vishnu
sounded the holy mridanga or drum. Krishna, an incarnation of
Vishnu, is always shown in Hindu art with a flute, on which he plays the
enrapturing song that recalls to their true home the human souls
wandering in maya-delusion. Saraswati, goddess of wisdom, is
symbolized as performing on the vina, mother of all stringed
instruments. The Sama Veda of India contains the world's earliest
writings on musical science.
The foundation stone of Hindu music is the ragas
or fixed melodic scales. The six basic ragas branch out into 126
derivative raginis (wives) and putras (sons). Each raga
has a minimum of five notes: a leading note (vadi or king), a
secondary note (samavadi or prime minister), helping notes (anuvadi,
attendants), and a dissonant note (vivadi, the enemy).
Each one of the six basic ragas has a natural
correspondence with a certain hour of the day, season of the year, and a
presiding deity who bestows a particular potency. Thus, (1) the
Hindole Raga is heard only at dawn in the spring, to evoke the mood
of universal love; (2) Deepaka Raga is played during the evening
in summer, to arouse compassion; (3) Megha Raga is a melody for
midday in the rainy season, to summon courage; (4) Bhairava Raga
is played in the mornings of August, September, October, to achieve
tranquillity; (5) Sri Raga is reserved for autumn twilights, to
attain pure love; (6) Malkounsa Raga is heard at midnights in
winter, for valor.
The ancient rishis discovered these laws of sound
alliance between nature and man. Because nature is an objectification of
Aum, the Primal Sound or Vibratory Word, man can obtain control over
all natural manifestations through the use of certain mantras or
chants.
7 Historical documents tell of the remarkable
powers possessed by Miyan Tan Sen, sixteenth century court musician for
Akbar the Great. Commanded by the Emperor to sing a night raga
while the sun was overhead, Tan Sen intoned a mantra which
instantly caused the whole palace precincts to become enveloped in
darkness.
Indian music divides the octave into 22 srutis or
demi-semitones. These microtonal intervals permit fine shades of musical
expression unattainable by the Western chromatic scale of 12 semitones.
Each one of the seven basic notes of the octave is associated in Hindu
mythology with a color, and the natural cry of a bird or beast Do
with green, and the peacock; Re with red, and the skylark; Mi
with golden, and the goat; Fa with yellowish white, and the
heron; Sol with black, and the nightingale; La with
yellow, and the horse; Si with a combination of all colors, and
the elephant.
Three scalesmajor, harmonic minor, melodic minorare the
only ones which Occidental music employs, but Indian music outlines 72
thatas or scales. The musician has a creative scope for endless
improvisation around the fixed traditional melody or raga; he
concentrates on the sentiment or definitive mood of the structural theme
and then embroiders it to the limits of his own originality. The Hindu
musician does not read set notes; he clothes anew at each playing the
bare skeleton of the raga, often confining himself to a single
melodic sequence, stressing by repetition all its subtle microtonal and
rhythmic variations. Bach, among Western composers, had an understanding
of the charm and power of repetitious sound slightly differentiated in a
hundred complex ways.
Ancient Sanskrit literature describes 120 talas
or time-measures. The traditional founder of Hindu music, Bharata, is
said to have isolated 32 kinds of tala in the song of a lark. The
origin of tala or rhythm is rooted in human movementsthe double
time of walking, and the triple time of respiration in sleep, when
inhalation is twice the length of exhalation. India has always
recognized the human voice as the most perfect instrument of sound.
Hindu music therefore largely confines itself to the voice range of
three octaves. For the same reason, melody (relation of successive
notes) is stressed, rather than harmony (relation of simultaneous
notes).
The deeper aim of the early rishi-musicians was to blend
the singer with the Cosmic Song which can be heard through awakening of
man's occult spinal centers. Indian music is a subjective, spiritual,
and individualistic art, aiming not at symphonic brilliance but at
personal harmony with the Oversoul. The Sanskrit word for musician is
bhagavathar, "he who sings the praises of God." The sankirtans
or musical gatherings are an effective form of yoga or spiritual
discipline, necessitating deep concentration, intense absorption in the
seed thought and sound. Because man himself is an expression of the
Creative Word, sound has the most potent and immediate effect on him,
offering a way to remembrance of his divine origin.
The sankirtan issuing from Sri Yukteswar's
second-story sitting room on the day of the festival was inspiring to
the cooks amidst the steaming pots. My brother disciples and I joyously
sang the refrains, beating time with our hands.
By sunset we had served our hundreds of visitors with
khichuri (rice and lentils), vegetable curry, and rice pudding. We
laid cotton blankets over the courtyard; soon the assemblage was
squatting under the starry vault, quietly attentive to the wisdom
pouring from Sri Yukteswar's lips. His public speeches emphasized the
value of Kriya Yoga, and a life of self-respect, calmness,
determination, simple diet, and regular exercise.
A group of very young disciples then chanted a few
sacred hymns; the meeting concluded with sankirtan. From ten
o'clock until midnight, the ashram residents washed pots and pans, and
cleared the courtyard. My guru called me to his side.
"I am pleased over your cheerful labors today and during the past
week of preparations. I want you with me; you may sleep in my bed
tonight."
This was a privilege I had never thought would fall to my lot. We sat
awhile in a state of intense divine tranquillity. Hardly ten minutes
after we had gotten into bed, Master rose and began to dress.
"What is the matter, sir?" I felt a tinge of unreality in the
unexpected joy of sleeping beside my guru.
"I think that a few students who missed their proper train
connections will be here soon. Let us have some food ready."
"Guruji, no one would come at one o'clock in the morning!"
"Stay in bed; you have been working very hard. But I am going to
cook."
At Sri Yukteswar's resolute tone, I jumped up and
followed him to the small daily-used kitchen adjacent to the
second-floor inner balcony. Rice and dhal were soon boiling.
My guru smiled affectionately. "Tonight you have conquered fatigue
and fear of hard work; you shall never be bothered by them in the
future."
As he uttered these words of lifelong blessing, footsteps sounded in
the courtyard. I ran downstairs and admitted a group of students.
"Dear brother, how reluctant we are to disturb Master at this hour!"
One man addressed me apologetically. "We made a mistake about train
schedules, but felt we could not return home without a glimpse of our
guru."
"He has been expecting you and is even now preparing your food."
Sri Yukteswar's welcoming voice rang out; I led the astonished
visitors to the kitchen. Master turned to me with twinkling eyes.
"Now that you have finished comparing notes, no doubt you are
satisfied that our guests really did miss their train!"
I followed him to his bedroom a half hour later, realizing fully that
I was about to sleep beside a godlike guru.
1 Puri, about 310 miles south of Calcutta, is a famous pilgrimage
city for devotees of Krishna; his worship is celebrated there with two
immense annual festivals, Snanayatra and Rathayatra.
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2 The 1939 discovery of a radio microscope revealed a new world of
hitherto unknown rays. "Man himself as well as all kinds of supposedly
inert matter constantly emits the rays that this instrument 'sees,'"
reported the Associated Press. "Those who believe in telepathy, second
sight, and clairvoyance, have in this announcement the first scientific
proof of the existence of invisible rays which really travel from one
person to another. The radio device actually is a radio frequency
spectroscope. It does the same thing for cool, nonglowing matter that
the spectroscope does when it discloses the kinds of atoms that make the
stars. . . . The existence of such rays coming from man and all living
things has been suspected by scientists for many years. Today is the
first experimental proof of their existence. The discovery shows that
every atom and every molecule in nature is a continuous radio
broadcasting station. . . . Thus even after death the substance that was
a man continues to send out its delicate rays. The wave lengths of these
rays range from shorter than anything now used in broadcasting to the
longest kind of radio waves. The jumble of these rays is almost
inconceivable. There are millions of them. A single very large molecule
may give off 1,000,000 different wave lengths at the same time. The
longer wave lengths of this sort travel with the ease and speed of radio
waves. . . . There is one amazing difference between the new radio rays
and familiar rays like light. This is the prolonged time, amounting to
thousands of years, which these radio waves will keep on emitting from
undisturbed matter."
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3 One hesitates to use "intuition"; Hitler has almost ruined the word
along with more ambitious devastations. The Latin root meaning of
intuition is "inner protection." The Sanskrit word agama means
intuitional knowledge born of direct soul-perception; hence certain
ancient treatises by the rishis were called agamas.
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4 Sat is literally "being," hence "essence; reality." Sanga is
"association." Sri Yukteswar called his hermitage organization
Sat-Sanga, "fellowship with truth."
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5 "If therefore thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of
light."-Matthew 6:22. During deep meditation, the single or spiritual
eye becomes visible within the central part of the forehead. This
omniscient eye is variously referred to in scriptures as the third eye,
the star of the East, the inner eye, the dove descending from heaven,
the eye of Shiva, the eye of intuition, etc.
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6 "He that planted the ear, shall he not hear? he that formed the
eye, shall he not see? . . . he that teacheth man knowledge, shall he
not know?"-Psalm 94:9-10.
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7 Folklore of all peoples contains references to incantations with
power over nature. The American Indians are well-known to have developed
sound rituals for rain and wind. Tan Sen, the great Hindu musician, was
able to quench fire by the power of his song. Charles Kellogg, the
California naturalist, gave a demonstration of the effect of tonal
vibration on fire in 1926 before a group of New York firemen. "Passing a
bow, like an enlarged violin bow, swiftly across an aluminum tuning
fork, he produced a screech like intense radio static. Instantly the
yellow gas flame, two feet high, leaping inside a hollow glass tube,
subsided to a height of six inches and became a sputtering blue flare.
Another attempt with the bow, and another screech of vibration,
extinguished it."
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