Swami Vivekananda in London
Swami Vivekananda in London
Swami Vivekananda in London
Some in India doubt the accuracy of Mohendra Datta's memory and even
veracity, in his accounts, partly because the book was written some years after
the author had returned to India and because of his penchant for the miraculous.
However, it is highly probable that he kept a journal and he could not have
grossly misreported. The material is valuable, not only for what it gives us of
Swami Vivekananda's daily life, but also for the light it throws on the lives of
Swami Saradananda and J.J. Goodwin. We feel this to be ample justification
for making it available to the public. Sister Gargi (Marie Louise Burke) had
first rights to it and used some of the information in her biographical books on
Swami Vivekananda.
The Preface tells us that Goodwin had two unmarried sisters. He had filled
seven notebooks with Swami Vivekananda’s words. These were sent by
Alasinga Perumal and others to the mother, Mrs. Goodwin, who, unable to
decipher the shorthand, destroyed them. Sister Nivedita attempted to trace the
family but could not. In London a woman in nurse’s uniform used to take down
Swamiji’s lectures in shorthand. Who she was or where she lived no one
knows. Mohendra is going to do his best; he has not put in his own opinions or
feelings [in this portion of the book]; he records here what little he can recall.
Chapter I
Chapter II
Chapter III
In the parlor [ground floor] was a central round table and four chairs, a
fireplace opposite the door. There was an easy chair near it for Swamiji; except
for Sturdy no one else used it. There was a secretary table. The ceiling had a
lotus flower design in gesso. The lighting was gas. The following hilarious
scene is described: Both Swami Saradananda and Mohendra are up in their
room with (recurrent) malarial fever. Swami Saradananda is walking around,
delirious, “rehearsing” a lecture. He tells Mohendra, “Are you listening? You
say ‘Hm’ from time to time so that I will know.” With great difficulty
Mohendra replies ‘Hm’. On the day when Swami Saradananda was recovering,
Swamiji came in and Saradananda, falling down before him on his knees, clung
to Swamiji’s feet and wept like a child. “Make me well. Lift off this burden!”
he said again and again, keeping his head on Swamiji’s feet.
Swamiji smilingly said, “Sit up, you fat rascal! Just see what the malarial
fever has wrought! You will have to lecture, or I will beat you with a stick and
throw you down to the street from this window. I will send you to the
workhouse; do you not know how much money has been spent? (To bring him
there.)
Swami Saradananda replied, “Beat me or do whatever you like, only make
me well or I will not let you go.”
“So be it, rascal,” said Swamiji. “Now get up.” Swami Saradananda stood up
like one utterly obedient. “Look,” Swamiji said, “sitting in my chair in the
dining-room I was building up power. Don’t you know how to build up power?
But what you have seen I did before your eyes.” (Apparently he means that he
has done a “miraculous” cure of Mohendra.)
Swami Saradananda said, “Fine, you have done well; set my mind at rest.”
Swamiji said to Mohendra, “Don’t take any more quinine; take it out and throw
it away; will-power is everything. Don’t eat any bread today, take sago milk.”
And he went away. Swami Saradananda said: “This is not the old Naren any
more; today I have seen at first hand how by will the fever of so many years’
standing has been driven off.” This was the day of the first class lecture [i.e. 7th
May?] Swami Saradananda used to teach Miss Muller a bit of Sanskrit.
Swami Saradananda and Mohendra went to the Indian Empire Exhibition at
Earls Court.
Around the first of May, Mr. John P. Fox, a young man from America
arrived and spent some time. Fox was very fond of Swami Vivekananda whom
he had met at Mrs. Bull’s house in Cambridge, Mass. where Fox was secretary
for a conference. For this reason everyone treated him well.
Miss Muller had studied at Cambridge University with a Dr. John Venn,
(author of Logic of Chance). One day she took Swamiji to meet him. They
talked about philosophy in various forms in different countries. Swamiji
impressed the professor very much and he was most pleased with the
encounter. Mohendra did not hear a word of this from Swamiji, who said only
that someone had been pleased to meet him.
Miss Muller once mentioned seeing all the old cows in India and their pitiful
condition. She remarked that in England such unproductive and suffering
animals are done away with. Swami Saradananda made the mistake of asking
her, “Then why not do away with our parents too, when they get old?” Miss
Muller, whose elderly mother was living, would not speak to him for three
days.
“You see, Sarat,” said Swamiji on hearing about it. “In this country there are
two kinds of old maids: some grow fat; they are cool-hearted and comfortable;
the others get dried up and they are peevish.
Around old maids you must take great care – stand up when they come into the
room; ask, “How are you?”; keep your hands out of your pockets etc.
Quickly give them whatever they want.”
There used to be lectures on Tuesday, from eleven to one. The same subject
was given again at 7 p.m. The same arrangement on Fridays. [This must be a
mistake in his memory]. After about a month there was a Sunday lecture at 4
p.m. in the gallery of the Royal Institute of Painters in Watercolors. The former
were called class lectures and they began with the Yoga Aphorisms; then,
bearing on this, whatever works there were, Eastern or Western, be it history,
chemistry, physics etc. he would talk on without let; afterwards, questions. At
this time there was no particular formality, the conversation being all quite
spontaneous. Some days it was the answer period which was more attractive
than the lecture. But the subject matter was so deep and difficult and he spoke
so fluently, that it was impossible to keep in mind what he said – and even the
speaker would sometimes forget what he had said a moment before.
Goodwin had many shorthand notes of the speeches Swami had given in
America; now there was talk of getting these ready for printing. Whenever he
had time Goodwin would transcribe these and try to get them printed. In this,
Sturdy was the most enterprising, while Miss Muller and others were also
agreeable.
Swamiji on many days did not eat lunch at home. Some particularly big
person or other would come and take him out to lunch, or to tea. Goodwin
would breathe easier when Swamiji was out of the house. Fox, not being a
vegetarian would go out to eat. This day Goodwin, having finished his work
began to dance and cut up, showing different folk dances. Swami Saradananda
said, “Just see, what exertion the English are capable of! This fellow Goodwin
has gone around the whole city, has read his proof-sheet, and now see him
dance! Without this energy could the race have risen up?”
Chapter IV
There used to come to the morning lecture an elderly lady from distant
Crystal Palace or Sydenham, who was past sixty, stout and white-haired. She
would mount the stairs slowly and seat herself with difficulty. Although
summer had begun, she was wrapped up as if it were winter and would
perspire. Mohendra handed her a fan and they got into conversation. “I love
this Swami’s talks,” she said, “I seem to be seeing someone out of the Bible as
it were. Though I am only an old woman and cannot understand much of the
philosophy, Swami speaks in such a way, with his voice and gestures and all,
that I am charmed. It is as if I were seeing clearly before my very eyes many
incidents of the Bible.” Mohendra asked her where she came from and she told
him. “Where will I get the carriage-hire to come so far? So I ride part way and
walk part way, but I don’t miss a lecture.”
A remarkable dream
A lady of about forty-two or three named Johnson, who was English but born
in Moscow, came around. With much devotion and animation she told her
dream: A luminous man came to her and said, “Come along.” Without a doubt
or objection she began to follow him. Going a long way across a field they
came to sea shore. It was a very dark night, yet a wooden ship was seen to be at
hand. A voice came out of the darkness, “Board this ship.” The ship spread its
sail, caught the wind and moved swiftly. All around, a boundless sea. All black
sky, not even stars to be seen. Gradually fear came over her; darkness all
around, who this pilot was, or her fellow-passengers – nothing could she
understand. Then she saw a rope stretched between the mast and the prow, and
on it a lantern hanging. Small as this light was, it gave her hope. Then she saw,
standing by the light, someone who was the Captain or other officer of the ship.
She could see him clearly. At the sight of his face, clear as a photo, her heart
rose. Looking at her and seeing her fear, he said, “There is no fear; even in the
dark the ship will go to its destination; you need not be afraid.” Suddenly she
woke up. Miss Johnson: “I couldn’t say of what country was the man whom I
saw bit it affected me so much and looking in many places in Russia I could
never find that face. I have been living for several years in London and decided
my dream was my delusion. Several weeks ago I heard that a preacher of
Hinduism had come and was giving lectures. As soon as I saw Swami
Vivekananda and heard him speak, I knew it was the same person.” Then she
said that she hadn’t gone up to speak to him, as she was a woman and would
not know what to say. Mohendra got the impression of a sincere and truthful
woman.
One devotee was the wife of a general [Lady Ferguson?]
One night while walking Swamiji told Sturdy how he met Goodwin. “When
I first gave lectures in America, who wrote down anything or kept track of what
was said? Finally everybody insisted that such fine lectures were being lost,
and these must be recorded. So an advertisement was placed in the newspaper
for a shorthand stenographer. Many job-seekers applied and I saw all were
Americans. But one English lad had gone to America and, attending the
Exhibition, had taken down my Chicago speech and given it to the newspapers.
Now he was foot-loose.
He came, and was hired. At first he took wages and lived and ate elsewhere;
after a few weeks he became very devoted to me and said, ‘I don’t want to take
any other work; I wish to do everything for you.’ From that time he has stayed
with me. He does a tremendous amount of work for me; without him I would
be in difficulty.” Sturdy became very serious and Swamiji changed the subject.
After breakfast one day there was the translating of a portion of theNarada
Sutra. When Sturdy had left, Swami Vivekananda came out of his room
wearing his lecture clothes (long red shirt and silk waistband). Now lecture
arrangements had been made for Sunday also; many were attending the class-
lectures etc. so Swamiji was very happy. It was about an hour before morning
class; the busy traffic on the street could be seen through the large dining-room
windows. Swamiji, looking out, began a comic song: “Umbrella in hand, hat on
the head, so many pretty girls are going by with basketsful of flour smeared on
their faces (powder).” He put it to such a droll and mysterious tune, that
Mohendra had to laugh uncontrollably. Swamiji said to Swami Saradananda,
“See the ladies have put powder on their faces as if they had scraped it up with
a hoe.” Swamiji saw that only a few minutes remained till lecture time. Still he
was laughing and joking with the other swami, poking ribs and playing. They
were like two kids as they went up the stairs. Gradually, as Swamiji went up he
became a totally different person, that look of a lion-conqueror, master ascetic
etc. coming over him. Swami Saradananda seeing him, fell behind, silent and
awed.
One day Swamiji was sitting in his long easy-chair and smoking his pipe,
when his glance fell on Fox’s shoes, which were brown boots with pointed
toes. Swamiji said, “In America those who wear this kind of shoe get their toes
curled, the toes pressed. At first it seems uncomfortable.” Then, “America
seems to be full of electricity. What exertion and enthusiasm there is
everywhere! I used to see poor Italians or Russians entering the country with
pack on the back, halting steps, afraid of anyone, wearing soiled clothes; after
two or three months I saw that they were wearing respectable clothes, walking
erect, going into restaurants and eating with everyone. No more idea of fear!
The country is free, you see; so into them also that freedom has entered. And if
a man makes a new invention, right away he gets a patent on it and makes a
fortune.” And he went on in that vein. “What a desire for work! Nobody
depends on anyone else. Son doesn’t wish to remain dependent on father, nor
father on son. Seeing America I was able to understand what Freedom is. I saw
that great or small, a man works with the idea that one day he may become a
millionaire, or even President.
Work, work, self-manifestation, tearing up obstacles – demonstrate freedom –
this is in the very air of America.”
When one evening he told the story of Narada on his way to heaven meeting
the two aspirants, the ladies were in raptures. Gathering around Swamiji they
said, “I never heard such a beautiful story; it has brought peace to my heart.”
The discourse was very good that night. The average person did not understand
the discussion of Raja Yoga: dhyana, dharana and all that. They listened
because they had to. But everyone enjoyed the talk on Bhakti of that evening.
Swamiji, too, was not in a very serious mood that day. Coming down from the
lecture room to the dining room, all the “family” being there, Swami
Saradananda emptied a full glass of water at one gulp. “Look at that!” said
Swamiji to Sturdy and Miss Muller, “I lectured and hegot thirsty.” Looking at
the other Swami he said, “Did you speak, that you have become so thirsty?”
Swami Saradananda said smiling, “Well, your lecture was such a threat
(dhamak), who wouldn’t get thirsty? It was not one glass, but three glasses.”
All laughed. Even Miss Muller was very happy with the talk, and Sturdy
praised it.
Chapter V
For the Piccadilly Sunday lectures the Water Color Painter’s Gallery was
hired, and a notice placed in the newspaper. A church paper published that an
atheist had come from India to preach his doctrines; he did not believe in God,
criticized the Christian religion and various other nice things. In all the
newspapers such was the influence of the clergy that this was the general
understanding. On Friday or Saturday evening Goodwin would write out, on
small pieces of paper, notices ready to be sent to each newspaper. As many
copies had to be made, Swami Saradananda and Mohendra did this. These were
sent but not a mention came out in the Sunday papers. From this it was clearly
understood that there was a strong inside prejudice. Goodwin was just as
determined: every week when he wrote the notice he would send it to all the
papers. But there was no mention in the church news column.
Canon Haweis
Then gradually, with tones of affection the words began to come out quickly.
Even when his voice was soft, he would be clearly heard to the end [of the
hall?] Gradually as the thought became tense and complex, so the voice would
rise accordingly. Slowly his left arm was set in motion and the fingers of his
hand sometimes clenched, sometimes spread, expressing the thought in his
mind. Sometimes he would raise his right arm, and sometimes when the
thought was very profound, he used both arms to aid the expression. Thus the
lecture ended after nearly an hour and a half. The audience had sat still and
breathless as if there were no one in the room. Then he drank water, came
down, seemed his normal self and within five minutes tried to mix with
everyone. Even then a “lit” look remained in his face and eyes. Among the
audience those who were American said, “We heard this lecture in America.”
But those who were hearing it for the first time were astonished. Miss McLeod
was present. The house lectures were on Raja Yoga and the Piccadilly ones
serially on Jnana Yoga and other stories and subjects arranged in various places
in the Complete Works.
Below stairs
One day Swamiji and his brother-Swami went down to the kitchen, made
ghee, cooked potatoes into khichuri, and made a very spicy curry and brought it
up to the dining-room. Suddenly Swami Saradananda said to Mohendra, “Oh,
take a bit out for Miss Cameron, otherwise she will scold us when she comes in
the afternoon.” Mohendra did so, but Miss Cameron did not come that
afternoon. She came next day at four o’clock bringing a young Swiss man
[Max Gysi?]. Miss Cameron was about forty-five years old, a friend of Mr.
Sturdy. She loved Swamiji very much and had a loud mouth but a big heart.
She would come to the door and say, spiritedly, to Swami Saradananda, “You
kooky Swami, you devil Swami,” etc. Though scolding, she would examine
everything minutely, from kitchen to bedroom, seeing whether the kitchen was
supplied, what was being cooked, talk over with the housekeeper the menus
etc., tidy up each room, see if the sheets were clean, then come and sit in the
dining-room. The young man had spoken before with Swami Saradananda and
Mohendra. Later it was learned that he came from Switzerland and Miss
Cameron was taking care of him like an adopted son. When Swami
Saradananda fed them some of the curry, it made her eyes water and she cried
out, “Oh, it is poison,” and teased him.
Goodwin always stayed close to Swamiji, listened carefully to his words and
took down everything about Vedanta and Raja Yoga. At that time the mood of
Vedanta became much awakened in Goodwin. There was an elderly
maidservant (apparently Irish) with whom he used to banter. She once took
exception to something that was being done in the house and when told
“Swami Vivekananda is responsible for it; why don’t you complain to him?”,
she lost her nerve and said, “No, Swami is a great man. I love him much. He is
very kind to all. He is a great-hearted man!” She never attended any lecture and
stayed downstairs; but seeing and hearing about the people who came to him
and what they said, she had much faith in him and devotion to him.
Sturdy, who did not smoke and did not know tobacco, one day brought
Swamiji a pound of special pipe tobacco which he tried, but could not get to
burn properly. He said to Goodwin, “You see, Sturdy is rather stingy. He got a
bargain, and so the tobacco is no good. No taste, no smell, it won’t draw in the
pipe. Throw this away, my boy, and go out and get me some good tobacco. All
day I have to spend talking with people, have to lecture, have to think; I can’t
even smoke a little if I want to. This sour-faced man into whose hands I have
fallen has taken the life out of me.” Goodwin did as he was bidden.
Clarification of “Yoga”
Chapter VI
Goodwin loved every product of his own race. He would say to Mohendra,
“Eat some strawberries! They are a very fine fruit, a really good thing.”
Mohendra, like many Indians, saw nothing great about them.
One day, from the fancy fruit market there came a pineapple. Swamiji was
delighted and taught Goodwin how to peel it. After all had eaten it, Swamiji
talked about pineapples. “This is a Chinese fruit; formerly it was not found in
India. Probably the Portuguese or Dutch brought it in. It was called ‘ananas,’
which in time became ‘anaras.’ But now there are plenty in India; so fertile is
Indian soil that many foreign fruits are grown in abundance.” At any rate, the
Indians present were enraptured at tasting it. They say that even the cawing of
crows of one’s own land is sweet to the ear.
Once Swamiji talked to Deshai a lot about miracles. He said, “The Tantrik
sadhus know how to distill wine. They were carrying wine in
theirkamandalus when a village, getting the smell of wine, raised objection.
Then the sadhus began to show their miracles. Pouring a little wine into some
water with repetition of a mantra and posturing their bodies in many ways they
showed that the water had become like milk. Everyone was astonished. Sadhus
can show many tricks like this. Because of this, true religion becomes a
laughing-stock and people remain skeptical about sadhus. You see, one of
Shivaji’s gurus was a sadhu. It was through his blessing that Shivaji prevailed.
When Shivaji fought with the Moguls, his spies wearing gerrua like monks
went about all over the land gathering information. There was no restriction on
the movements of sadhus. From that time government is very suspicious of
people wearing gerrua and they keep a sharp eye on them.”
He told Deshai: “When I was wandering about in India I once took rest near
a schoolroom (pathshala) where some children were studying grammar. I was
sitting at a distance; they saw me but said nothing. They thought I would be
taking some food and moving on; they would see me at mealtime. Hearing their
mistakes in grammar, my ear took offense. Finally I could not stand it any
longer and went over and corrected them. Now they began to spread my fame
and press me to stay there. My mind was much depressed at that time, and I
wanted to go to another place, so I had something to eat and moved off. Deshai,
going around India I have seen what difficulty a sadhu has to get two grains of
rice. The other day you asked me about hatha yoga. Do you understand what
hunger there is there? I saw then what suffering there is in the land.”
And Swamiji’s face lost all smile, became grave and he was stock-still with
tears in his eyes.
One day Goodwin began to talk to Swami Saradananda regarding his own
life. They had lived in Frome [a bit south of Batheaston] and were tenants of
the Marquis of Bath. Goodwin had a widowed mother and two unmarried
sisters. They were supporting themselves somehow, and when he got money he
would send it to his mother. He was then twenty-three or four years old and
knew shorthand well. Work was not always available in one place, so he had
wandered from England to Australia, then to America. Wherever he went he
studied the local language. Goodwin said, “I have traveled wherever English is
spoken. What else to do? A poor man from childhood, I have gone about trying
to get my living. No patron do I have; I have been to many places, mixed with
many people – they gave me work, gave the wages – but no one gave me his
heart’s love. Then in America I met Swami Vivekananda. Then alone I could
understand what love was. So, income or no income, I am trapped! I have been
round the world, hob-knobbed with famous people, but never have I found such
a noble being as Swamiji: one is drawn as if to one’s very own.
“On the boat from Australia to Colombo I had no work. How to put in the
time? So I began to dance. I would dance half the night. And I played cards and
gambled. Lost a lot of money.” Hearing all this Swami Saradananda said to
Mohendra (in Bengali), “Even though Goodwin is Swamiji’s devotee, his
English nature is very prominent. Cricket and football are his craze, gambling
his vice. All the English weaknesses are in him.” Goodwin, hearing the talk,
said,” It seems you are berating me in your own tongue?” Swami Saradananda
replied that he was just talking about his gambling.
Swami Vivekananda had heard about all that before. Referring to this he told
Goodwin, “You were misnamed Goodwin; it should have been ‘Badwin.’
Goodwin shook his head and rolled his eyes. “I am not Bad-win,” he said, but
Good-win, Good-win, Goodwin.” Swamiji laughed a bit and said, “You are a
gambler, you are always thinking of that.”
Swamiji said that in America there was a married couple, both artists, short
and plump of build; they used to go out on bicycles together, like friends, for
painting pictures. They were very fond of him and sometimes would come and
take him out on the contraption, sitting one on either side of him [tandem?]
They would seat Swamiji between them somewhere and begin to paint his
portrait. They would compete to see who could produce the greater likeness
and thus eagerly would work at painting him. Swamiji would sit still until he
was cramped, while they worked. He felt very happy to see their urge to be pre-
eminent, and laughed while telling us about it.
Goodwin was a real cut-up, making everyone laugh.
Swamiji was always careful to learn the local customs and to follow them
without defect, which is why he was so much respected. Once he told
Mahendra not to come into the sitting room with his tie loosened and to change
his collar twice a week. It seems to an Indian very extravagant.
He paid so much attention to manners and customs that it is no wonder that
people in America had said that, though he went about like a wandering monk,
he was the child of an aristocrat – never forgetting an observance. He always
shaved beard and moustache, and if he had an evening invitation to meal, he
would shave again, change his collar, and comb and part his hair, and see that
his shoes were shined.
One morning Swamiji said, “In America now there will be scarcely a town of
twenty or thirty thousand who will not know of me. And many will be very
familiar. There are many students, too, but these proved to be “chips” and blew
away [chela means both]. Only Goodwin stayed; I saw that fellow was without
food. But there is a difference between the English and the Americans: as I see
it, the Americans are very sociable, whereas the English don’t like to mix and
can bite like white ants.” Then he changed the subject.
His coming to the West
An international incident
The news appeared one morning in the paper that a young Chinese had come
to London, and the Chinese ambassador had decoyed him into his own
residence and forcing him to board ship and go back to China. Reading the
news, Swamiji said to Goodwin, “What is this, Goodwin, isn’t this a free
country? All are the same in freedom. Now where is your right of hospitality?
This poor Chinese lad in the city of London is being maltreated. Where is your
national ideal of liberty?” Goodwin jumped up, shook his fist, stamped his foot
and became quite heated. He said, “Such behavior in England! Anyone setting
foot on the soil of England becomes free from that moment. How wrong of the
Chinese Ambassador! Doesn’t he know this is England? Many nihilists and
anarchists and foes of the government of Russia are living in this country in
freedom. Their meetings and newspapers etc. are being carried on: no one says
anything. And this Chinese ambassador has taken the Chinese boy!” Sturdy
said, “Even if there has to be a war with China over this, we are ready. I will
become a soldier myself. It is a disgrace to England.”
Then Lord Salisbury, M.P. had soldiers surround the Embassy and man all
the docks. He wrote to the Ambassador to deliver the young man into his
keeping. But Goodwin was hot all day and did no work, and bought
newspapers. Swamiji’s face was very melancholy; he seemed to be brooding.
Once in a while he would say something. “Powerful people treat poor people in
this way.” Even when he did not speak, one knew his every thought by his face.
Then Goodwin delightedly brought the news that the boy had been freed.
[Mohendra says that he, Mohendra, later made acquaintance with this boy in
the British Museum Library. The young man was the future Sun-yat Sen].
One day the newspaper informed that a Mrs. Dyer of Reading would be
hanged. [She was an elderly woman who for some years had taken under her
“care” the illegitimate babies of “high society,” along with the money for their
keep – then disposed of them in the Thames River. Biggest scandal of the day.]
Swamiji read it and said to Sturdy, “The Thames water has become babies
soup!” Then, “I see that the society is rotten. This baby-murder goes on in
house after house. A race begins to rot from the inside first: then comes an
enemy and conquers it. If this race goes on in this way, its fall is assured, I see.
From social evil every evil eventuates.” Sturdy said, “Swamiji, English society
is going rotten inside; as outward enjoyment increases, in such measure does
inner corruption increase too. In this country the standard of living is high, and
human nature will be what it is; so there is much social evil.”
Swamiji remained in a mood of disgust that day.
At this time Max Muller’s essay entitled “A Real Mahatma” appeared in the
well-known journal Nineteenth Century. He had brought out a life of Sri
Ramakrishna, as mentioned before.
The former Presidency College Principal, Mr. Tawney, had written and
published an article in a paper of the time about Sri Ramakrishna. Because of
Swami Vivekananda’s London speeches and his mixing with the “big people,”
there began to be some discussion of Ramakrishna in academic circles. At
Kankhal in 1917 the famous Aswini Kumar Datta told Mohendra that he and
Prof. Tawney wrote that the latter tries to read “M.”sKathamrita in Bengali, but
cannot make it out in many places because of the village dialect. Yet he reads it
daily just like the Bible. Aswini told this with great joy.
One afternoon Swamiji was sitting in the parlor with Sturdy and others.
Swamiji said, “See how advanced the Germans are in science.”
(Then he described their use of a fielding system for sewage water. Coming out
on the other side of a field, the water was quite pure and even fit to drink.)
Chapter VII
Goodwin’s patriotism
Edward VII was then Prince of Wales. A horse of his named “Persimmon”
won the Derby race. England is a racing country, the fact that a horse of the
Prince should win the race made a big stir. Everyone was overjoyed. Goodwin
became excited and talked a lot about horse-racing, which did not please the
others. He said the name Persimmon time after time. Swamiji was walking
back and forth and began to make faces, saying “Persimmon” in mockery of
Goodwin. The latter, who understood Swamiji’s every mood, got down on his
knees and with folded hands pleaded, “Swamiji, whatever ridicule or teasing
has to be done, please do it to poor Goodwin. Poor Goodwin is your disciple,
your servant; but please do not say anything against the Royal Family; that is
considered very censurable in this country. Have pity on me.” Hearing his
words all were bemused. This Goodwin was supposed to be a dyed-in-the-wool
radical, and here was such unswerving devotion to the Royal Family!
At one point Swamiji and Sturdy were discussing the clergy of America.
Swamiji said, “The clergy of America only go about with plans for raising
money. Faith, devotion – these things are not in them. Just as the industrialists
of America go around making money, so is the preoccupation of their clergy.
Where Jesus showed his grand renunciation and wandered about with a single
garment taking the name of God, these priests only raise money. I gave a good
preaching to the preachers. They got miffed at me, but the rest of the people
were pleased, because on one has dared to reproach them before.”
Sturdy said: “The Christian religion has become utterly corrupted; it has
become just a military and commercial religion. Its business now is war and
commerce. Such religion will no longer stand in the world. The whole thing
must be thrown out and a new religion established. The Vedanta is the only
religion that will work.”
A gentleman came to meet Swamiji who, while talking with him, said from
time to time,” Do you not think such-and-such?” as if his matured opinion must
be Swamiji’s also. No one need do any thinking for himself, but should
expound this man’s idea and nothing else. Swamiji heard him in silence and
with a grave face. At last, after a few words the Swami dismissed him, and told
Sturdy, “This is a bad way of conversing. He uses a patronizing tone. So I did
not engage him much in talk.” Sturdy said that many have this fault.
One day a man came and told Swamiji all his most intimate affairs. Many
did this with him. It seemed to console them. They reckoned him as one of their
family and never thought, “Oh, this is a foreigner; I should not mix with him.”
Goodwin was interested in politics and always was talking about “one man,
one vote.” One day there was a knock at the door. Mohendra followed
Goodwin to the door, saw there a peasant in boots. Mohendra noticed that
Goodwin spoke with him at the door. Later he asked Goodwin why he had not
asked the man to come in, and was told, “He belongs to the laboring class.”
Then Mohendra thought of how Goodwin said everyone was equal in England.
Swami Saradananda commented that politics is in the very bones of the British.
Goodwin kept his mouth shut around Swamiji. So when the latter was out, he
made use of that opportunity to talk politics with the others. He favored
abolition of the House of Lords (but not of the Monarchy).
Swamiji’s conversations
“Do you know why your country still survives? The French were a great
race, who worked like heroes. But they had one weakness: the officers, the
ministers, could be bribed by foreigners against their own people. They
betrayed them in battle. So the French race fell. I see a thousand faults in your
people; you may be cruel and self-seeking, but you have one great quality: very
strong love for the race. There is no betrayal. This alone is what has preserved
you. If you ever lose that you will fall apart in a few days, and will revert to
being barbaric.”
The question came up of the Mogul Empire. Why did such a great empire
fall? Swamiji used to say it was conquered by its own wickedness.
When Sir Thomas Rowe went as British envoy to the court of Jehangir he
wrote that when the Mogul emperor moves from one place to another, a whole
city goes with him. Whatever classes of people live in the city, the same must
go and stay at the Badshah’s encampment. Several thousand persons go with
the camp and it lacks nothing. Even bathing facilities are a big affair. The
magnificence and majesty of the Mogul Emperor was unrivalled and was the
reality imagined by poets. Shah Jahan and Aurangzeb outdid Jehangir. The
number of soldiers became so great that it began to be unmanageable. The
soldiers began to loot the villages. This is the way oppression of the populace
developed. From all this luxury and because of the army, the cost of
government became insupportable and under pressure collapsed.
The British were becoming greedy rulers and were trying to cover a vast
empire of ever-expanding perimeter. But they are not a sufficiently vigilant and
supervising people. Often there is news of uprising. A few selfish British
ministers are bringing such a big empire under their control, incurring the
expense of more and more armed forces. “It will crumble to pieces out of sheer
weight.”
Chapter VIII
There was a discussion about the fighting between England and China.
Goodwin said that the British Empire had been established by the heroism of
the British themselves, and for this reason they would preserve it. Swamiji
showed a little annoyance and began to tell the true history. “What have the
British done in the China war or any other war? Our Indian soldiers have gone
everywhere and fought, and spilt their blood in building this empire and handed
the victory to the British. This great empire has come into being through Indian
blood and Indian money. What have you British done? Indians earned the profit
you are eating up. Who fought in Egypt? It was our soldiers. Your empire has
grown so big; wherever you have been successful, the Indian soldiers have
fought. They have poured their blood like water and their money without stint
so you have got a big empire. How many British were in the battle of Plassy?
All were our countrymen and they defeated the British. When has your race
showed courage in battle? Cowards themselves, by hypnotizing others, they
lord it over the world. Remember it – some day the British Empire will become
the Indian Empire. Just as the Romans conquered Spain, Germany, Greece etc.
and later Spaniard and Germans came and sat as Roman emperors – so will it
be with you.”
Goodwin could not take this and said, “No, Swami, your men do not know
how to fight.” Swamiji, becoming more heated, replied, “Our Indians don’t
know how to fight? When Alexander of the Greeks conquered Persia and,
swollen with pride, invaded India, who first opposed him? It was a Hindu king,
Porus, who satisfied his thirst for battle. In the battle of Arbela an Indian army
helped the Persian Emperor Darius a great deal. That is why Alexander decided
to fight with the Indians. You say our Indians don’t know fighting! From time
out of mind Indians have been famous for their prowess. But they don’t know
the treachery of the British people, that ingratitude. Don’t you know? During
the Mutiny the soldiers said, “For many days we have eaten the salt of the
British; now they are in danger, they cannot survive.” So they, through nobility,
again set up the foreign government. The Hindus have a chivalrous spirit. And
you, this race you call so great and boast of, you have taken India by swindles.
You didn’t even have a pillow under your head: you were a poor, worthless
race. You were laggers-behind in European history. The French were the
foremost. It was only by acquiring India, India’s wealth, that you grew strong.
But when the Indians shake off their delusion and wake up from inner sleep,
they will squeeze you like a lemon.”
Goodwin now insisted: “You are a great man, no doubt, but your men do not
know how to govern themselves. We, the British people, are the best men to
govern India.”
Swamiji then got more excited and told him how Chandragupta’s
Megasthenes had reported the good panchayat system, the absence of theft, the
people’s regard for truth etc., and it was no exaggeration. He also said that
wherever the British influence has not penetrated and native rule still prevails,
the people are happier and disturbance is less. The British seek only to enrich
their own land. “And still you say what you say.”
Swamiji told Goodwin that in the course of conversation a few days before,
with a General, he had said this about the British having needed India and its
wealth to raise their status, and the General himself had said that it was the
acquisition of India which gave the British expansion in all directions.
Goodwin knew little of Indian history or even ancient British; he read the
papers. So what he learned from Swamiji surprised him. Of course he protested
at pronouncements such as these, but through such arguments his faith
and sraddha in Swami Vivekananda grew more sincere.
Swamiji was in this mood for a few days. Talking with Swami Saradananda
about “Congress” [the early promoters of self-government], he said, “Why are
the Indian people raising such a fuss about this ‘Congress!, Congress?’ What
use is there in a few noisy persons gathering in a place to beat their gums? Let
them sit down, declare ‘From today we are self-governing.’ Let them send this
declaration. Then see the hue and cry. Most people don’t even know there is in
the world, a country called India. Why has America got a response throughout
the world? Is it just a matter of kicking up a fuss? One must work on without
anxiety. I want to work through due process (lawfully) and if any bullets hit the
chest, let them hit mine first of all!” he said, pacing the floor. “Let the bullets
rain on my chest; America, Europe – they will feel the shake, they will then
understand what Vivekananda is! If my blood spills there will be a world-wide
reaction. Let Congress make an outright Declaration of Independence. Sitting
and whining like old women – what will that do?” Swami Saradananda and
Mohendra heard in silence. Then he spoke of the oppression of the barbaric
Russian government, and how the Tartar tribes had given a lot of trouble, but
were now under control because of the terribly strict administration of the
Russians. He noted that the Russian lands are all together in one place. It is not
so convenient for the British in this respect, since, unlike the Russians their
territory is broken up into little pieces and they have to manage that. Swamiji
often used to say that a composite empire like this could never hold together
long.
The subject of the Mutiny came up again. Swamiji said, “The administration
by the East India Co. was very bad at first. They ignored [the British]
Parliament and everything else. This commercial company got a vast empire.
Were they out to do business or to establish rule? At first, gain was their sole
object, and their waywardness had that object. Gradually even the Indian
sepoys got annoyed. But there was no single leader for them. The Mussalmans
wanted to make the Delhi emperor strong again. The Hindus got excited and
wanted to make a government under Bajirao’s son, Nanasaheb. Other petty
princes tried to come forward to be independent. No one would listen to anyone
else. The sepoys had learned the English method of warfare but had neither
leader nor supplies. At last they began to loot for a handful of rice, even from
their own Government. Hindus and Muslims began to pillage each other. The
sepoys fell into such a condition that for obtaining provisions they had to sell
their strings of pearls. The British, getting this opportunity, armed new native
sepoys, subdued the Mutiny and conquered India again. As a result of the
mismanagement of the East India Company the administration was transferred
to Parliament. Then much more method and order came, but the humiliation
and scorn were as much, only of a different sort.
Inventiveness in America
One day in conversation Swamiji spoke about the wheels of horse carriages.
“Staying in America for several years I saw that America creates new things in
every field. And I have been around and seen many places in Europe;
everything is old and antiquated — smudgy, ugly things. In all America I saw
smart, novel things, whether in building, in shoes, in dress, shirt buttons – there
everything is clean and neat, all of a new type. I decided that in the race there is
a vigorous living power. And in England everything is of an old type. I saw the
American horse carriage wheels: thin, very fine, looking as if when you pressed
them they would break, but so strong and durable. Do you know how they do
it? [Then he describes the pressuring of the seasoned wood.] They are clean and
light. It brought delight and upliftment to the heart to see American products.
They are demonstrating the power of Man.” Swamiji became ebullient. To
Mohendra he said, “Go. Go to America. What will you get out of England?
There is a new country of new enthusiasm; seeing it your mind will expand and
a new mentality will come. No new idea comes to this old place. If one wishes
to do something in his own way he must see America. People staying in an old
country get antiquated – no new idea comes to them at all.”
He talked about food and said it was a very old custom to eat onions with
meat. In Polish “Pol” means meat, and Polish “with meat, another name for
onions. He said fried onions were indigestible and gave stomach trouble, but
boiled they were useful and cleared the bowels, hence so widely consumed.
Swamiji as a singer
Swamiji, on days when he was feeling happy, would hum Bengali songs.
Goodwin could not understand them nor did the tunes please him. One day
after breakfast Swamiji went upstairs where Goodwin, Swami Saradananda and
Mohendra were. The conversation was about Indian music and with Swami
Saradananda some talk of Indian and European music began. The gist of it was
that in India there are big singers and their methods of singing also are of
different types. Swami Saradananda tried to make this clear. Among those in
Calcutta who specialize in drupad style Swamiji knew one big one in
particular. Goodwin could not follow. Swami Saradananda easily made him
understand that Swamiji was a fine singer and was reckoned among the best in
Calcutta. Goodwin, much surprised, clapped his hands. “Why, I never knew
that!,” he exclaimed. “I knew he was a great philosopher and a great speaker
but never knew that he was a singer!” And he expressed his joy in various
gestures, so happy he was to add the least glory to Swami Vivekananda.
A Swedish or Norwegian scientist named S.A. Andree was going with some
companions up in a balloon to explore the Arctic. A lot was written of this in
the papers. When all the others were talking of it one afternoon, Swamiji was
silent. Goodwin and Sturdy were praising the people and the idea, saying it
would mean the opening of a new passage in the world, etc., but Swamiji said
nothing and seemed a bit depressed. He only said, “They will go by balloon, no
doubt, but there is no certainty that they will come back.”[This prediction had
been voiced by several experts]. Hearing this all were taken aback and the
happiness they had felt was dissipated. The fact that there is another side to
every affair was realized by all and they remained silent. As it happened,
Andree and party never returned and nothing was heard of them. [Thirty-three
years later three corpses were found on White Island along with Andree’s
diary.]
Part II
Analysis of “Duty”
On duty and love. One day in the course of his lecture Swami Vivekananda
began to speak to his audience in a new vein.
“There is in English the word duty, meaning that work which one is obliged
to do. Westerners do all their work impelled by this idea. Some powerful man,
getting a weaker one under his control through fear or hope of gain, intimidates
him. In all this work, whether such a person wants to do it or not, there is no
consideration, as a lord giving orders to his slave takes his service without
making any study of how he feels about it. “Duty expresses this idea about
work. But Indians think differently about it. Their idea is to work with love. It
is love that is the motive power of work. Sanskrit has no word corresponding to
the former idea of duty, because the Hindus never thought of it in that way.
Love means self-expansion or self-emanation. in any object or work the Self or
I is seen in unmanifest or manifested form. So for the gain of that object or that
work, the soul exerts itself. What is called in English the incentive for action, or
the desire to be impelled to work – the purpose is to get one’s own image into
the thing.
“All work is to be done through love. It is only through love that the mother
goes fearlessly to give her life to save her child in danger.
There is a bargaining mentality in “duty.” One person is doing work as if like a
corpse or inert matter. It is like a commercial proposition. The Hindus’ idea is
different. They are eager to love or to see the Atman in the object, so they try to
do all work through love, not commercial mentality. It is love that is the road to
action.
“Why am I distressed at the suffering of another?” was the subject matter to
one of Swamiji’s lectures. “European philosophers have written a lot of
different ideas about this. One section of them say, ‘This fate may be mine in
the future, so I must be ready to sympathize and try to remedy it or ward it off.’
No higher ideal than this is present. Another group says, ‘Without this mutual
aid society will fall into disorder. Fellow-feeling among neighbors will
disappear and the power to do cooperative work will dwindle.’ This is the
reason given for sympathy.” Then he began to show the profound ideas of the
Hindu sastras.
“The Hindu idea is different. It sees that within every soul and object there is
the one Brahman. It is Brahman which has manifested in a thousand forms,
covered with various veils such as objects, souls and living beings.’
All-pervadingness expounded
Another day he said, “In the whole creation there is a continuity or sequence.
I see something as a gross object but its subtle aspect is covering it. This subtle
form is encased in another, very fine form. Finally, I feel that I am different
from, or cut off from that which puts me in touch with, or joins me to, the
whole of creation up to the heavens; then fear or depression come into the
human heart. Not being able to understand, oftentimes, due to our weakness,
we become cut off (so we think) and fear is introduced. But when I see that I
exist in the gross and I am in touch with all on the subtle plane, and I am united
with all, and gradually that I extend to subtler and subtler worlds, into the
whole of sky, the firmament, the sun, outer space – then ananda enters my
heart, and courage comes. If one body is destroyed, I remain in another. The
dissolution of one body means that the molecules of one center have become
separated but they are joined up with another center.
If we can get this idea, then there is no worry about death. While one portion is
being disintegrated another portion or form is being integrated elsewhere. This
vibration or impulse extends pervading the whole creation and fashions it
accordingly. In the midst of this vibrational continuum no spot can remain
empty or void. ‘Nature abhors a vacuum.’
A few days before, Swamiji had been filled with the scientific spirit. That is
why on all these days, whatever he explained was expounded from a scientific
standpoint. We used to see that whatever mood he was absorbed in, according
to that the lecture would be; in a bhakti mood he spoke devotional things; jnana
likewise. Whatever stories he had heard in childhood from his mother or
grandmother, he would tell; sometimes he would repeat these from memory,
but the direction of application would be his own, original. Always he would
lose himself in the subject. No occasion for low-mindedness or petty anxiety
was ever to be found in him. Thinker and thought seemed to become one, and it
was difficult to say which was uppermost, so much was he one with what he
spoke.
“The universe is one undifferentiated mass of energy. If any new thing
formed outside the creation, it would not have any place in the universe.
Because the universe is all-pervading, there is no split or gap in it anywhere.”
Sometimes he spoke so far over the heads of the audience that no one could
follow. Mohendra remembers a lecture in which he said, “Every point is a
center, but nowhere is the center.” No one seemed to understand.
Once he recounted the experiment of a professor. In the pursuit of truth,
before he reached what he was after, he saw a new thing: it was as if a
completely new truth was staring him in the face. Utterly still, unmoving for a
moment, uttering prolonged sighs, the professor said, “It is all one great Void!”
Swamiji said “Ordinary people, unable to understand this Fullness describe it as
a void.”
Another day: “Hiranya-garbha: this idea was current among the Hindus
from ancient times. This entity has been revered for a long time as an aspect of
manifestation of God. Hiranyagarbha stands between the manifest and the
Unmanifest. We can comprehend the former, but the manifest does not emerge
totally from the Unmanifest. This state of transition or Point of Polarization is
call Hiranyagarbha. What the unmanifest condition is, we cannot get by using
speech or the power of thought etc., but we understand that it is. Mentation
intimates, as a glimpse, that unmanifested state. But we cannot perceive this by
cogitation. This intermediate ground is called Hiranyagarbha.”
In fact, his lectures were not something to hear or understand; they were the
concretization of ideas before one’s very eyes. He had an extraordinary power
to make explicit the series of ideas which were being given out. Swamiji and
his audience were detached from their bodies for the time being, so to speak,
and he made them see these things directly. He had acquired a great surplus of
this power; that is why he touched and seized upon the heart so much, in his
lectures.
That is why one can remember in this way what he said, even now. There is a
vast difference between hearing his lecture and reading his books.
Explaining the subject of meditation one day Swamiji said, “Everything we
see in the sense-bound world, its picture is on our conscious plane. Every
moment new ideas, my knowledge of previously known objects – all are going
from the conscious plane down to the subconscious where they stay for a long
time. They rise again to the conscious when they get a fit stimulus. When we
are drawn in toward the Inner Self, leaving the gross body for the subtle, that is
the superconscious, and when time, space and causation are left far behind,
then the idea or the perception is seen in all clarity, this is superconsciousness.
Something must be said here about the petulant moods of Swamiji. All day
and half the night he would work tirelessly. Many times he said, “The way I
work is enough to drive ten men crazy. That I am still sane even now is
miracle!” So from time to time he displayed moods of irritation. No one else
could keep pace with (or cope with) his tremendous power. Sometimes it would
be Swami Saradananda, sometimes Mohendra, sometimes Goodwin, to whom
he would give unbearably sharp scolding. As soon as he felt, for various
reasons, bodily fatigue, he would use this sort of harsh language, but a little
later, forgetting the whole thing, he would regain his normal mood. No one else
would store up that biting utterance either, but then again no one argued with
him. All those who had the good fortune to live with Swamiji were accustomed
to that. This was a special feature of his nature. For, when the power of a
mighty person meets a little obstruction an unusual pain comes over his body or
mind and he feels angry, but this abates shortly.
It is no permanent anger. It is necessary for us to know about this matter,
otherwise the portrait of Swami Vivekananda will be incomplete. This is
clearly indicated in many places in his letters. [Here Mohendra cites the letters
of St. Paul to show similar behavior.] Swamiji was not endowed with “dasya
bhava”; he was the dictator type. He always said, “My people, my country.” He
acted in the singular, not in the plural. With the anger-less calm, soft, polite
attitude of a Bengali devotee, no one can understand Swami Vivekananda.
Off to America
Soon the day for going to America drew near. Swami Saradananda packed
his things ready in a portmanteau. Swamiji gave Goodwin some pounds. The
ship was to sail from Liverpool to New York. All arrangements were made.
Swamiji said, “It would be better for Mohendra to go to a new country. This is
a very old, conservative place. Everything has a contracted air about it, old
ways are current.” Then he went away and Goodwin tried to play Swami
Vivekananda with Mohendra.
One day Goodwin put on a shirt given him by Swamiji (reaching from neck
to knees). Swami Saradananda wound a turban around Goodwin’s head.
Looking in the mirror, seeing that he was looking much like an Indian, he was
jubilant. Suddenly he remembered that as he was leaving London, he must meet
and argue with the elderly housekeeper. He loved a joke; so he went to the
basement and said to the housekeeper, “I am a jnani – a jnani, not a bhakta!” At
first she did not recognize him. After ruffling her up a bit he returned. The next
morning Swami Saradananda and Goodwin left Liverpool on their journey to
the United States. Goodwin’s mind being much drawn to jnana, his sannyasi
name was Jnanananda [No mention is made of any sannyasa ceremony.]
What Swami Saradananda later told Mohendra about the American visit is
being related here. “Well, brother, I had not studied much and had never given
a lecture, but because of Naren’s insistence I had to do it. Then again he might
get so angry he could even hit someone in front of everyone. How could I
lecture in English? Even my speaking in it is halting. I decided if it didn’t come
out right I would go right off home via Japan. But when he has said it, I would
raise my voice like the secondary singer in a singing party. Then it came to me
that Goodwin was having books printed. On the ship I took his proofs and sat
as if for examination. I began calling earnestly on Thakur and made this prayer:
whatever may happen to me, let Naren not lose face, for it is he who is sending
me and if the work goes wrong, he will be blamed.
“We reached New York duly. Goodwin took care of everything. We went to
Mrs. Ole Bull’s house in Cambridge. She was of Swedish [Norwegian]-
American descent. She gave me her book, Memoirs of Ole Bull.
Swami Saradananda’s American “debut”
Now to the twice-a-day lectures on Raja Yoga. Goodwin took them all down.
Although Swamiji had a translation of the Yoga Sutras together with brief
written commentaries, when he gave the lectures an independent commentary
and ideas of his own would come out. The sound of his voice, the look of his
face, the glance of his eyes – all were his own. Very profound, sweet,
commanding, endearing – all different from what was seen at the lecture time.
He became of such unusual appearance, no one had the capacity to look him in
the face for long. It wasn’t Bengal’s Narendranath Dutt any more. There was a
great power named Vivekananda in that body.
Let no one suppose that Swamiji had made his Raja Yoga explanations by
appropriate forethought. Anyone who assumes that idea has not known or
understood him at all; rather, he will have formed a completely false notion of
him. Swamiji at every point would say, “I never preach what I do not practice.”
It was not that he just told the people about his Brahmajnana, his experience
beyond the senses; he made them feel, in some measure, all these things, with
his teaching. Coming to hear Swamiji’s Raja Yoga lectures and sitting still for
an hour and a half in meditation were really the same thing. He would make
them realize much of what he had himself realized. It was Goodwin alone who
wrote down and kept all the instructions, but the ordinary listener would not
take special notice of Swamiji’s points. Mohendra will now report what he
remembers and just what he thinks was said. Goodwin’s [unpublished] material
has all been lost and apparently there is no hope of recovering it. Mohendra’s
account will be like a grain of sand beside the Himalayan compass of the
former, but perhaps better than nothing at all!
Recommended food
“At the time of sadhana stimulating foods should not be eaten. Rice, bread,
milk, banana and other fruits are best. It is good if one does not take meat or
fish, but fasting is not necessary. You can take bread, fruit or milk three times,
or four or five times a day. Eating little is good, not filling up. Notice what does
not cause wind in the stomach and lassitude in the body and take accordingly.
Also what keeps the mind pure. By observing this much discipline the mind
will quickly progress on the path of meditation.”
The meditation room. [First part as given in Raja Yoga.] “Always think of it
as a place for meditation. Keep it pure by means of a few flowers, fruits,
incense etc. Let its air be fresh and the mind will concentrate automatically.
Keeping in the room some pictures of perfected souls or some symbolic figures
too is good, because all these accessory things bring an attitude ofsraddha into
the mind.
“Asana. When you keep to one seat and make japa there with concentrated
mind for some time, some of the japa’s power lies hidden in that
habitual asana and it will rise and help you on a day when the mind is restless
or lazy, so always keep it pure.”
As an example of the holiness clinging to special places, he mentioned that a
certain person had entered a secluded mountain cave and sat doing japa for
many days until he gave up his body. No one knew his name, place of origin or
anything about him. But if any advanced sadhaka now goes into that cave, he
will know as soon as he enters it that it is a holy place. And he will declare that
a perfected soul had lived there, because the power left there reveals itself to
the newcomer.
Japa. “Unceasingly one should make japa of some pure word or the name of
a perfected soul. At first it will be with the tongue, or gross body, but as it goes
on uninterruptedly, the japa becomes inward and springs up inside the body.
Then it goes from the tongue to mind, and gradually all the subtle nerves of the
body pick up the japa. As one goes on doing this, a certain power arises from
inside; then the gross body becomes different, and does not seem so heavy,
inert or indolent.
The dejected and impure moods which we feel in our ordinary state do not
come any more. Then the body feels quite light and gay; there is enthusiasm
and difficult matters seem easy to understand. Swamiji said: “I have done
continuous japa; it is in every atom of my body. I have done it to the very tips
of my fingers. As we now experience the objects of the world in our gross
body, when we go to the subtle body, all this is experienced in another way and
that is full of joy (ananda) and affection.”
Good effects of continual japa
Swamiji said, “By doing perpetual japa the mind takes a higher direction. On
going to a certain plane, the mind becomes very dispirited, and as if not being
able to see or do anything more, as if empty and vapid, as if there is not longer
any capacity for japa or meditation. This is called a point of polarization. Many
get frightened at this point. But either by faith or grace or some other means if
one can go beyond this, again one goes on into a higher groove. In this state,
phenomenon becomes noumenon, in other words, the visible universe vanishes
and the supersensuous appears. Whether through one’s own strength or through
the grace of an illumined soul or by all means taken together, this barrier must
be crossed.
“By continually doing japa and meditation, when the mind goes beyond even
the subtle body, from within the hidden power or latent energy wakes up; this is
called ojas. When it goes downward, offspring are produced, but when directed
upwards the mind proceeds toward Brahman. When it goes in different
directions to different organs, various activities result. If it goes to the eyes, the
aspirant gets clairvoyance; to the ears, clairaudience, to the nose, smelling at a
distance, and if, going up into the head, it reaches thesahasrara, there is
samadhi. This ojas finds various modes of expression through the sushumna. In
one whose eyes are naturally strong, the ojas first tries to find expression
through the eyes; then through the nose, ears and other organs. In one who is
‘ear-minded,’ ojas gets expression there and so on. It is not by taking a lot of
food that ojas is increased: otherwise those who can eat the most would have
the most, which is far from the case. They do not depend on so much food;
food is helpful only to a small degree. Ojasis an independent thing; it arises
from within the sushumna through uninterrupted japa or other similar activity.
The difference in this ojas is what make the difference in speakers.”
On the day of this lecture on ojas the discourse became most profound.
Everyone felt an upliftment of heart and the banishment of weak thoughts by
new strength.
Pranayama. “It means controlling one’s vital force. Many think it means just
breathing exercises, but actually it is not; that is only a small part of it. The
whole world is constructed of two things: one is called akasa. It is not the void
we see above us, but is that in the void which is real. What is ordinarily seen is
not the akasa. When the mind of a yogi stays in thecittakasa or mind-space, he
discerns another person’s mental content or a supernatural order. But when it
goes to the cidakasa, then the experience is contentless, the Self shines in its
own glory. This akasa is one all-pervading existence. It is so subtle that it is
beyond ordinary experience. When this becomes transformed into some shape,
it comes into our ken. It is in thisakasa that the creation remains at first, and
into it again that it finds dissolution.” Here Swamiji discussed and compared
many philosophical views.
“Akasa through the power of prana, becomes the universe. As akasa is the
all-pervading substratum of the whole world, so prana is the all-pervading
developing power of the universe’s origin. Everything becomes changed
to akasa at the beginning and end of the kalpa, and all the forces get merged in
prana, and from it again all power becomes manifest. If one becomes adept
in pranayama the door to infinite power is opened.
Pranayama is a process of knowing and understanding the true nature of this
force (which controls breath etc.) The word prana applies to the senses, mind
and all. It is the name of the one Power. Those perfected inpranayama are able
to accomplish “supernatural” deeds. These are not miracles; everything is a
miracle to the ignorant.
“By rhythmical breathing the body can be kept well. From olden times the
soldiers used to stand in an open area, keep the spine straight, and march etc.
according to a rule; so they were healthier and stronger than ordinary men.
Yogis can throw off disease if they so wish.
I have taken medicine by the carload, but have had no special benefit from that.
At last, when I firmly put disease out of my mind, from that moment I became
healthy. The yogi, if he likes, can by touch or glance control illness or even
banish it.” (Here it is necessary to remark that Swamiji cured the malarial fever
of one-and-a-half-years’ standing, of the writer, by his sheer will. He and
Swami Saradananda were on the fourth floor of the house, and Swamiji, from
the first floor projected his power and cured Mohendra.)
“The way we breathe ordinarily is quite uncontrolled. Then too, there is a
natural difference between men’s and women’s breathing. So it is necessary to
regulate breath because that will keep the whole body well.
If one practices pranayama sadhana for a few days, one will quite clearly
understand that the voice has become affectionate, sweet and melodious. I have
never seen a yogi with a croaking voice. Even in ripe old age flesh of the face
may be wrinkled but it is firm as a child’s. All the lines of the face which show
dryness or harshness disappear and the color brightens. The mind becomes
filled with peace. This peaceful mood and happiness of eye, face and body are
clearly visible outwardly. After practicing for some time one gets this
appearance. But it must be borne in mind that all this depends on the sadhana.”
The ladies of the audience hearing all this were quite happy and began to think
that all other parts of Raja Yoga were less important than pranayama.
Pratyahara and dharana were taken up [There is nothing in this particular
section not in the book Raja Yoga].
“To control the mind requires a special sadhana. Those who can control their
own minds can control others’ also. They can awaken in others their own innate
enthusiasm or inspiration. I have made the minds of many controlled, and had
the fruit thereof. I have not, however, had the opportunity to go to the zoo and
control the mind of the fierce lion or tiger, so I cannot demonstrate that; but
because it has not been possible to control the lion or tiger’s mind, is no reason
to disbelieve.”
Self-identification. Swamiji said one day that if we are to know the inner
aspect of anything, we must merge with it; that is, it must be gradually entered
into by being meditated upon. It is by our going into it and staying fixed there
that everything inside it is clearly known. Take a scientist who exposes all the
qualities of a substance. Does he describe its insides by looking at it from the
outside? Or is he depending on something else? By continuous thought about
the object to be known, about its unknown essence, he is becoming
unconscious of his body. The he becomes unconscious of the house, room,
door, his equipment etc. – so much so that he loses consciousness even of his
own body. Here he has become one with the object, or all-pervading. If he
remains in this condition for some time, all the unknown and unrevealed
aspects of the thing are reflected in thecittakasa and its inner secret qualities
shine forth. Now the telescope and other instruments have come, so the various
aspects of the sun, moon etc. can be readily understood, but in very ancient
days the yogis by recourse to self-identification learned many fact about the
planets etc. which are proven true even today. It used to be that many poured
abuse on all the pronouncements of the yogis, but now in the discovery of new
truths by science, many words of the yogis are being respected.
“Perfected yogis can, if they wish, let go of the gross body and going into the
subtle or causal body take up the gross body again somewhere else. He gave
the example of Sankara, who was going to a certain place with some of his
disciples. They had to go rather quickly because there was a big hill on the way
which they would have to go around, causing a big delay. TheAcarya asked his
disciples whether they should go around the hill or cleave it and go through.
They could not grasp the meaning of his question, so were thinking they would
go around. Sankara told them to do so, while he himself separated from his
gross body and transformed the subtle. Then in his subtle body he went through
the hill, and, arriving on the other side took up the gross body once again.
When the disciples arrived they were all astonished and began to question
him.”
Raja Yoga is the one sastra which harmonizes and explains all the marvels
written in the scriptures and all the experiences of the seers of God and
substantiates and explains their claims.
When the ojas of kundalini remains at a particular lotus or center, the
aspirant sees the superimposition on the mind-space appropriate to that center.
As an uncivilized barbarian cannibal sees that a horrific majestic idol is
standing before him and in accordance with the nature of the view is
commanding him to perform fierce deeds, to eat human flesh or some such
horrible thing. But in another, more civilized country, where the sadhaka has
his kundalini in another center, there will be a different kind of
superimposition. Some will see a very peaceful image, some a compassionate
one, etc. The superimposition for the aspirants of this country will be different
due to their natural surroundings and climate. That of the American Indians
will differ from that of the Vikings.
“The prophet Mohammed saw the messenger of God standing before him
and telling him many things. Later he related all of that to his circle of
followers. There is no doubt that Mohammed clearly saw the angel of God and
believed him in all simplicity. According to his superimposition (or projection)
he saw and heard correctly. Amongst all such disembodied messages there is
no doubt about those that are elevated and true, but it took place in accordance
with Mohammed’s level of projection.”
But Question and Answer period often brought out new and profound ideas
not found in the lectures. Swamiji often used to say, “I learned all this from him
at whose feet I sat; all this I saw in him and heard from his lips. I am not nearly
so qualified as he.” With a very little bit of humble speech he expressed the
tremendous faith and devotion he had for Sri Ramakrishna. Hearing his words
everyone could clearly understand and could realize that if Swami Vivekananda
was a great soul of such caliber, of what stature must have been his guru, Sri
Ramakrishna! In America and in London Swamiji was a different person—he
had a different mood: India has not witnessed that great power. India saw
Narendranath Dutta and the Western world saw the powerful Swami
Vivekananda. Maybe India could not bear that power, so he did not manifest it
there. He showed the kind of power he had to show in order to establish his
position with respect to the world-conquering English race. It used to be
thought that the English were thepeople—so wealthy, so respectable, learned
and with the right to make use of other races’ brains and at the same time be
indifferent to them. Everyone would stand before them like obedient devotees.
He showed this power in the Western world but when he returned to India he
shucked it off and became again Naren Dutta.
Sri Ramakrishna
Swamiji said, “That great soul, sitting at whose feet I learned my knowledge,
used to see the Divine Mother. He would see that She was standing before him,
telling him all truths. All those were exalted ideas, fraught with profound
meaning. How had he been able to see this? His ojashad reached a high level
and he had the vision of the Divine Mother. She talked with him in various
forms, and he would listen. New ideas and new truths were revealed to him.
This condition is not the fruit of any special reading or study; the awakening of
the ojas is the only means. So, even though this great soul was unlettered he
was preeminent in the world of thought. This is called projection (adhyasa).
Lord Buddha: “Buddha said, ‘Whatever truth I have seen and do see I
fearlessly give out to all. Even if all the world stands up and contradicts me, I
will not be disturbed in the least. I have seen the truth and all this truth will
remain. All the truths I have told you will be as Veda to you.’ What Buddha
taught was great truth but he spoke of things as he saw them.
“The Vedic rishis, making hard tapasya awakened the kundalini power.
They too discovered many truths. Each truth was correct, but each sage saw or
heard the disembodied message in accordance with his own superimposition.
These they fearlessly declared. In one story it is said that a certain sage learned
his brahmajnana from a river. A river doesn’t say anything: it is a mass of
flowing water; so how did he learn from a river? When the mind got into a high
state this sage learned as it were from the river, from external nature he heard
the divine message. This is called the ‘reflexive mind’ [Written in English].
Another story tells of a sage learning from the fire. How? He
performedhoma with a concentrated mind. Raising his mind to a high state he
heard the truth and it seemed to come from the fire. So the homa fire is
calledJataveda. In another story he sage grazes his cows for many years, all the
time making japa. Finally the culmination of his austerity arrived. One day
while he was driving the cows, he entered a deep forest and was thinking
especially deeply when a cow, pleased with him, gave him brahmajnanaand all
this divine message as a highest truth. The sage saw in the cow his own
projection. Now different explanations cannot be given in the various stories of
sages; Raja Yoga is the only means by which all these different ideas can be
reconciled, the different views being seen as expression of the various
projections of the persons seeing.
Similarly, Moses. Burning bushes do not speak, but that is no reason to deny
Moses’ vision. Science usually scorns all these happenings as the ravings of a
lunatic and brushes them off. But it is not proper nor useful to treat any
philosophical or metaphysical matter in this way. It is the business of the
philosophy treatises to ascertain what kind of truth is in each thing. What
science calls derangement of the brain Raja Yoga gives meaning to, and
explains as superimposition?
The discovery of Truth
“Many people say that such and such a person has discovered a truth. Is truth
sitting in the corner of a room someplace, waiting for someone to come along
hunting and find it? Although many truths have been discovered, many remain
yet unknown. Compared to the truth that has been discovered, much more
remains yet to be manifested. If anyone says that he has discovered the whole
truth about anything, it will be a big lie. Truth is infinite. Each person in each
new age discovers new truth according to his projection; so long as man lives in
this world, so long new truths will be revealed. Truth is no one’s monopoly.
Only fools, fanatics, say that they have discovered the full truth. These do a lot
of harm to the world.”
Swami Vivekananda’s own vision. All the truths Swamiji spoke of he had
seen, either in vision or in sleep. He said many times, “I do not know anything.
I don’t think out anything. I don’t keep notes for my lectures, not do I think
before hand what is to be said in the lecture. When I arrive I collect and pacify
the mind for a few moments and then I see all the ideas clearly standing before
me. All these living thoughts I try to bring out, mumbling something or other. I
don’t understand at all what I say. When all these thoughts do not take shape
before my eyes I cannot speak a word; only when I see clearly do I begin to
speak. Mohendra often noticed this transformation of mood and heard Swamiji
say that just as men have form and color, so do ideas.
The discussion of “vision” went on for several days. Mohendra has given
only a brief account of it here. Swamiji seems to have given many very deep
ideas on this subject. The audience was awestruck and heard many truths new
to them. People were dumbfounded to learn that among religious and
philosophical truths there were such different views, that even among persons
of revelation and inspiration there could be different levels of these, and that a
book of sutras could be written that harmonized all these [referring to
Patanjali’s].
For the common man, this great truth had been declared for the first time
outside of India, in the American and Western world. Buddhist monks of old
had preached it after a fashion in foreign lands, but no one knew it very
accurately and we have no record of it, but in this age Swamiji has done this. It
is difficult to describe the splendor and brilliance of his face, eyes and voice at
this time. The power which he had expressed standing fearlessly before the
choicest religious audience (Chicago Parliament) was coming out again. He
had not stood before them with bowed head and folded palms, but as an equal
among equals. So his lecture was of such a high quality.
This lecture subject went on for four days, i.e. eight sessions.
Such was the level of Swamiji’s talks on “Vision” that his fame with the
public increased and brought many new persons to hear him.
One evening at the lecture there was a (military) pensioner who had served in
Bengal. He was elderly and thin. Because of having lived for a time in a hot
country his skin, instead of being the usual English white, was dark. The lecture
began. Swamiji was standing in his place. Goodwin had his paper on the sofa
near the far corner of the room. Swamiji started slowly. Hardly had he spoken
for five minutes when the India-returned Englishman said very disrespectfully,
in a loud tone, “Oh, thank you!” at almost a shout. Everyone was annoyed, but
still no one expressed anger openly. Many now regarded Swamiji as one of the
great souls like Jesus or Paul, and had profound love and respect for him. To be
frank, they called him a perfected guru. So naturally they became irritated and
began to make a stir. Pursuing his speech Swamiji said that the Christian
religion had now become warlike, but that in Buddhism there was still the idea
of compassion. In China at the present time, because of Buddhism, 400,000,000
people get a little food. Wherever Buddhism is still strong, war and military
technology is played down. But where Christianity is current many go hungry
and they always keep ready for battle. Jesus himself was a most compassionate
man; Christianity had become a military religion.”
This man, sitting near the fireplace said, “Sir Monier-Williams has written in
a book that Buddha was a very selfish and cruel man, as he ran off from his
wife and child. He was an atheist who didn’t believe in God. His teaching could
not be called a religion. Buddha merely made a set of social and ethical rules; it
is not an ’atheistic religion’. And Jesus’ religion is the only one: it alone has
faith in God and words of welfare for man.” The man evidently read Sir
Monier-williams’ books and when living in India read nothing about Hinduism
or Buddhism. Swamiji. without giving any rejoinder to his words began to
relate in many ways the compassion of Lord Buddha and said that even to this
day in India there are such noble sadhus.
“No,” said the man, “I know the sadhus are thieves. They are all robbers.
When the sadhus would go into any town or village I would see the police
follow them. I even used to see them chase them out of the village. Thieves and
loafers put on the gerrua, and they are what are called sadhus.” Sturdy was
sitting in back of the sofa. He got up and came quickly to the middle of the
room.
“When I lived in India I saw many fine sadhus, men of the highest level of
Swamiji here. I made particular investigations into this matter and talked a lot
with them and watched them.” He said this in a rather loud voice and with
some heat.
Previously this Englishman had thought that Swami Vivekananda was a
Madrasi because in Bowbazaar in Calcutta there lived many Madrasis with
long names ending in “swamy.” But when he heard Swamiji and saw his
mannerisms, he recognized him as a Bengali. Then he puffed out his chest and
in patronizing tones said, “I thought you were a Madrasi; now I see you are a
Bengali Babu. You know that during the Mutiny we saved you.”
Sturdy, who had been sitting at ease but was now standing in the middle of the
room like a madman, shouted. “But you were well paid for it.” Shaking all
over, he angrily seized the man by the neck and began to push him outside.
Goodwin had been writing there in his chair and occasionally looking angrily at
the man. Now he could stand it no longer, dropped his pen, rolled up his
sleeves and prepared to come to blows. Swamiji had even them been going on
smoothly with his speech, so Goodwin, out of regard for that, had been waiting
for him to stop speaking.
The audience was upset, turning one way to look at Sturdy, the other to look
at Goodwin. Fox had indistinct speech and was not so prompt; he was saying
something unintelligible from his seat. Swami Saradananda and Mohendra
were Indians, cowed by this uproar in a foreign country and both began
shivering. Then Swami Vivekananda, abandoning his natural peaceful
demeanor, assumed an altogether different and threatening one. Turning to the
right and facing the man by the fireplace, he poured fire for nearly thirty-five
minutes without let.
He began to recite the history of the English race from Hengist and Horsa to the
present day, and how their behavior had been oppressive and rude wherever
they had gone. He told the ubiquitous story of the English race, full of
reproach, and said the world had given scarcely any impeachment to them on
the evidence of this history. That day he showed what a surprising knowledge
he had of these events of history, in proper sequence, and astounded all with his
facility. Then that Englishman, downfaced like this in front of everyone, took
out his handkerchief and began to weep and blow his nose. He consumed three
handkerchiefs in the process. Then he was all undone and sat like a block of
wood. Swamiji, after thirty-five minutes again faced the audience and in an
affectionate tone of voice resumed his lecture.
The Duchess of Albany. Many people had come to the morning lecture,
among them some élite ladies. A lot of carriages were at the door and a great
deal of bustle going on. Mohendra and Swami Saradananda were sitting at their
post on the upper interior staircase. The nurse (aforementioned) was sitting on
the balcony, writing down the lecture. It was very moving and everyone was
listening intently. When it was over everyone gradually came downstairs.
Swami Saradananda and Mohendra came down to the balcony. In the lecture
hall there was a lot side-glancing. whispering and nudging going on among the
ladies. It was all about one particular lady. When she had left they heard, “It is
the Duchess of Albany”. Then it was learned that she had come incognito and
secretly, to hear Swamiji’s lecture: earlier her lady-in-waiting had come to hear
them and had told her all about it. For ladies of the Palace it was forbidden to
go elsewhere without Queen Victoria’s permission. The Duchess of Albany
was the wife of the Queen’s fourth son, so she had to come incognito.
At this point it should be said that in his lectures Swamiji would raise one
topic and the speak on various subjects and from different texts, so it is
impossible to remember on which day he spoke on what. Only this can be said,
that he discussed these matters in Raja Yoga in the upper room. Probably the
audience did not remember it either, because it was his specialty that he would
carry them into a realm beyond words.
Previous birth
“Our minds are always out-going. The path of the movement of energy too,
is from inside to outside. It is the natural propensity of the mind to wish to seize
upon something new, and so it runs in this direction. That is why people are
always making new discoveries. But there is another direction for the mind,
which is inward, turning the mind back upon itself. Most people do not
remember their actions of long ago. If you ask most people what they did three
or four days ago, with whom they spoke etc., usually they cannot say. All this
bundle of actions does not arise in their memories; perhaps with a little mental
effort they may be able to recall a little. But there is a practice by which all past
events can be very much awakened. At first we have to think hard, when we
did what; gradually we are able to walk backward and reawaken these
memories. At first it is very troublesome and exasperating, but after a while, by
practicing this the mind becomes firm. By thinking into the past like this,
finally we can catch the memory of our childhood. Whom we played with,
whose house we visited, who were those who loved us etc. – all must be
minutely awakened. After that, the mental power becomes fixed in one place; it
cannot waver from looking back, as it were. If anyone can go beyond this limit,
one can reach even the knowledge of one’s previous lives. All these things are
written in the books, and I can tell you that I firmly believe them. From what I
have done myself and so far back as I have been able to go, all this appears to
me to be true.” That day he quoted freely from various books about the above
subjects.
“When we first try to control the mind, many sorts of thoughts arise. At first
it is best to let them run. Whatever energy we have, then this has to run down a
bit and they will subside of themselves. After that, the body begins to itch as if
something were crawling around on it. Sometimes it is like ants tickling. These
are all phenomena of the beginning stage. Later the back of the head heats up
and a pain may be felt. If this happens it is good to stop meditation for awhile.
No special gain is made by forcing; on the contrary, it may be counter-
productive and weaken the body. Or we may feel, in the backbone, that
someone is pricking us with a sharp needle. In that case too, stop meditating,
because if all the nerves get a little rest, they will again become strong and the
power to meditate will return. In this state it is necessary to urinate frequently;
it is not a symptom of illness, rather it has an improving effect on the health.
Sometimes when the mind is raised up from the ordinary state, many changes
take place in the body.
In the Christian religion there is an idea that a time will come when
everybody will be pure, noble and filled with holy thoughts. All will be saints,
suffering, poverty, wickedness and crime, will vanish, heaven will descend on
earth and earth will be heaven. Swamiji, referring to this, called it an
impossibility. It was fine to hear, but unfeasible and a contradiction in terms.
As we go on meditating, when the mind gets steadied and the body-
consciousness is minimized, i.e. when even the remembrance of body, place,
time, country and causation is not there, and the mind rises to the Great Void,
then the object of contemplation is reflected in its cidakasa. But devoid of
substratum (or receptacle) the mind cannot remain long in the Great Void: that
is why a support is needed. The first impression of truth comes in the form of
pictures. In the Great Void or cidakasa, numerous forms suddenly appear like
pictures. But the movements of these in relation to each other express quite new
ideas. We can express through speech a little bit, but all the living ideas which
are beyond speech, and which speech is attempting to indicate, then become
clearly evident. There is no fear in all these visions; gradually this seeing of
pictures will get expanded in various ways and become uplifted to higher
realms.”
“Sadhus and yogis in the early stages see everything as external, and try to get
their instruction and their blessings from outside. I roamed about the whole of
India, my forehead swollen from being banged against the floor through
prostrating. At the time, a little peace would come, no doubt, but shortly it
would all go away and I would become very depressed. Nothing happened nor
was there any hope. Finally I got disgusted and so dejected that I gave up all
external practices, all bhakti. Then I decided that as I had got nothing from
outside after so much search, let me see if I can get it from inside. I would
renounce everything, even give up the body. There was no necessity for a life
spent in vain. And I began to search inside. I extinguished the external world
completely; in the interior world I saw something tremendous! There the
external seemed a mere trifle. Little by little, doubt began to lessen, and my
dejection abated and I began to have Self-realization. Then a strength and
courage came into my heart. The inner vision is far superior to the outer. A
natural dignity (or manliness) comes from the vision of the Self. Ordinary
heroism is clumsy person’s heroism: it lasts but a little while – in a moment a
person can become crestfallen and cowardly. But the manliness of those who
have seen the Self is full of fire, enduring and incontrovertible. It is not the
build or strength of the body that gives mental power. That comes from the
vision of the Atman.”
Self manifestation the basis of everything. “Self-knowledge or Self-
realization and each object as the manifestation of Brahman – when one acquire
this Knowledge one becomes free. One can no longer be much impressed with
external glamour. In my days as a wandering monk, because of the uncertainty
over food and rest, the body was always out-of-sorts and ill. I took many
medicines but got no result. Finally, exasperated, I altogether gave up resorting
to medicine and tried to arouse whatever was already within me. Then strength
came to the mind. I banished all bodily illness, then the body became all right.
If the Atman within awakes, one’s body becomes changed. From that time my
health has been quite good. Sometimes I catch a bit of cold, but then I don’t
have to take much medicine. Self-manifestation is the main thing.
“Even if yogis drink intoxicants, they get no special effect from them. When
a yogi reaches an advanced state the body changes. The way the action of
liquor affects the ordinary person is not seen in the advanced yogi. Wine is no
different from water; one will notice no difference. The scriptures even say that
if poison is administered to the perfect yogi, nothing will happen, because when
the mind has risen, no action on the lower level is effective.”
Swamiji said that he knew of the case of a certain person. Though one of his
limbs was burned, in the state of samadhi he felt nothing. Though others got the
odor of burning flesh, he, dwelling in the state of samadhi, did not move the
rest of his body nor feel pain in the member. But when his mind came down
again to a lower level and joined itself to the gross state, he began to feel the
pain of having been burned. When the mind unites one part of the body with
another it experiences its sensations. But when it rises, the gross body’s
sensations cannot disturb the subtle body.
“When we first meditate we get some joy and the mind moves ahead by
degrees. But a state comes when the mind becomes paralyzed, and there is no
energy left in it. It seems to be dull. At this time, one must try to invoke grace,
blessing, and bhakti. Crossing over this state by such means, you will again be
able to meditate.
“When, after meditating, there comes real absorption, i.e., the sadhaka
becomes free of body-consciousness or clings only to the subtle body, letting
go of the gross (in this condition the whole external world gets merged and
only space or void remains), then from inside oneself a question must come up;
turning over this question for some days, one provides the answer oneself.
Self-projection
“A devotee sat on a very high mountain in a hut, repeating the Lord’s name,
and spent his days living on whatever food came to hand. One day a miracle-
working yogi came and stood before him. ‘What are you doing sitting on this
peak?,’ he asked brusquely.
The devotee replied, “I am sitting still and repeating the name of the Lord;
what else?’
‘I’d like to show you my power,’ said the other. ‘Look, see what I can do.’
And waving his hand in the air he said, ‘Let a storm come.’ At once from all
sides clouds came and heavy rain began to fall. Many trees and shrubs were
uprooted. Among the travelers coming up the side of the mountain, some were
swept away. Sheep and goats also died as if themahapralaya had come.
“Then the yogi said, ‘Shall I show you another power? Storm, abate.
Sunshine come; sky, be clear.’ At his word all the storm clouds departed and
very clear sunshine prevailed. Seeing all the destruction thereabouts, the
devotee said,
‘These powers of yours have done much mischief. Through the taking of so
many lives, how much misery you have brought! And all for the sake of
expressing your own egotism! You have got this power, but have you got God-
vision, brahmajnana? You began your tapasya with the idea of getting God-
vision one way or another; now, stopping in mid-journey you have lost that
ideal and taken a side path. This is no glory to you: it is your obstacle. Nor are
you the sadhaka you were. You have fallen to a lower level. Give up totally
this power; then you can approach Brahman.’
The yogi was ashamed on hearing this and, understanding his error, took refuge
with this devotee and stayed with him for the rest of his life in the pursuit and
contemplation of God.”
If one does japa and meditation there comes a covering over the body. If
these are done for some time, a transformation in the cells of the body begins,
and the old molecules are changed for new ones. The body gets changed a bit.
The body of a (accomplished) yogi is made of different material from that of an
ordinary person. The vibrations and projection of the atoms are from our
natural propensity; the mind creates this body. The yogi’s body is of a shining
cast, the voice is sweet and his glance affectionate and full of attraction, and his
appearance peaceful and calm. Then, when the yogi attains a high condition,
from his limbs a magnetic power or luster is given off. When this luster comes
close to the low-minded it gives them a kind of terror or apprehension. If he sits
near wicked people, there come into his mind panic or restlessness, as if from
inside that person something really horrid is issuing. But if a perfected yogi
comes near him, an affectionate, joyful, peaceful feeling issues of itself. If he
wishes, the perfect yogi can spread out this covering or aura to a great distance.
“There was a guileless little boy who went into the forest to do austerity for
realizing God. He did not know any rules or regulations. But he called on God
with a pure heart and simple faith. Various dangers arose: tigers, bears and
other wild animals came, but not a one injured him; each went its own way.
Now, tigers, bears etc. are all dangerous animals; they molest people and
devour human flesh; but why did nothing approach Dhruva? If I think about
harming another – if from within me injurious vibrations arise, those vibrations
will surround me and whoever comes into that area will feel thought of injury
arising in him and ultimately these will come back on me as cruelty. But if I
rejoice in the welfare of all and distribute thoughts full of peace, those too will
go out and whoever comes within the radius of that will feel peaceful inside for
the time being. I have seen something of this matter myself, and as for the rest,
I have full faith in it. Wild animals are certainly affected by it. After all, they
also have babies, they too at one stage wandered about with their mothers.
‘Wild’ means that for the first moments there was no cruelty; they are at the
same time both wild and tame. From the episode of Dhruva we may realize that
vibrations of affection flow out from the body of a yogi. This is not the only
such example; there are many such stories.”
“In many books the story is told that a yogi practicing spiritual exercises
achieved a high degree of advancement when suddenly his mind became upset
and a divine nymph came and began to seduce him. This idea is current in
many lands and in various forms. Why? Mind can go very high through
austerity. Reaching that, one gets quite a bit of joy and feels secure, but inside,
hidden and unknown desires remain which can rise up forcefully.
When tapasya has been done for some time, all the nerves become subtle. They
are easily touched off by slight vibration. So when old desires or memories get
wakened a little, they assume very vivid forms and stand before us. No nymph
comes from outside; these are projections from within the aspirants themselves.
Taking form in the causal space, they become reflected as a suggestion in the
mind. In accordance with the previous life of each aspirant, in accordance with
one’s social milieu, this reflected picture stands before one. So no two people
have the vision of the ‘nymph’ in just the same way. Mara attacked Buddha in
one way, Jesus’ temptation was different, but all these come up from inside.”
Then Swamiji said, “When one reaches a very high state one has to give up
the desires altogether – to ‘fry the seeds of desire’ [written in English], in the
language of the yogi. If the seeds remain, they will sprout; but if they are
thoroughly fried, they cannot sprout any more. On the part of an advanced yogi
this is especially important. For this whole universe has come into being
through desire, and it is in desire, also, that a person becomes bound. Desire is
the creator of the universe.”
On the domestic scene
Swamiji expressed to Miss Muller his desire to learn French; she knew
English, French and German. He told her that if he traveled in the various part
of Europe and wanted to talk with society people, a knowledge of the French
language was mandatory. He would often talk with educated travelers from
foreign countries. And the surprising thing is that he was able to study and get
some accomplishment in it. He told Mohendra to study it too, but the latter was
not willing.
Miss Muller was much annoyed with the old housekeeper. She always
complained about her cooking. After some days she brought a new servant and
told everyone, “This cook is a very good one, one cannot find a better cook
than this.” There was no end to the praise. Everyone kept quiet; no one
ventured to say anything. She then volunteered: “She can cook wonderful rice.”
At this, Sturdy asked, “How does she cook it?” Miss Muller replied With
glee, “Why she puts the pot of water on the fire until it comes to a full boil;
then ties up the rice in a cloth and puts it in, and when it is boiled takes out the
bundle and drains it, and such beautiful rice is there.” When the two Indians
listening heard this astonishing method of preparing rice, they suppressed their
laughter with the greatest difficulty. Mentally they were saying, “Thank you,
dear cook, for your bundle-cooked rice!” No one dared say anything for fear of
a row.
One day Swamiji was in an expansive mood, walking to and fro in the house,
sometimes smoking, sometimes sitting briefly in his own chair. He began to
speak. “How robust are the British women! On the street, in the lane,
everywhere, how like men they work and walk. Their muscles, too, are very
hard. They are the symbol (or model), as it were, of the good health of the race.
That is why so many children are born in this country who are also strong and
virile. They don’t marry before the age of twenty-five or thirty. They take
special care to keep the body healthy. So even the girls are strong and virile.
And all those parents who are thin and sickly, their children too are the same,
lank and effete. None are married until their bodies are built up. The Indian
race must be made very strong. Because it has not been so, its children are
weak and always full of despair. It is essential to make that race self-confident
like the British. The Hindu race is dying from this hopeless attitude. Filled with
faith they will be able to accomplish much in the world.” Swamiji animatedly
said such things. His pronouncements had become serious, anxious and
reflective, for that is how he spoke when he was under some mental distress.
One day Swamiji said, “How energetic the American women are! They are
not women at all, they are men! They go to the market, buy things, keep the
account, go to the bank and make change, climb up on a bus, drive, go here, run
there……What astonishing energy! They defeat the men! There is not the least
femininity in them: they are like men. And these discreet English women are
homely and fat. If they have some work to do and have to go out alone, they die
of fear. They are not so smart and clever as the American women—nor so
courageous. Compared to (the Americans) the British women seem about fifty
years behind. They are antiquated, as it were, following old customs. And in
the new American republic both men and women earn money. That is why they
are so vivacious. An enthusiasm comes in the women’s minds and a strength to
their hearts. They haven’t a trace of womanish thick-headedness.” Everyone
heard him in silence.
Swamiji could, when he felt like it, or when necessary, remain in such
serious and absorbed mood that no one dared to go near him. But again, when
in his natural frame of mind, he would make all sorts of fun with everybody.
One morning he was sitting in his usual chair while Sturdy sat in a chair not far
away looking out the window into the street. Then with Sturdy he began such a
farcical sotto voce confab that the latter bent his head over (lit., “in shame”) and
began suppressed laughter. But Swamiji, holding nothing back, carried on
without let for some time. From this it can clearly be understood what intimate
association Swamiji used to have with people; as a result, no one took offense
at his words or actions. He was such a simple man that he would not hesitate in
the least to express himself. But he could not keep back anything, in his mind,
for long.
It was summertime. Even the breeze felt a bit hot. Mohendra came down at
about 3:30 one afternoon and found Swamiji sitting in a chair. Seeing him
Swamiji said, “Some black grapes have been kept in the glass dish. Eat, eat
plenty. Grapes purify the blood.” He got up and gave Mohendra grapes from
the bowl. “Take, take and eat; it will purify your blood.” That day he was very
expansive.
One afternoon at four o’clock Goodwin came and informed Mohendra that
Swamiji wanted to see him. Mohendra was just coming back from a trip out
and was ready to go and wash his face; but getting a summons from Swamiji he
quickly went to him without delay. At that moment Swamiji was in
conversation with four or five visitors. Of course the talk had been in English.
When the formalities were over, Swamiji, noticing that Mohendra had no tie
and collar, and his hair was not properly brushed, said [in Bengali?] “You
shouldn’t come into the room in such a condition. Don’t use a collar for a
whole week; change it twice a week. Using a dirty collar looks very bad. And
always keep your hair neat and clean; your coat, vest and everything too.
Gentlemanly behavior and appearance is of the first importance. Otherwise you
will be despised.” Swamiji looked closely into everything and particularly
noticed correctness of behavior and dress.
Swamiji said one day, “The Americans don’t eat much, but how much they
take! They will eat one or tow spoonfuls and throw the rest away.
And they eat such a variety! As the people eat, so are they able to work and
earn. That is why they live so long and keep well. But how can the Indians live
on so little food? On a half or a quarter of stomach full? They have no
enthusiasm or perseverance, always depressed and despairing. What little they
can do in the world does not occur to them. They have forgotten what strength
still remains in them. They see only death ahead, and sit spineless. They have
no power to make anything new. To what a frightful state the race has fallen!
Will it not die out at last? Often I sit and think of this. And I think about this
question of the Americans. Between the two races, what a difference of heaven
and hell! One says, ‘By my own power I will slash all the obstacles from my
path and proceed,’ and the other says hopelessly. despairingly, ‘What will
happen? How can I manage?’ The main reason for this downfall is the
wretched diet. Wretchedly they eat, wretched they are; so the race has come to
this pass.” We all saw big tears welling from the corners of his eyes. In the
effort to express in words his feeling, that feeling had erupted on his face like a
volcano. Then we were all overwhelmed by it.
Another day Swamiji said, “How long the Americans live! At eighty or
ninety years they work like young people. Those who have become old
scarcely remember it. That idea has been completely routed from their mind.
The country is free, the people happy, in everything there is zeal. Money, too,
comes easily to hand, so they can enjoy life for many years. Death itself seems
afraid to come near them. English people too, live long and their bodies are
strong and virile; but in what a sorry plight are the Indians, who dies so
quickly. Their faces always wear a fearful expression. They look like a
shapeless mass, lifeless, without hope or endurance, no zeal for anything and
no desire for it, nor for doing anything new. So they soon die. Will they not die
out, leaving no trace? What misery! How sad.” The color drained from
Swamiji’s face and he fell silent for a long time, sunk in sadness and
depression.
After some time living in London and giving lectures all the time, and
coming in contact with the common people, Swamiji, being very tired and
urged by all to go for “a change of air,” decided to do so. In the summer recess
he wanted to make a “Continental tour.” Mohendra moved alone to a house in
Cambridge Street. Sturdy from time to time used to come and stay in that
house. After a few months and an improvement in health, Swamiji returned to
London and related various incidents from the Continental tour.
He spoke of his seeing Deussen and the latter’s special kindness.
He was a scholar specializing in Vedanta and renowned for this, throughout
Europe. Such a pandit, and so well-read, yet he was just like a child. His
children would be yelling for their breakfast; instead of concerning himself to
feed them, he would be engrossed in his Vedantic study. But from Swamiji’s
conversation and expression, it was clear that Deussen was fit to be only a
student, compared to Swami Vivekananda. Probably his meeting with Swamiji
took place before his coming to London. At the time of discussing this with
Sturdy, Swamiji expressed his affection for Deussen and gave vent to his own
opinions, to which Sturdy assented. The significance of this incident is that
such was Swamiji’s extraordinary genius and astonishing power, that even a
famous pandit of Germany respectfully bowed before him like a disciple.
At about this time an incident occurred in Paris which is particularly apropos
here. One day Swamiji went with the Duchess de Palma in a hired phaeton
from Paris to a suburb for a change of air. Swamiji had studied French and
could also converse nicely in it. The Duchess said to him in English, “The
coachman of this carriage can converse in excellent polished French.”
(Something unexpected of a coachman.) While this conversation was going on,
the carriage came to the side of the village road. A maid-servant had brought a
little boy and girl out for a walk. The coachman stopped the coach and, coming
down, took the children in his lap and kissed and stroked them, and then got
back in the driver’s seat. The Duchess de Palma saw with surprised that these
were children of gentlefolk, yet this person who was a cabman had fondled
them like this. So asked him, “Why did you do that? Those are gentlemen’s
children.”
Said the cabman, stopping and turning back to the Duchess, “They are my
children. Have you heard of (Such and such a) Bank in Paris?”
The Duchess replied, “That was big bank, but it has failed.”
The coachman said, “I am the manager of that bank. I watched it fail. To pay
back the debt will require several years. Now there is the need to have my neck
in the grasp of someone else. I have kept my wife and son and daughter in a
rented village house. There is just a maid to look after them. With what little I
had I bought this phaeton and have taken up driving. I support myself and my
family with what I get. But when the debt is paid off, again I will open a bank
and be a banker.”
Swamiji, amazed and delighted at this story, said to us all, “This is what I
call a Practical Vedantist. This man has understood the essence of Vedanta.
Falling from such an estate to this low condition, he is nonetheless unmoved,
steadily going about this work. He is in no way overcome. Thank God for such
a power of mind. This man is really a Vedantist.” Swamiji often told the story. I
do not remember all he said. There were many other things said about the
Continental tour, but I do not recall them now.
PART III
Astronomy
Then with Miss Muller the subject of astronomy came up. What is
particularly worth mentioning here is that in ancient days there was no
telescope, yet what the ancient sages if India had said about the composition of
the planets etc. was true, it has become evident. Swamiji said, “There is a
branch of Raja Yoga called ‘self-identification’ – I am the planet, the planet is
myself.’ In this way, when the two became one, all the qualities and things
embodied in that planet or star are reflected in the person. This can be used also
to investigate other things besides planets. What today’s science is telling us
about the planets, the Indian sages mentioned in different ways.”
In this way he talked about what form astronomy had taken in which
countries, and how it had been transformed and how ideas had passed from one
land to another, and how all these ideas had been improved. He spoke in his
chair just as he had while lecturing. He showed that day his knowledge of the
science. He had read and thought much about it, otherwise such erudite and
detailed descriptions he could never have given.
From time to time Miss Muller would say, “You can silence me but you
cannot convince me.” Then I went away.
He and Miss Muller now went to the Continent [19th July]. Even then
Swamiji used to stay at Lady Ferguson’s house, 57 St. George’s Road. Fox and
I began to live in a house nearby. Not staying near him, I did not know
everything. Anyway, Goodwin went again to America and so did Fox, as he
was an American. I moved to another house. The cold weather began: probably
it was October. One evening Goodwin suddenly came into my room. I was
bowled over. He had returned only a few days before from America
[13th October]. Someone was with him, I saw, dressed in English clothes. It was
dusk, I had been startled, I could not recognize this person. But Goodwin was
talking to me. With embarrassment I asked the name of the newcomer. Then
this person took off his hat. I saw it was Swami Abhedananda. Then how I
rejoiced! Goodwin said, “Now talk in your own language!” (Because the
British custom was that when a person was present who did not understand a
language, it was discourteous to use that). Anyway, when Goodwin left I lit up
my pipe, Abhedananda put a cigarette in his mouth, and we went out for a
walk. Abhedananda said he would have to lecture the next day [27th Oct.]. At
this time Swamiji left 57 St. George’s Road and took Swami Abhedananda
with him to live in Westminster on the ground floor [actually, below ground],
Greycoat Gardens. Goodwin was to live there too.
In the afternoon (of the next day) on the roof of a “bus”. Sturdy and Swamiji
sat in front while Swami Abhedananda, Goodwin and I sat behind. We arrived
at 33 Bloomsbury Square, WC1. The house was extremely well-appointed. On
the stairway was a stuffed bearskin and a statue. The rooms had gas lanterns.
On one side of the first floor a mountain and waterfall had been created with
ferns and rocks and moss. One could see that the master of the house was very
fashionable. A meeting had gathered in a large hall inside. Swami
Abhedananda and I sat on a sofa at one side. In the middle of the side of a table
sat Swamiji, Sturdy and several other people. And in various places around the
room people were seated in chairs. Swami Abhedananda began his lecture; he
was not accustomed to it, especially before English people, and after a few
minutes became a bit self-conscious. His words seemed to get stuck. I touched
his knee and whispered, “It’s going fine. Carry on.” Then the rest came out
well. His subject was the book Pancadasi.
A question period followed. As the younger Swami was new and unfamiliar,
Swami Vivekananda undertook to answer the questions. Anyway the lecture
was well-attended and everyone well pleased. When it broke up in the evening
people came down to the outer door. Goodwin was almost dancing with joy,
that Swami Abhedananda’s lecture had been successful. Swamiji said, “Kali,
why were you nervous about lecturing in England? They too often get stage-
fright, they make a lot of noise, and say things like ‘you see, you see.’ Your
lecture was very good.” Swami Abhedananda had written out his lecture and
read it over several times before giving it. Because it was the first day, naturally
he had been a bit nervous. Then all went home by bus. Swamiji and Sturdy
went in another direction. Goodwin and Abhedananda went to their
Westminster quarters.
At this time in Victoria Street near the Army-Navy Store Building in a rented
hall upstairs Swami Abhedananda began to hold a Gita and Vedanta class. I
went to it one afternoon. By that time Swami Vivekananda had returned to
India. Swami Abhedananda at that time was staying in Sturdy’s house in
Holland Park Avenue [Villas]. When the Gita class was over I talked with
Swami Abhedananda for a while and then came home. A few days later I went
to Sturdy’s house and met the Swami and the two of us went to the house of a
Mrs. Turner for Indian cooking – ruti and so on. At that time he was giving a
talk in some meeting on “sarva-dharma-samanvaya,” The Harmony of
Religions. After that I did not know much about Swami Abhedananda. Later he
went to America.
“In the early stages a lot of nonsense comes up in the mind in meditation.
Endlessly, vulgar and uncontrolled thoughts are present, so that you may feel
‘Even in dreams I never thought like this. Very vile thoughts, too, arise at this
time. Then too, four or five thoughts come at once and create an uproar in the
mind. The ingredients a person’s mind has been composed of, surface at this
time. Many wild and fearful pictures may come before our eyes. There is a
limit even to the ravings of a madman, but not to this, it seems! Yet there is no
need to be afraid.
“If one practices meditation regularly for some days, the breathing becomes
controlled. The breathing of the average person is irregular and unrhythmical.
After some meditation, the body feels free, spontaneous, and heaviness,
weakness and sloth disappear. As inertia goes, the body feels light, but there
will be this special sign that within the person a power of attraction will arise.
Willy-nilly people will be attracted to such. Affection, sweetness, profundity
will be noticed in all one’s actions. It is as if one has gradually left one’s old
body and taken on a new one.”
Swamiji in his Raja Yoga lectures made a special point of this: that at the
time of such sadhana married persons must avoid sexual relations. He used to
say this repeatedly. If that virile power goes downward to another body, or to
produce offspring, it is not available for rising to the higher “lotuses.” Only
then can the mind rise up to the sahasrara and have God-vision.
While giving these Raja Yoga lectures Swamiji would go from the dualistic
state into the non-dualistic; finally he would arrive at the pure Advaita. Then it
would become obvious what an independent being, a free soul, he was. He
would stand with his spine absolutely straight. This was the method or posture
for meditation. Meditation could be done while lying on one’s back: this is
called the “corpse posture.” But meditating deeply while standing on one’s
feet, very few are able to do.
Swamiji, taking up a subject, would begin in a soft manner. Gradually his
mood would change and (voice) become louder. The sweet tones of his
beginning, with the gracious expression and affectionate eyes little by little
would begin to change. Then his body would become straight as a rod. His
hips, spine, neck and head all seemed as if suspended from a common string.
Slowly his meditative mood would deepen, his tone of voice become altogether
altered. His rhythmical sonorous voice would come from his throat in an
unobstructed stream. People nearby and those farther away also, could hear that
sound. In that voice of his there was not note of harshness, nor of sweetness,
nor of sorrow, nor of “I and you.” It was as if in boundless space a vibration
had arisen, been converted into waves and that sound was gradually penetrating
everyone’s ear and body – to the very marrow of the bones. Yet everyone at
such times had this particular feeling that they had no body. Body-
consciousness was totally removed. Place was absent: even the consciousness
that one was sitting somewhere was gone. Time was nothing, and there was no
awareness of one speaking and others listening. Speaker and audience were
totally one. Neither had a gross body. All had risen to the causal body and from
the vast firmament, the sound was becoming a single wave-current vibration
[attempted translation – Ed.]. Then he would often say, “I am a voice without
form.”
His power to make others feel like this was like a communicable disease.
That is why all the topics and arguments of his lectures could not be
remembered or taken notice of; it was the living power that was the reality: the
arguments, the language, were unreal. The samadhi was the inner
consciousness. He would say, “I am directly seeing and feeling the Truth; I am
perceiving Truth and I am myself the Truth.”
Swami Vivekananda demonstrates samadhi
Day after day, when Swamiji would give the lecture, there would be no chair
in the place where he was accustomed to stand. One day before the lecture he
asked Goodwin to put a chair there. And the evening lecture began. He started
to talk a lot about samadhi and the different forms of it. The audience was
absorbed in this new topic. The higher samadhi was brought up. He said that in
this, all the external nerves became actionless and the inner ones awakened: in
other words, all the external mental waves are suppressed. “All vrittis become
stilled and the gross body and causal body separate and the mind plunges into
the depths. The gross body becomes totally motionless and vibrationless and
the subtle or causal body becomes activated. Samadhi is not sleep nor any kind
of intoxication nor the drowsiness of basking in the heat. When one’s sleep
breaks and one wakes up, one returns to one’s previous mentality; there is no
particular change. Drunkenness brings a kind of stupor, but afterwards the mind
is lower; not so in samadhi. A fool or ignoramus coming out of samadhiwould
be a wise person. His path would open and he would manifest a new expression
which he would never have known before. Ignorant persons would become
sages, as it were, weak-minded persons, persons of mental power; knowledge
would appear before them.
“In samadhi mind leaves the sense-bound world and goes to the
supersensuous where it sees truth directly. One touches it with one’s hand and
oneself becomes truth. So when one returns to the gross body, one is a free
soul, one’s whole attitude becomes one of freedom – the look on one’s face, the
glance of one’s eyes – all become changed.” Swamiji would often say, “The
fool becomes a sage, without book-learning. Truth has to be seen, to be dug
out, to be realized.”
In this way the lecture went on for about forty-five minutes. The audience
had been able to understand a little of this topic, but it was mere hearsay; they
had not seen it. Somehow they had been able to get some idea of it. Now
Swamiji brought up the chair, and sitting in lotus posture with straight spine
became totally absorbed. His face altogether changed. His eyes were half-
opened and the pupils turned up. Swamiji’s eyes were by nature larger than
most people’s; often the pupil would seem to be very prominent. But in
this samadhi a portion of the white of the eyeball was clearly visible.
Everyone was struck on seeing this samadhi. Many of those sitting at a
distance stood up to stare at the new sight. Goodwin stopped writing and
turning around in his chair, looked fixedly at Swamiji’s face. It was something
new to all. There was a bit of a stir, but no commotion; all were surprised and
awed. Swamiji remained in this condition for three or four minutes, not
moving, not breathing, like a living image made of flesh. Then he brought his
mind down, gave out a long breath, which (because the room was hushed), was
clearly audible. Then he got up from the chair and pushed it behind him and
again began to speak on various matters concerned withsamadhi.
“When I used to study spirituality,” he said, “at the feet of a great soul, he
would always be going into samadhi. His would be of a very high order and he
would be in it much of the time: he could not keep his mind in the sense-bound
world for very long. I am a small man – I have been able to understand only a
very little of him and his samadhi. That day people were so overwhelmed that
they had no courage to make any special conversation with him. There was no
question period and Swamiji, too, seemed more tired that evening, or perhaps
more serious and disinclined to talk or company. [A footnote is given: at
Baranagore Math in the first stage, in the rainy season one afternoon,
Swamiji’s savikalpa samadhi was observed. Because of his practice
of samadhi he could have it while walking – but there was no body-
consciousness. He had had it several times at Cossipore Garden too. But having
this samadhi at lecture time and many persons seeing it, is particularly worth
mentioning (or “remarkable”). They could clearly see and understand the
topic.]
“By fixing the mind on a spot between the eyebrows, or on some object of
meditation, if one can keep it there, the outgoing tendency of the mind is
reversed. It is quite difficult at first, but by some days’ practice, the mind can
reach the incorporeal state. In the corporeal state of gross body, the mind takes
on various fickle moods, but in the incorporeal this is greatly lessened and the
mind stabilizes itself.
“I am the giver of my own blessing.” In the course of the a lecture it came up
that if we make sincere prayer or restless demand of the Lord, our desires are
fulfilled – even to the extent of getting direct counsel. How does this come
about? Swamiji said, “By thinking uninterruptedly about one thing and
combining devotion to the Lord with that, the mind itself goes upward and
often becomes forgetful of body, time, place etc. Going further it is conscious
only of itself as truth; no other awareness is there. Its own truth becomes
reflected in the cidakasa and in this reflected state becomes the light of
consciousness. Often it is evident that the higher mind, observing in the light of
consciousness the entreaties of the gross body, satisfies these and give
reassurance – in other words, one’s own subtle or higher condition has taken a
certain form and the gross body is as if asking the prayers. Of itself this high
state blesses the gross body. It is not that as soon as one prays, one’s prayers
are answered; the causal body determines whether or not the prayers will be
answered. Normally we go on thinking that some god or heavenly being is
hearing our inmost prayer, and he, condescending through his grace, is
fulfilling it. This is the popular idea, but if our mind goes higher, it can be
clearly seen that I am granting my own boons – that is, the subtle ‘I’ is blessing
the ‘I’ which is in bondage.
Despicable “sadhus”
In one lecture Swamiji said that where past and future become mingled, there
is samadhi. We are always thinking of the past and the future; it is the present
which forms the center of things. But so swiftly flow the currents of our
thought, that in thought itself the present becomes fragmented into past and
future. So the mind dwells on the future and can understand that, but cannot
hold on to the isolated present. When the simple present or existent is the center
[of attention?] one experiences one’s own nature, and there past and future
become one; and that is samadhi.
Vedantic relativity
Up and down relativity. Swamiji spoke on this in a very beautiful way. “We
always gauge up, down and the directions, but this relative idea of ours is not
based on permanence, but on certain conventions; but if these conventions are
trespassed, the truth based on them no longer holds good. When we look
around on this earth, we use ‘up,’, ‘down,’ ‘east,’ ‘west’ and such words, and
here all these are meaningful, but leaving earth and rising into the Great Void
or eternal space in which the earth is revolving, no such directional words are
applicable. Where a comparison can be made between one thing and another,
such directions are meaningful.”
Especially when we say qualities, we are aware of ebb and flow, but when
we say substance, we think of the eternal and unchanging. We never perceive
all the qualities at any one time, and perhaps one person perceives twenty
qualities, while the object looks the same to everyone.
Even if we speak of qualities, one explains them in one’s own way and our
awareness of substance is unchanging, while our awareness of qualities is
changing. It cannot be that the idea of the permanent has been superimposed on
the impermanent. Quality is the illuminator or witness; but the question is, even
if the qualities are all aggregated, is there apperception of our permanent
substance?
“Our permanent substance beyond qualities is unchanging and eternal. Our
mind is divided and fickle. Therefore if we perceive the Undivided, we have to
do it by means of the bundle of qualities. We cannot express the permanence of
a thing by means of the quality-bundle, as the former is itself the expresser and
beyond the qualities. Nothing can be called the Void. We are accustomed to see
the divided because we always observe with a divided mind and thought. So if
we enter the Undivided, we become frightened and distressed and, not being
able to find our usual aggregate of qualities, we feel it as void. But this very
Undivided is Fullness.”
This lecture consumed about one-and-a-half hours. He resorted to many
philosophical arguments on both sides, comparing both, and finally propounded
the Absolute of the Vedanta.
Swamiji once said, “The trend of our mind is called a tendency (vritti) but
the word really means circling. We have certain natural tendencies or we are
under the sway of these, most of the time. These are degrading or harmful to
others. Abiding in all these lower tendencies, the mind gets dirty and degraded.
How can we stop such lower tendencies? That same lower tendency which
depresses the mind must be replaced by filling the mind with its opposite
higher one. For example, if anger overcomes the mind, to ward this off, the
quality of forgiveness is to be cultivated. To get rid of egoism, cultivate
sincerity (or uprightness). For injury, practice compassion or generosity.”
One evening Swamiji began his lecture with the quotation, “Both you and I,
O Arjuna, have passed through many births; you know them not, but I know
them all.” He talked a long time about the causes of rebirth. Letting our gross
body go, we go with our subtle one, but our previous experience remains to a
great extent in that subtle body. That is why it gets expression again through a
suitable vehicle or receptacle. Therefore many experiences of previous births
are visible in the human body. Two offspring are quite different in their
endowment of intellect. This is explainable by reincarnation. Heredity is not
enough. Swamiji said that when frightful plague occurred in England many
years ago, it was noticed afterwards that the birthrate increased. This doctrine
(of reincarnation) was found in many races in olden times.
A lecture was given in the Theosophists’ Hall. Near Regent’s Park, probably
in the section named Park Avenue, at 19 Avenue Road, St. John’s Wood, there
is a prominent establishment where the writer once visited. They had invited
Swamiji to give a lecture there on Vegetarianism and he had agreed. Now
Swamiji said to Swami Saradananda, “Sharat, you go and give that lecture.”
The latter was speechless and felt as if the sky had fallen on him. Upstairs he
said to Mohendra, “Well, brother, Naren has put me into a fix. What danger
there is here! I will have to give a lecture face to face; if I make a mistake, they
will say, “He is inexperienced.” And Naren gets so worked-up; if a mistake is
made perhaps he will knock me down! Am I finally to get a beating in my old
age? Earlier he told me I would have to go to America and give lectures: that
doesn’t bother me: over there, what will be will be; Naren will not be staying
there. The danger is here in his presence. He can get so angry! If I am abused I
will take it.”
So Swami Saradananda was in difficulty. Even though himself a powerful
man, because of lack of practice in speaking, he had no self-confidence. That is
why he was hesitating so. If Swamiji asked a question, Swami Saradananda
very humbly would answer with hesitation, indirectly showing his nervousness.
Swamiji sometimes would fire him up with self-confidence, sometimes good-
naturedly scold him. Both actions were indicative of their mutual love.
At any rate, one afternoon Swamiji himself went to the Theosophist’s hall
and gave the lecture. He praised vegetarianism and talked about the difference
in manifestation of power due to the diets of the elephant and the lion. He
extolled vegetarianism at great length. But at the end of the talk, he confessed
that he was not always a vegetarian; sometimes he ate fish and flesh. Even if
unable always to follow the ideal, he did not believe in lowering it. Showing by
reference to their respective diets, the similarities and differences of the English
and Indian races, he made the lecture interesting.
Coming back from the lecture he said to Swami Saradananda, “Go on, you
shouldn’t be afraid any more. Why, I gave a few words I had fixed up in
advance and added whatever came to my mouth. They don’t have a hyper-
critical attitude. Stirring and mixing, I showed who have the high ideals. They
understand worldliness well enough. Why are you so afraid of them? Just
trample on them like noxious insects. The essence of philosophy is found only
among the Hindus. It will take a long time for them to understand India.” He
spoke all of this walking back and forth in the room. When Swamji had gone to
another room, Swami Saradananda said, “Anyway, my boy, the fever with its
perspiration is over; now one part is finished; today at least I have escaped a
scolding. Who knows when or where again he will tell me to give a lecture? If I
stay around him, that is the peril. Let me now run to America. There, if I don’t
make a go of it, I bolt, via Japan.”
A fish dinner
One day Sturdy and Miss Muller had gone elsewhere and that evening
cabbage curry with fish was prepared. Swami Saradananda, Swamiji, Goodwin
and Mohendra sat down at the table. The palate was much gratified to savor
cabbage cooked with fish, after a long time. Even if it was not cooked in the
genuine Indian way, the imitation itself was good. Probably Goodwin did not
take any, as he had become a complete vegetarian. Swami Saradananda too,
usually was, but whether he ate this dish on that day, I do not exactly recall.
After dinner Swamiji was pacing the floor. He was very happy. Goodwin
remarked, “You teach vegetarianism. You give lectures on vegetarian food –
why have you just now eaten fish?” Swamiji laughed and said, “Well, the cook
brought the fish. If I didn’t eat it, it would be thrown down the drain; instead I
have thrown it into my stomach. What harm is there in that? He quoted a
Sanskrit sloka: “I am not the enjoyer etc.” and began to gloss on it. “I never eat;
the body is the receptacle and into it various objects are put.” Goodwin, a little
annoyed, replied, “I don’t understand all that Sanskrit you are muttering.”
Swamiji again tried to give a Vedantic reply. Goodwin, more heated now said,
“You are trying to counter my words with words. What I want to know is, why
you are eating fish?” Swamiji was very jolly that day. Making a face at
Goodwin, he got him more worked up. There was no serious mood in him; he
was simple as a child and irritated Goodwin by laughing and smiling. Then,
quoting more Sanskrit he said: “When you are threatened, hold still; when you
are on the crest of the wave, be forgiving; never be vengeful.” Then each of
them went his way.
The momentariness of knowledge
Swamiji told many stories from the “Jataka series” of Buddha’s former
births, especially the one of the tigress. That day his face was very peaceful and
he was full of love and bliss, as if experiencing fullness of love for all
creatures. There was not a trace of hardness, only enthusiasm and bliss. His
mood of joy became much more attractive than the Jataka tales. The
appearance of his face became quite different; for Swamiji always used to say,
“If I meditate on the brain of a Sankara, I become Sankara, if on the brain of a
Buddha, I become Buddha.” In any case, that evening he seemed to be a new
Buddha, recounting to his audience his own Jataka stories and the mood was
much more than the lecture. He said that Lord Buddha was able to remember
his previous lives. How many times he had been a wild animal, how many
times a monkey, how many times one level of human being or another – all this
he could recall.
He further said that Kapila, the “father of psychology,” also could recall his
past births. People ordinarily make the chief object of meditation either the
future or the transcendental. But there is another type of meditation which
looks backward: what I did this morning, or yesterday, or in previous years.
Usually this process takes one back only to the period of the three-or-four-year-
old, and most people cannot go back of that. But if someone, with tremendous
energy breaks through the barrier, then one-and-a-half years, one year, six
months – these ages yield to him, and even the embryonic condition he can
remember. If this happens, he can know all about his former lives. But to come
to this point of polarization is very difficult.
The stories of Narada, and Hercules, deluded by maya.
[Here Mohendra attributes to Swamiji a long story in which the “Narada, bring
me some water” story is mixed with the “Vishnu born as a pig” story; nothing
in it about human wife and children. Narada dreams he is a pig. In a footnote
Mohendra says the other version exists in the Puranas, but that Swamiji told it
this way. So have editors “corrected” it in the Complete Works, or was this a
different occasion? --Trs.]
“Among the Greeks there is a story of Hercules which is quite similar to this.
Hercules, performing twelve labors, got puffed up with pride. He took two
peaks named Calpe and Abyla in his hands and separated them and ocean
poured its waters over the feet of these two mountains. They are otherwise
known as Gibraltar and Mt. Hacho. Proud Hercules was lying down on the far
side of a mountain and began to rage and roar. ‘There is no hero like me; I can
conquer anyone and can be conquered by none.’ Gradually his boasting
increased until the heavens parted and Jupiter, king of gods, came overhead
nearby. Jupiter asked everyone, ‘Where is this boasting coming from, and what
does it mean?’
“’Down on earth,’ the gods replied, ‘a hero has been born named Hercules.
Having performed twelve heroic labors, he is proclaiming his own glory in a
loud voice.’ When Jupiter heard this he smiled and said to the blind boy Cupid,
‘Vanquish this haughty man at once.’ Cupid went up to Hercules and sat down.
Finding him asleep, the flower-armed Cupid shot Hercules with flower arrows.
He fell into a profound sleep and Cupid fled.
“When he awoke, thinking it was not right to stay in one place for many
days, he decided to go somewhere else. In a certain place he saw a very
attractive young maiden sitting in the sun. No one was with her. Hearing her
piteous, grieving cry, Hercules’ heart filled with compassion, and, falling in
love with her, he began to live with her in great happiness.
“To keep house various things are needed. Hercules sometimes carried pots
of water on his shoulders, gathered fuel for fire, and gladly performed other
such duties as a householder. Several years passed in this way. The wife was in
great happiness to get for husband such a hero, and asked of him anything she
wanted; he happily obeyed her.
“One day Hercules was bringing from the forest a heap of fuel on his
shoulders. Just then Jupiter came upon him and asked him where he was going
with that fuel. Hercules no longer had his former power. Like an ordinary man
he replied, ‘Lord, when I take home this fuel my wife will be able to cook;
otherwise the cooking will be much delayed.’ Jupiter asked him what other
work he had to do.
“’Sir,’ said Hercules, ‘I have to draw and bring water. My wife cannot
always negotiate this rough and difficult path through the mountain, so I must
carry water.’
‘What else?’ asked Jupiter.
‘Sir,’ replied Hercules, ‘all kinds of work a householder must do. My wife
just goes to her place and cooks the food. I eat it.’ Then Jupiter laughed and
said,
‘Hercules, did you not boast that you were all-conquering, that none could
vanquish you? Now you have become a bond-servant and are working at the
command of your wife like a slave. Where now is your heroic behavior? Your
all-conquering mood?’ At these words Hercules’ consciousness awoke and his
vision of the woman and home vanished.”
On individuality
One day the question of what individuality is, came up. Swamiji said, “Our
mind is always scattered in various directions; it is not able to remain in a still
or steady state. We are always in a state of divisibility. We cannot stay in an
undivided condition. We are always trying to come from divisibility to
indivisibility. It is only when we reach that, that we shall have our full
manifestation of individuality; meanwhile we are always trying to reach that.”
There were many new ideas in this lecture. It was very powerful and as if a new
light had fallen upon him. Swamiji spoke with great vigor that night.
In an evening lecture Swamiji related the story of the sadhu killed in the
“Indian Mutiny.” A certain sadhu had been doing tapas at Allahabad, at the
time of the battle. He was elderly and a man of extremely peaceful nature. A
Muslim ruffian found him and senselessly stabbed him to death. A short while
before he expired, some Hindu sepoys who had taken part in the Mutiny came
upon him and discovered what had happened. The sepoys found the Muslim
and brought him to the sadhu, saying, “Maharaj, give the order and we will
finish off this ruffian.”
With their weapons at the ready, the sepoys awaited his command. The old
monk was losing blood in unstinted flow, and his life had almost ebbed away.
Smiling a little, he said to the sepoys, “Do not cherish hatred toward this
person. He too is my God. He is the Beloved. Everyone is my Lord, everyone is
the Beloved.” Saying so, the sadhu expired. The assembled soldiers were
dumbfounded to see such love and adherence to God. They performed
the sadhu’s obsequies and went on their way.
Swamiji told this story with such feeling and pathos that all were much
moved. What love, and seeing of the ishta in all, on the part of the monk! –
Swamiji made everyone understand this. He told the story with such sweet
devotion that the audience seemed to be seeing the series of events being
enacted before their very eyes. The listeners, being Christians, remembered the
crucifixion and heard this account with great feeling. Though it was only an
incident, Swamji’s method of describing it with much facial expression and
vocal inflection made it dramatically real to them.
APPENDIX
On his way to London, Mohendra had stopped in Colombo. There the father
of Dharmapala, Don Carolis [has Mohendra spelled it right? Of what race?] ran
a cabinet-maker’s shop, near the harbor. He was a fine man.