Act One
Full moon night of Jhulan Purnima. In Miras temple at Brindavan she is singing before her Image of Gopal. On the right of the altar her Gurudev Sri Sanatan Goswami is seated beside the temple-priest, Pundarik. On the left, four sombre, whiskered pundits are watching intently. Behind her sit, with folded hands, a motley crowd of pilgrims, come from far and near, drawn by her name, music and holiness.
MIRA (singing in a mystic ecstasy, standing before the Image):
Friend, shall I tell you how I wooed
And won my Lord Gopal? How the One for whom pine mighty saints Responded to my call?
I knew but one code, trod one path:
Alone to the Alone. They worship Him as the King of kings:
I claimed Him for my own.
The sages seek Him far and near
And still sigh unfulfilled:
I searched for Him in my yearning heart
And there He stood revealed!
I conned no books nor performed feats
Of high austerities. I gladly hailed what He ordained:
My joys and miseries.
The learned fail to fathom Him,
The Vast and Mysteried:
He answered because I prayed to Him
My way lost soul to lead.
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How can I ever, friend., plumb His ways ?
Can a bird span the space ? I only fell at His lotus-feet
And He smiled on me, in Grace.
I cried for Him as for the mother
The child cries in the night, And compelled. He leaned like sky to earth,
In love's divine delight.
{In tears of ecstasy she sang, describing
How Krishna, her one blue dream in desert life,
Delivered her from the underworld of Night
To boon her with the freedom of the sky,
Calling her His own child of dateless dawn
And she sang how she had groped for years for Him:)
MIRA (sings)
I sought Him in idols, temples, shrines, Woods, hills and dales, alas, in vain! With mantras and rites I worshipped Him With lights and incense, time and again.
Till the saints revealed to me — how one Must love the Lord one yearns to see And I sang: 'I know I am dark and flawed, Still I am Thy child and cling to Thee.'
So Mira, the derelict. He redeemed And gave asylum at His feet When, lo, in a flash, the ages' chains Fell off— as He came her to greet!
(Her voice rose in a resonant crescendo
And, as she sang and danced in a mystic fervour,
The devotees acclaimed and kissed her feet;
Men bowed down to the ground; the women wept
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And even the children stared, bewitched — as she In simple similes delineated How the Blessed Lord installed her lowly slave In His tender heart of evergreen delight.)
SANATAN (in a moved voice)
Oh you are bless ed, blessed Mira, my child! For surely 'tis He, your Gopal, who inspires Your ecstatic songs and dances, raining His Grace On our earth's heart of drouth. Your mother is blessed And blessed are all -who come to your holy feet. 0 lotus of light, flowering on darkness' stem, Who have grown into a legend in your lifetime, In this our world of din how shall we hail You, minstrel of Gopi-love, to whom our Lord Of bliss and loveliness, comes to reveal His inviolable self of harmony, Beauty and bliss, music and compassion To manifest His soul of dream delight? How through your voice He sings, day after day, In ever-new lilts. His deathless melodies, And visits the temple of your soul to seek Your pure love's hospitality! 0 daughter of divinity and stainless purity! Sing on ... ever on ... dispense His nectarous ruth's Lavish bounty...
(Thickly)
In this our world of greed
And gloom you come, missioned to teach us, misers, How to win all thro-ugh staking one's all for Him, To grow blue wings, with the sole power of faith And make love's rose bloom on a mantra's stem, The love that defies the wisdom of worldly prudence! O incarnate audacity, who abandoned all You cherished — to attain the viewless Peak By dint of your one yearning for the heights! We salute you who have come to initiate
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Our storm-sky lives with the dare of your star-poised soul!
(With a sigh)
We are, indeed, fool cripples who still prefer Crutches to wings — we, realists, who applaud The testimony of those who have not seen And scotch the rapturous evidence of the seers! The mud-lipped worms are real, but not the eagles That pierce through clouds to revel in stratospheres. The ghostly shadows are true because they abound, But rainbows are pointless because their angel glances Are few and far between! We indict Heaven As heartless because none can have for the asking Its endless riches! A few do, indeed, sing Of the blissful Brindavan of selfless love They come to know through the Evergreen Lover's Grace;
But nay, we must have a Grace on our own terms,
Build a religion of stark power and greed
And impose it as the unique real gospel
That can make us all happy on this earth!
Oh, when shall we accept the heart's lead of love
And aspire to see light where we see today
But a kingdom ruled by hatred's gloom or half-lights
Of transient pleasures which fail even to please?
So we appeal to you, O His beloved
Minstrel maid, you sing ever on — uncaring
Whether we, fools and dotards, respond or not.
You sing on and — who knows — you may achieve
With your unearthly voice and moving songs
What Pandits, priests and pulpit-preachers have
Striven in vain to bring home to our minds:
That faith and love are the twin angel wings On which we all can soar to His Vaikuntha.
MIRA (falls, in tears, at his feet; then rises and, standing before the Image with folded hands, starts singing again) We home in His love's own domain, Love is our heart's one refrain:
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When for love we lose our all, We know all all we'll attain.
In love, in rapture, we sing,
Drink at love's pure virgin spring;
Come joy or come deep pain,
We'd live and die for our King.
Love-intoxicate are our eyes
Which strain but for love's sunrise:
We, minstrels of Brindavan,
Love His Face in our soul's dream skies.
We chant His one Name all day,
Consigning our lives to His sway And, enthralled by His call, we dance
When He starts His flutelet to play.
We reck not of virtue nor sin,
Knowledge nor wisdom serene, We hymn but His beauty and thrill
In His laughter's lilts evergreen.
Sings Mira: "We are love-mad, friend:
On love alone we depend:
Like love-lorn moths, in His flame
Of love we will merge in the end."
PUNDARIK (rises and folds his hands)
O mother, how you do transport our souls With your angel voice, celestial songs and dance! A time was when I did wonder at heart If what you claimed you had seen were true! I felt At a loss ... because I myself never had seen In all my wanderings a saint who had So swiftly attained the Goal: His lotus feet. But your incredible personality,
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So radiant, strong and yet so flower-pure,
Whittled away my crust of scepticism
And helped me glimpse in you the Lord's own maid.
As Gurudev so aptly said just now.
The Gopi-heart of Brindavan is yours
And so it is you can, in a moment, unveil
The starry secrecies of our great Lord's
Love and compassion through your beautiful songs
And heavenly dances of pure ecstasy.
(His voice grows husky) And may I tell you something? 'Twas because You blessed me with your Grace that I caught, at last, The contagion of your vision creating faith Which laughs dark doubts to scorn. For 'twas this faith That fostered within me the Eye of Light Which can see into the heart of things. And so My doubts gave place to a deep reverence For all that you stood for. Thereafter, oh! Your every message and dance and song and smile Did give a fillip to my aspiration.
(He bows his head and drops his voice) I wanted, mother, to confess to you;
But a fear held me back lest you renounce me
If I owned that once I had dared dismiss
Your vision of Him as mere hallucination
And your claim to have compelled Him to descend
To dwell for ever in your heart as a sad
Delusion if not sheer pretension. Thus
I had deeply sinned because I had refused
To listen to the dictates of my heart
Which would fain have me bow to you at once
As one whose even anklets showered sweet lilts
Of Gopi-love that comes in this dark age
Only to a few, the blessed elect,
Whom His love, like a ruthless hurricane
Wrenches off their anchorage to be granted
Eternal refuge at His lotus-feet.
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(He heaves a sigh)
But something within me sought refuge in My recalcitrance when your deep Grace had gripped me, Till, slowly it dawned on me that those who spoke Like your inviolate self, from summit-vision (Attesting what we, on the plains, alas, Can never glimpse) must first be venerated Before we could presume to verify Or scotch their findings, as the Gita says:
Shraddhavan labhate jnanam
For How could one judge of what transpires on peaks When one wallows in abysmal ignorance?
(With a sigh) But even this is not all. He says in the Gita:
"Disclaiming all commandments, codes and dharmas Take refuge in me alone. Have no misgivings:
For I undertake to deliver you from all sin."
I waved aside even this breath-taking pledge
As fabricated by His unscrupulous priests.
"For is not He," I asked, "the peak and plinth
Of spiritual life which must be grounded in dharma's
Inviolable codes? If so, how could He
Thus lead us astray — sundering trustful souls
From their eternal moorings: the moral codes?"
(Smiling a bitter smile of self-pity) But the great Lord knows that fools cannot help but adore Their folly and so must resent if His Light comes down to deliver them from their blindness. So little wonder that I saw the Gita's Profoundest truths distorted through the haze Of my idiot conceit.
(After a brief pause)
'Twas then you came, Like moon on her golden chariot, cleaving my dusk And, singing your way to Heaven, carried my dark, Doubt-weary, peaceless soul to the very gates
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Of the Paradise of certitude — the eternal Brindavan where the Evergreen still plays on His haunting love's flame-flute. 'Twas only then The meaning of love's surrender dawned on me, The love which, once attained, we overpass All moral codes, commandments, formal rites —
FIRST PUNDIT
Halt, fool yokel! A truce to blasphemy! It is stark, staring lunacy!
(Bitterly)
To think
That you an old and sober priest should thus Take leave of your senses — genuflect like this To a woman, hailing her as your eye-opener!
(Snapping his fingers in contempt)But you are but a stooge. 'Tis she who isResponsible — the prime mover, chief offenderAgainst Divinity — His will and fiatsTo which all among us must bow, or beExcommunicated by Manu's law.
(Consternation among the devotees. A stifled outcry
ripples through them)
PUNDARIK (bridling)
How dare you, sire-
SANATAN (putting a restraining hand on his shoulder, in a
whisper) Hush, Pundarik, my son! There is no need. Mira can hold her own Against them all.
PUNDARIK (surprised, in a subdued voice)
But still, must you allow Insolent fools to insult our holy mother?
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SANATAN (smiles )
Can insolent rockets ever insult the star By merely hissing at her diamond gleam? I have an object. Let us witness His lila.
(Meanwhile the First Pundit has been answering back excitedly at a dissident colleague in a low voice. At the very moment he finally shakes his head and bursts out.)
No, no! I will not listen. For I do feel The call is urgent : accept her challenge we must. Did you ever hear the like — a gospel of love Gone mad! She must be told now some home-truths, And made to see how grotesque seem her claims When mirrored in the good sense of sobriety.
MIRA (smiling sweetly)
Forgive me, sire! For what I sang was not The gospel of madness but of the sober Soul's Discovery of the last Reality. Whose other name is Divine Love. And when This is borne home to our Radha-soul, she sings:
"Austerities, virtues, learning, genius, pomp,
Scholarship, prudence — these move not the heart
Of the world's Unique Beloved, the Evergreen
Swain for whom the eternal Radha-bride
In the soul of every one of us lives. And
He can be only won through simple love's
Petition and the ultimate surrender
Of all one has and is; my Gopal being
Pure love — He's best propitiated by
The offering of the guileless heart's deep yearning.
FIRST PUNDIT (his glance ranges the baffled faces of his
colleagues) Did I not tell you? She is unrepentant
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And it is serious — I warn you all — Because there is a method in her madness. She has a way with her and so infects Effusive women and simple rustics like This senile priest who, in his turn, will start Recruiting similar half-wits, calling trustful Yokels to gather under her banner. So, It is high time we put her in her place ...
(Turning hotly on Mira) You do have a tongue which you know how to wag To draw the credulous with your swift allure. But you shall never take in those who can See through your ruses. Humph! How can sobriety Endorse your version of Lord Krishna's ways And coming and going? It sounds all too quixotic! You glibly mouth a string of hyperboles, Feminine and absurd! Do we not know How unattainable is our Lord, Sri Krishna? Did not even the resplendent saints and sages Apostles and Messiahs find the Path To Him, the Lone, strait, difficult to tread As the razor's edge? Is He not far-off like The galaxies, elusive like the sky, Vast like the sea, ineffable like Om And, above all, is He not hard to please? And yet you, garrulous maid — who are not versed In the Vedas or philosophy, who know not A word of Sanskrit, the alphabet of the Gods — How dare you arrogate the Sage's status And brag you are cradled in "your Gopal's" Love!
(He makes a grimace of contempt and turns his eyes upon
his colleagues}
Do use your brains, gird up your loins, friends! I appeal to you: be scandalised and shocked! To think that such an ignorant babbler should Expect us, learned pundits, to believe That the Omniprevalent, One-without-a-second
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Has deigned to descend to abide for ever with her And eat out of her hand, her little Gopal!
(He blows his nose angrily) Humph! do we not know all about His ways Through our high erudition and Yoga of knowledge? Has He not over and over again proclaimed In our hoary scriptures that none ever on earth Can attain to Him save after years and years Of stern and arduous austerities:
Self-discipline, fasting, vigilance, meditation, And last, an intensive study of the Vedas? Has He not promulgated: "Only the strong Shall win through to the Self's inviolate light?" Yet she vaunts — "her Gopal" never once exacts From her what He imposes on us all! "Her Gopal", indeed! Humph! The One who is The Creator of the cosmos, the Absolute, The immaculate Supreme who ensouls all!
(He takes a pinch of snuff, then jabs his friend seated
next to him) Oh, wake up, friend! Say something, for God's sake!
SECOND PUNDIT (bridling)
Wake up? How do you mean? Surely, I Am no somnambulist — nor was I dozing! Only I wondered if one should in a temple Flare up into a fracas. But you are right:
Our honour is at stake. We —
(turning with sudden heat on Mira)
Mira, listen:
You are delirious. You know Him not. Is it not written: we must be pure as light, Perfect as crystal, thunder-strong and, lastly, Delivered from the siren Maya's bondage, Live in the forest, for long years vowed to silence And comtemplation and philosophy, Embodied in the Tantras, Vedas and Gita,
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Before we can glimpse Him? Do we not all Know to our cost that He smiles never on our Manifold flaws and foibles of the flesh? Your puerile, sentimental rhapsodies And popular songs, I warn you, never shall find Favour with Him, the Superconscient Brahma!
THIRD PUNDIT (in a tone of raillery)
I applaud you, my self-righteous friend! And therefore, I also, duly furious, shall take now ... Ahem ... my cue from you. We must all growl In a body like a pride of wounded lions, Maimed and down, but... ahem ... not out. Oh, no! For lo and behold: are we not bristling with Righteous indignation? And joy, as well, Of course ... for is it not in tedious life Delightful to explode and feel... ahem ... Superior to a woman? And when one is As cock-sure as we are (in a body, again) That one is a paragon of wisdom and those Who genuflect to other idols are fools, Does not one walk on air, athrill that one Is born peer of angels, model of virtue, Sponsor of dogmas, teacher of saints and proctor Of morals?
(Taking a heroic pinch of snuff)
So Mira! I say, you are doomed! For you are innocent of all that we Have learned through memorising reboant phrases. Ergo, you have not the ghost of a chance against Our august selves when you dare claim you see Light where we ... ahem ... see but silhouettes For your poor evidence is only ... ahem ... A woman's, whereas ours is masculine And therefore ... ahem ... strong, impeccable!
(The raillery becomes more pronounced) You see, we are so erudite and can quote
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Torrents of fearsome dicta from the Vedas.
But you, frail thing, even if you have seen
Are out because you never burnt midnight oil,
Cramming on earth blue rumours of the Beyond.
So I ... ahem ... deduce ... I know not what
Follows from this ... but never mind ... for this much
Is certain that the great Vyas knew what he
Wished to convey when he blared like the trump of doom!
Kalena sarvam vihitam vidhatra
paryayayogat labhate manushyah;
Which means, most probably, that as one grows older With time the present vanishes momently Into the past, and that, the older one grows, With the march of dreadful time, one is expected To grow even wiser till one ripens ... ahem ... Into an awful oracle, shall I say? Never mind. Only ... where was I? Ah yes, It all comes back ... we must rebuke you sternly For being what you are. So Mira, I, too, Must with my learned colleagues lash at you For venturing to have seen what we have never Glimpsed even once nor dare hope ever ... ahem ... To see with our mortal eyes till they grow glassy With cataract or deepening wisdom. Well, well!
(His eyes range the faces of his three colleagues and his
lips curve into a smile) Is not that just what you would have me say? I mean ... ahem ... thus crushing her with the weight Of authority of books and howling down With multiple frenzied voices that of a simple Dame who can only sing and dance and thrill But not overawe as we great pundits ... ahem ... Do, first and last, and even in the middle ... Oh, why must you shoot a fire-fly with a gun?
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FIRST PUNDIT (frowning) Fool! hold your tongue!
SECOND PUNDIT
Nay, he's a flippant knave,
As we all know to our cost. But we, who are Responsible guardians of society, must Take action since it is no laughing matter.
FOURTH PUNDIT I do agree. But how shall we —
THIRD PUNDIT
— in chorus
Drown with our scandalised tears her sparkling folly? (A low titter of laughter ripples through the audience)
FIRST PUNDIT (in stentorian tones')
Silence! Good heavens! Is this a temple — or A circus of clowns?
(To Mira)
I say, you must not mind
What my friend, the buffoon, said just now. I mean
We have no wish to be hard on you. But ... er ...
I mean ... you must learn to bow down to your elders,
Nor presume to ridicule the wise, our Sanskrit
Vedas and Tantras and the holy rites.
We only evolve in light through living in light
And not in the primitive world of our blind instincts
And impulses of the untutored mind.
Besides, an unlettered woman should be humble
And ignorance must never sermonise.
MIRA (placidly)
I assure you all, my venerable elders, That I luxuriate not in sermonising, Still less in ridiculing the holy codes.
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I only dance and sing to my Gopal And speak my mind. But I do understand Why you misunderstand me. I subscribe To your verdict on my humble self. I own I am an ignorant, unlettered woman Unversed in the Vedas, innocent of Sanskrit. Only I cannot help but wonder how Can an intensive study of the Vedas Or Tantras liberate us from our chains Of worldly attachments? How can, sires, a mental Philosophy lead us to the One who baffles The mind and senses ? And how shall scriptures Memorised heal the cravings of the flesh Or curb the passions that lay us under the yoke Of what the wise call Fate? And lastly, how Shall ever learning help one glimpse Gopal Who resides not in the books but in one's soul? The sages who have realised Him have, Indeed, attested: "We have known the One Stationed beyond the mist of ignorance And to see Him is to achieve the Goal of goals:
To taste the Nectar of Immortality."
But what have you achieved and known in life?
You merely cite the testimony they gave
With an eloquence more sonorous than convincing.
The saints have seen; you only prate the news
Of their great vision and experience.
But can mere erudite talk that someone else
Has tasted honey help one ever to know
How honey tastes and thrills and fortifies?
Can quoting the experience of a sage
Afford you even a clue to the deep fulfilment
Which he won through direct experience?
(As the pundits, nonplussed, looked at one another And fidgeted and hummed and hawed in deep Embarrassment, the loyal devotees
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Of Mira, tickled, tittered again. She gave A beatific smile and her twin eyes Glistened with unshed tears as she resumed):
MIRA
But one who is touched by His own love, who's called By His Flame-flute does pass beyond all cults And the maya of words, words, words!
(With sudden animation)
But what have I
To do with the hollow drum of words — I who His Presence feel in the adytum of my heart? I assure you that my Friend and Mate Gopal Does come to play at hide and seek with me And sings and dances, too, with me, and daily Nay, hourly, teaches me the art of love. He knows, indeed, my countless flaws and foibles, My sins and lapses, falterings and stumblings;
But He also knows that I do cling to Him As my one and only life-line to salvation. I count the world well lost for Him and draw My every single breath from His love's breath And see at every step by His eyes' light And lean on Him and Him alone in life:
So He told me: I am His and He is mine.
(A hint of raillery creeps into her tones) I do know, sires, how limited is my knowledge;
I know I am weak and frail and helpless. Only One thing I know which you are yet to know, Which may I tell you in all humility?
FIRST PUNDIT (cuts in sarcastically)
Humility, indeed! One who presumes To bandy words with her superiors, Erudite elders versed in the mystic lore Of the Vedas! We will leave you to your fate And visit your temple nevermore. You are
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Beyond redemption.
SECOND PUNDIT (indignantly)
You are right. Why cry In the wilderness ? Come, friends, it is a sin To hear her denigrate the hoary wisdom Of our sacrosanct Vedas — we must ostracize her.
MIRA (folding her hands, deprecatingly)
I have said I plead guilty to the charge Of being untutored, unsophisticated. But how can it be a sin for one who is Not learned to talk of what one has, indeed, Experienced with one's every pore and cell? Besides, why must I retire into silence, Like guilty souls in torment, when I have Known and seen, day after marvellous day, What few have glimpsed in life? Sires, why must I, Who have been in the clasp of my Gopal, (The end and aim of even the greatest sages) Disclaim such an apocalyptic vision?
FOURTH PUNDIT But the Vedas —
MIRA (with a deprecating smile)
Woe is me! the old, old story! The Vedas speak of what was seen by the sages Who lived the Truth and so was authorised To testify to what they had realised. But those who never have glimpsed Gopal, alas, Fall only into the snare of make-believe, A maya of words which weaves a pitiful veil Of noisy pride to get one reconciled To a life of grievous gloom or phantom half-lights And still — such is the maya of grandiose words — That one who's domiciled in a land of dearth
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Unwittingly becomes its advocate,
Until he forgets that the soul's deep thirst
Can never be quenched by resonant quotations.
I claim I was answered by His Grace because
I did not seek Him in the world of words,
In overawing tomes of holy books,
Which our great forbears penned to help us follow
In their footsteps, but you prefer, alas,
To memorise them to mouth void shibboleths.
(with a sigh) But from my childhood, I yearned for one thing:
The Raasa Tryst with my one dream: Gopal, The savour of His love which no scholastic Can ever know through books. I was impelled By my deep thirst to seek His love's caress With every breath and throb of my lone heart. And so I only appealed in derelict tears To my one Beloved whose love's Flute I had answered, Who had wrenched me off my moorings, made me homeless Till I found my home in Him and, to my joy, Discovered that He can never stay hidden if one Cries out for His union, staking one's all for Him.
SECOND PUNDIT (a little impressed in spite of, himself)
You mean you really found Him — your Gopal Whom we call Krishna, the Lord Himself—the One Who is the Primal Cause of causes, the Lone Inviolate Light of lights, the One-in-all —
Yes, sire, 'twas He, the world's Evergreen Beloved, Who gave me asylum at His feet. You find This incredible perhaps because the authors Of the holy books omitted to put on record That He comes to ignorant women even though They have never sought Him in the way approved Of the Vedas. In life, you hold, the bygone sages'
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Pronouncements are the only beacons and so The zones their torches fail to illumine must be Scouted as undivine and non-existent.
(With a smile) How grand the verdict of your summit-wisdom:
"What bears not the Vedas' seal is a chimera!" But can it not be that life has not yet Been fully fathomed or mapped out by even The holiest scriptures like your hoary Vedas? (She draws a sigh)
But I'll bow down to you. Since you dismiss
My findings as invalid, I will not venture
To submit before your bench an evidence
So unorthodox and shocking. If you are loath
To listen — I shall be silent.
But I demur. For I do, mother, long to listen. Let them Depart in outraged majesty in a file, I propose to stay on to receive your blessing.
FOURTH PUNDIT (to the others, equally embarrassed) What shall we do?
The answer you'll find in the Vedas:
The frog thrives best in its little world — the well.
Silence! ... We might as well give her a chance. For after all, one should be kind.
FIRST PUNDIT (reluctantly)
As you wish. (turning to Mira, sententiously) We decide to give you a hearing. Tell us now
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What you meant when you said you knew one thing Which we are yet to know?
Wait — let me put in
A clause — to safeguard our resplendent status That we wise men are not committed ... ahem ... To anything ... and whatever you may urge Can make no difference to us ... since ... ahem... We know all there is to know on earth.
FIRST PUNDIT (shaking his fist at him) You ... you black sheep! You ... you shall pay for this —
FOURTH PUNDIT
Oh, let him be—a chimpanzee will grin, Dogs bark and insects screech.
(turning to Mira)
Now, Mira, tell us
What is it we know not and yet you know?
MIRA (with a faint smile flickering on her lips)
You know not, sires, that you go to Gopal As a daughter-in-law goes to her mother-in-law Who weighs her constantly, relentlessly, Upbraiding her whenever she is found wanting, And making an issue of her every stumbling. But I look to Him as a daughter does To her own mother in whose loving eyes A child is to be treasured, never judged Harshly as a delinquent brought to dock. The mother, too, desires that her children may Grow hour by hour into a perfect shape And would not let them stoop to unworthy acts Or have truck with the ones who are impure. She corrects and curbs, but all the time with love's Charity, understanding. She does, indeed,
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Chastise her child when it is called for — only
Never in the manner of a martinet
Or a stern judge. And this her daughter knows.
She knows: she never can grow old and ugly
In her mother's eyes, nor would she quail before her;
For she knows that from the moment she is born She's bound to her mother with the strongest tie:
The golden cord of love, a love that could Never misunderstand, still less denounce;
Gives but never expects to be repaid.
(The pundits glance at one another, looking somewhat
deflated)
SECOND PUNDIT (uncertainly) Does it... er ... mean ... do you imply ...
THIRD PUNDIT (chimes in breezily)
Perdition!
SECOND PUNDIT (in a towering rage) Behave yourself... or we will ostracize you.
FOURTH PUNDIT (impatiently)
Oh hold! Let us now hear her — for a change, A little tranquilly what she implies.
I imply that I approach my Gopal with Full faith in His all-comprehending love But you would treat Him — I'm amused to note - As though He were your mother-in-law and so You brood or wonder, argue or speculate What he is like and how you'd cross the hurdles He poses. I regard Him as my own Own mother and father in one — I am, I feel, The child of His dream, the apple of His eyes, The breath of His indulgent, loving heart.
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FIRST PUNDIT {flaring up again)
We wished to give you a hearing, but... humph! your ... Your subtle flings at us ...
MIRA (folding her hands)
Oh, do forgive one Who is unversed in social etiquettes. Believe me, I gave this simile not to have A fling at your deep dignity. I only Wanted to stress that I should have to act Utterly out of character were I To approach my Gopal with deep awe — because To me He came day after rapturous day As my Beloved Teacher who taught me only With His sweetness and His charm that beggar description. In sum, I submit that He came to greet me Like moon's kiss on eve's brow. 'Twas so I came To know through Love the miracle of His Love. (She shivers and then breaks out into song)
Daily because of thy love. Lord, clay flowers into rose:
Wan water-vapour, soaring, &s a regal rainbow glows, The dim worm is transformed into a radiant butterfly And night's dark pain dissolves in sungold laughter of
the sky.
THIRD PUNDIT (in tears')
How exquisite! What music, images, And, above all, expression!
FOURTH PUNDIT (reluctantly)
I must concede Music can move our hearts in a way our minds Can never understand nor reason explain.
SECOND PUNDIT (in a moved voice) I know not, mother, how, all on a sudden,
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My heart's subdued with tears of ecstasy! I sometimes felt of yore that all this vaunting About high scholarship and formal ethics Was hollow. But whenever a questioning Made me uneasy I would look away — Dreading to face the issue — to come to terms With my incipient malaise or, shall I say, Admonitory conscience? I am unsure. But now something incredible happened to me:
When you were singing of life's night of pain Melting in the sungold laughter of the sky, I saw, lo! on your Gopal's lips a faint But indubitable smile. I rubbed my eyes And looked again — when this mysterious voice (That often of old had warned me like a kind But stern friend's voice before I stifled it With all my erudition's studied folly) Aye, this familiar, long-lost angel voice Came to the fore again and whispered: "Do, For a change, give me a chance. I want to take You under my wing, but how can I — if you Elect to flock to phantom banners and idols!" And my heart was in a heave and I... I... I... (He paused to gulp his tears)
FOURTH PUNDIT (after struggling with himself, capitulates)
Well, it's remarkable ... for I, too, glimpsed Something inexplicable ... I saw her standing In an aura of blue light!
PUNDARIK (smiling)
And so you have To regret to own that this old priest before you Had not taken leave of his senses, after all?
FOURTH PUNDIT (unable to contain himself) Forgive, ) O mother, this your foolish son!
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How often have I not lectured on the Vedas'
Dictum that intellect nor learning nor
The claim to having heard deep words of wisdom
Can help one to attain the Lord — but only
The ones who are elected by His Grace
Can know His ultimate Self of Light and Love!
Nayamatma pravachanena labhyo
Na medhaya na vahuna shrutena Yamevaisha vrinute tena labhyas-
Tasyaisha atma vivrinute tanum shvam
But not till today's revelation could
I really grasp the meaning of this couplet.
So you, the elect of His Grace, do bless me
That I may never again put on my blinkers
Nor let my conceit build a wall once more
Between my soul and the Light I have now glimpsed.
FIRST PUNDIT (theatrically stopping his ears with both his hands)
Sa no buddhya shubhaya samyunaktu
O, Lord, for mercy's sake, do keep me anchored To good sense!
(to the other pundits accusingly)
Shame, shame, shame on all of you! To think that all we have been taught since childhood Should be thrown out to the four winds on an impulse Of hero — or shall we say heroine-worship?
(turning hotly on Mira) But 'tis you — you — who are the poisonous flux Which vitiates the atmosphere. So I Hold you to blame for all this heresy And folly that have gone to their heads, alas! And I warn you for the last time, Mira, now:
Playing with fire is not a harmless pastime! Beware! Such false claims must doom you, in the end,
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To irrevocable disaster. You are dancing
On the brink of a dark precipice, nor delude
Yourself that wise men can be taken in
By such transparent ruses. Still less can
The Lord Almighty, be duped by a slip
Of a capering priestess posing as His agent,
Missioned to dower the blind with summit-vision!
(he laughs contemptuously) Those who live in the Lord are shy, secretive And, loth to parade the high boons they have won, They dwell in caves, nor will, like you, set out With all this cajolery to catch the eye. Is it not written that one who attains His peace Is changed into a vast and tranquil ocean No deluge nor cateclysm can affect?
(sententiously starts declaiming)
Apuryamanam acalapratistham
Samudramapah pravishanti yadvat
(as Sanatan smiles, he turns on him in high dudgeon) Why do you grin — you who are versed in scriptures You should know better than to mock at wisdom! Did not the Gita enjoin on all aspirants To strive to attain the illuminate's sober poise, Scorning the levity of charlatans?
SANATAN (giving a bland smile)
My furious friend! Whatever little insight Has accrued to me at long last, I do owe To her, the maid of Brindavan, the Eternal Gopi whom they adore as Mira, the Queen, Who turned a mendicant in Gopal's Name. Aye, valiant friend! 'tis she who came to guide And show me the sunlit path of Love when I Was groping in the dark of pedantry,
The so-called jnana, waylost in the daedal
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Forest of cryptic words. Her Godrapt life,
A canticle of all-surrendering love,
Has served me, in the late phase of my Yoga,
As the ultimate commentary of the scriptures.
So why not ask her — when she can, in a moment,
Untie a knot which takes such scholars as we
Years to unloosen?
FIRST PUNDIT (with a grim smile)
I will take you at your word, Though I am no heroine-worshipper, I warn you, Nor susceptible to sentimental gush, Or the cult of lachrymose love. I can be only Convinced by real achievement — not tall claims.
(turning to Mira, grandiloquently) Mira, beware of the vulgar rabble — the fools Who fall at your feet and blubber through their tears Because you sing and sway in a trance of joy. At your peril entertain the gullible, To be, in return, idolized by them. We, the wise, demand indubitable proof That this your grandiose love has achieved wonders. So hedge not nor mouth cliches: we insist on A simple answer to a simple query:
If you are what you claim to be, to wit, One who has met the great Lord face to face, (The Unborn, Everliving One whom countless Sages and saints and seers have, in all climes, Hymned as the last Goal of evolving life, The Sentinel whose consciousness broods over The flux of Time and the vast, star-studded Space,) How can you stoop to sing and dance before All and sundry, a puppet of your emotions, Utterly powerless to contain yourself?
MIRA (trying in vain to repress a smile) 0 fabulous omniscience! Have you never
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Seen how a mountain-stream descends when snow Thaws on the heights — when gigantic swirling waters, In a rapturous canter to meet the viewless deep, Burst all embankments that stand in the way? 'Twas so His Peak Love rushed my love-starved soul, Flooded my life and swept away all dams Of social codes and moral interdictions. picture to yourself, sire, a sudden hurtling Avalanche of ecstasy shattering all Tradition-worshipped dogmas and taboos, And you will not find it in your gentle heart To condemn me for my uncontainable joy Which made me ride rough-shod over all man-made Edicts and bans. Remember Who flashed out Of the blue to court my hospitality In a beggar's hovel: 'twas He, my Gopal, Whose miracle Gleam transfigures oceaned glooms Into rich rapturous continents of light! Now tell me, when you meet such a glorious Being (The touch of Whose marvel feet makes deserts quiver Into song-gardens of amaranthine flowers) And are told He has come to stay with you As your heart's Guest forever, can you still Refrain from dancing and singing in ecstasy, To emulate the deportment of the ones Who nod or frown or doze in sombre grandeur Or tread the beaten track with faultless steps, Never once stumbling till they, in due course, Come to journey's end to merge back in the dark Of fitful sleep hereafter? (she rushes on in joy)
And so you see, Failing continually to conform To the laws laid down by the sober worldly-wise, I laugh and sing and dance before you all Because I have attained my dream: Gopal, The Evergreen, of fadeless loveliness
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Whose love, through beauty manifesting, leads To deathless bliss in our world of pain and strife.
(She points to the Image) I have achieved the Eternal Light of lights And housed in my heart as Guest the Primal Host Of the universe, an achievement envied of angels, A fulfilment even colossal seers and saints Have craved in vain for aeons! Thrice-blessed am I That the God of gods, beyond the reach of gorgeous Emperors, should have come to stay with me! How can you, sire, expect me, after this, To comport myself like matrons prim and staid?
(She claps her hands in glee, like a child)
(As Mira's ecstatic voice rose by and by In a mounting rush of mystic adoration, The expression on the irate Pundits face Underwent a gradual change. His angry eyes First lost their hard glint, then, as she raced on, The frown on his face gave place to a startled wonder And the tension of his face relaxed. He gazed From time to time at Gopal's face as Mira Pointed to Him in tremulous rapture. Then, As she emphasised her blessedness, he gave An involuntary shiver and stood rapt, Staring, like one bewitched, at Mira's Face.... Then as her voice trailed off, he faltered out:)
O mother, I know not ... how ... it is so strange... And incredible ... just now as I looked ... His face Shone with an unearthly lustre. And a voice ... An inner whisper ... spoke and ... how it, lo, Tore at my heartstrings ... Now that I know ... at least ... But no ... I only know that I have been A pedant half-wit rich but in sterile pride.
(He gulps his tears and resumes)
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That is why I ... presumed to question your ... Deep blessedness.
(He falls at her feet. She blesses him, after which he
rises and goes on, in tears.) Only ... mother ... an egotist never can see Truth in its true perspective. We all, alas, See in the measure we grow and so we fail To realise the crazy folly of pride.
(After a brief pause, suddenly blurting out) O mother, I saw behind you Radha's face!
MIRA (smiles') I know you did, my son, you are thrice-blessed.
FIRST PUNDIT (smiling through his tears)
I am, indeed ... because ... 0 mother, she came To convey to me her blessing ... through your touch! So the scales have fallen from my eyes at last. Only you ... who know all there is to know ... Must know how we grow to hug our folly... and how Our egos blind us in such subtle ways. And so, alas, we fail to see how we Learn seldom from the school of experience!
(with a sigh)
We read, indeed, of bliss but only know Brief joys which, too, alas, in this drab world, Are few and far between and have, besides, To be always bought with some pain or repining, Because our revels never redeem their pledges ... We are disenchanted and still... such is the maya Of pride.... We tell ourselves that all is well With the world and our blind world-enamoured selves.
(After a pause, with folded hands) Only, mother, may I ask one more question
To have my darkness redeemed by your light?
(Mira nods and smiles)
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FIRST PUNDIT (after a brie/pause a/hesitation)
I humbly want to ask: if our great Lord Has come to stay for ever in your heart, Then why must you still intermittently Cry out in pain? ... Why must your ecstasies Leave desolate legacies of gloom and fear?
MIRA {gazes tenderly at the Image for a few seconds, then
turns back to the Pundit) Let me tell you a mystic parable, my son.
(After a pause)
Once upon a time, in a far-off village, A destitute woman begged from door to door. They gave her alms, a pitiful quota was hers;
But she, poor starveling, somehow subsisted. Now once, as she returned to her hut, she was Startled to find a jewel in her sack:
An entrancing thing that sparkled, scintillated! She loved the strange self-luminous talisman Which transformed her hut into a paradise. She hugged it to her bosom, guarded it Jealously from all alien gaze till she Began to be obsessed by fears lest thieves' Should rob her of her one and the only treasure. For it was not an earthly jewel: it made Even dark clods and clay irradiant, As though by a magic as incredible As thrillingly indubitable!
(She gives a faint smile)
Now, sire, Tell me: can it be that you have to be told Why the beggar woman's heart would palpitate In fear lest a chance robber should pounce on her And wrest from her the jewel of jewels she had Received in token of God's Grace!
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I ... know Grace.
MIRA (cutting in, impetuously)
Pardon me, son! It is impossible For us to know Grace truly so long as We go on living tethered to happy homes, Basking in the sunshine of security. What His Grace is we cannot realise Save through a shipwreck of our hopes and dreams.
(Folding her hands and ranging with her glance the
faces of the Four Pundits)
Sires, you are leaders of light and knights of knowledge, Who are served by rich disciples, idolised By all and sundry for your genius, Eloquence, strength and personality:
How can you ever understand what has
Transfigured a lost derelict like Mira?
I had no talents to commend myself
To the One on high and yet He came to me!
I often ask myself: "Can this be real?
For suppose it were a make-believe, a phantom
Touch of an angel who, like lightning, flashes
To vanish again! Who knows?" In dread I cry
Lest I should lose once more my nonpareil
Jewel of jewels, the Lord who came to make
His home with me — my dream Beloved, whose
One little smile can fill the boundless Vast
With trillions of stars and galaxies,
Whose one glance can transform the dreary deserts
Into an Eden laughing with fadeless flowers.
(Her voice quavers and eyes glisten, but she quickly
masters her emotion and resumes) Sires, only those who have trudged on leaden feet Life's tortuous ways and sloughs of dark despond;
Who have borne the cruel flails of Destiny And bled through stabs of traitor Calumny;
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Who staked their all at one throw of the dice, Then lost all to be jeered at by the world, And who still can nevermore hark back to the voice Of calculating prudence playing safe:
Aye, only such paupers know the meaning of Grace.
(She breaks into a smile of irony) Those whose houses are fenced with fortune's ramparts Can never know the supreme bliss of His Deep clasp of tenderness. He who on earth Has all can never win the One who is Beyond all. He comes only to embrace Those who have none but Him to turn to ... Sire! I cannot speak for others. I can tell Only of what I know; so I can say That His help came to me in the midnight hour Of abysmal helplessness. And then I thrilled And asked myself over and over again:
"Can it, indeed, be true — the Blessed Lord's Answering the lone call of derelict Mira And making her the recipient of His Love? Was it not, indeed, incredible that I So recalcitrant to His Light should be touched By His resplendent Grace to incandescence? Nor could I believe this till, one day, the heart Of the hoary mystery was revealed to me.
FIRST PUNDIT (eagerly) The hoary mystery? Of what?
Of His Grace,
His alchemist compassion which brings off Divine miracles in a human world With just one touch of the mystic Flame of Love The all-transfiguring, dross-intolerant Flame;
And this I understood when, one day, I Witnessed an accidental forest fire.
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(After a pause for breath)
I saw gnarled, ugly trees and withered grass,
Sere leaves, dead twigs and miserable shrubs,
All came to glow in a moment in the fire
That touched them to its hue of liquid gold!
Even so, came my Lord to me, and then,
By the magic of His Flute's flame-alchemy,
He performed the miracle and kindled in me
The resistless conflagration of His love.
(Mira now paused and then, with folded hands Upgazed at Krishna's Image, as pearl-like tears Streamed freely down her beautiful cheeks. Then, swaying, She chanted in a world-oblivious rapture:)
Mira {sings) 0 Peak of Love, O Deep of Grace,
0 all-transfiguring mystic Fire ! Who dancest thy victorious way
To golden all — clods, murk and mire !
Do I not know that Mira was A drop athirst and thou the Deep ? Hail, marvel Grace, who comst at last
To me, thy slave. Love's troth to keep !
(Mira pauses in tears and looks at Sanatan who beckons to her. She comes and falls at his feet. He places both his hands on her head in token of blessing.)
SANATAN (in a thick voice)
We are all blessed to have seen what few Have seen on earth. And even among those Who have seen how few do truly understand You who are missioned with the Lord's behest Inviolate our atheist world with your Inviolate purity outflowering in A carnival of heavenly songs! My child!
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Your life is a baptism of Heaven's own fire That burns away earth's dusk of centuries And, like a wizard, turns all obstacles Into a crystal stairway to His Home!
MIRA (in tears, holding his eyes) Bless me Gurudev, who led me to Him.
SANATAN (giving a radiant smile)
Oh, need you ask my blessing? Did I not Bless you years ago — when you were a sweet Child of delight and even then you sang And danced to invoke His light — although you knew not Your stainless self of Gopi-minstrelsy.
(His eyes glisten)
But who am I to bless one who is blest By the deathless Minstrel-swain of Brindavan? I only pray: may your great life be a beacon Of all-fulfilling Grace that outlaws doubt And initiates us in Radha's Love, revealing Her everliving soul in each of us, Singing her way to Him. You flow ever on, A naming flood that sweeps away all dams And hales even wan clods to be merged in the blue Deep of His compassion where all is Light And Love is coronated on Beauty's throne, The Brindavan of bliss and harmony!
(Mira rises as all prostrate themselves at her feet; then they, too, rise, including the Pundits who start singing with her alternately, as tears course down their cheeks)
MIRA (singing with the others)
All, all, 0 friend, is a play of love
He sustains sleeplessly, And binding us all with His love's chain,
He dances in harmony.
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In love still rise the moon and stars
And the great sun gleams in love:
In love the oceans, rolling, glass
The sky-blue Lover above.
The clouds pour rain in love and the bird
In love in the woodland sings And the shy buds laugh as smiles on them
Aloft the King of Kings.
In love woos Him the saint, and the sage Merges in love in Him:
The Yogi renounces all in love
And in love He comes to redeem.
Love is the eternal law of life,
In love begs alms the Queen, And Mira lost the world for the love
Of her Lord, the Evergreen.
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