Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol. 5


Old Bengali Mystic Poems

 

I

 

The body is a tree; it has five branches.¹

The mind is a restless thing and Death

            has entered into it.

Make the mind firm – that is the measure

            of the Great Happiness.

Luy says, "you must ask your Guru if you

            want to know."

Of what use is trance, if through grief

            and joy you move to death.

Pass out of self-will's bonds, out of the

            yearnings for senses' satisfaction.

Hold to your flanks the two wings of

emptiness.²

Luy says, "I have seen in my consciousness:

The twin breaths³ are the stools upon which

          I am firmly seated."

 

 

NOTES

 

1. Five branches – five senses.

2. One must have wings of emptiness – the empty consciousness i.e., pure consciousness emptied of all movements – to soar into the high heavens of Nirvana.

3. The breath, embodying the vital energy. One movement controls the right side of the adhara, and the other controls the left side – the twin movements of knowledge and action. It refers also to the double action of consciousness in yogic practice – the ascent and the descent.

 

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II

 

A tortoise has yielded milk the jar cannot contain¹

And a crocodile has eaten all the tamarind up the tree²!

O Fair Vagrant, the open yard is your home.³

At midnight a burglar has run away with your ear-ring;

The father-in-law is asleep, the daughter-in-law awake;

The ear-ring a thief has taken, where to find it?

At daytime the daughter-in-law fears even a crow.6

At night she is daring with desire.

Thus the hymn Kukkuripad sings­ –

One in a million can seize it in one's heart.

 

NOTES

 

1. Tortoise – the hoarded consciousness above (Hiranyagarbha) Milk – light and delight

Jar – the human receptacle (Jiva-ādhār)

2. Crocodile-the amphibian deity of life and body – the vito­physical power and energy.

Tamarind – the fruit of life.

The higher showers its Grace upon the soul, but the soul is too small to receive the Grace fully.

The lower enjoys its own Karma in its own domain. We may remember the two golden birds of the Upanishads.

3. Between the two what is the soul to do? He (rather she) is neither here nor there. The open place is her home.

4. She has lost her inner Hearing, her Guidance. The Enemy has stolen it.

5. The guardian of the ordinary consciousness. The soul is the daughter-in-law. She is wedded into this house (the human receptacle) – it is not her own house, she comes from elsewhere.

6. Day – the light of ordinary consciousness – in which birds of ignorance revel.

7. Night – when the inner consciousness is awake and the soul's ardent yearnings are in play.

 

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III

 

She is the common ale-wife, she goes into both the rooms

She binds the ale tight with thongs of bark..²

Oh, fix the Simplicity and bind the ale tight

So mayst thou be ageless and deathless and carry solid shoulders

The ten doors are marked:

The customer observes and comes by himself:

The wine has been poured into the sixty-four jars6

Once the customer enters, there is no more exit for him.

There is one jar and there is one thin Spout.

Biruba says: steady your move.9

 

NOTES

 

1. The divine soul or consciousness in man embraces both the sphere of consciousness, the higher and the lower.

2. That central consciousness hoards the delight, keeps it tight bound in the depth of the heart, so that it may not be spilt and spoilt – the material sheath with its teguments and ligaments must be strong and make a resisting armour.

3. The supreme consciousness is simplicity itself. What can be more simple than Zero (Nirvana)? One who follows, adheres to simplicity is the Simple Man (Sahaja). This simple single consciousness is to be affirmed, firmly established in this material frame, the body – which is to be made fit so that it may hold that delightful consciousness.

4. The ten sense-instruments (indriyas) through which the con­sciousness passes in and out. They are to be vigilant and stamped with the seal of the supreme consciousness.

5. The customer is the divine self, the true individual in man.

6. The complete number of the principles or elements of the human vessel.

7. Once you have the divine delight and enter into it you can no longer be satisfied with anything else less.

8. Truth is one and there is only one expression – that of the straight and narrow path.

9. Drink but do not be drunk – steady and balanced and firm must be the frame that holds and expresses the divine consciousness and delight.

 

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IV

 

O my mate, press triply and embrace me fast.¹

The lotus and the thunder shall meet and I shall

pass beyond time.²

O my mate, without you I cannot live a moment.

I drink from your lips the very sap of the lotus.

What I cast upward, my love, cannot be kept down here below.³

Climb towards the jewel centre and enter into the beyond.

The room of the mother-in-law is under lock and key

Cut away the wings, the sun and the moon.6

Gundari says I am a heroic reveller

Between the man and the woman the victory banner is uplifted.

 

NOTES

 

1. Triply – mind, life and body – bh >ū >r-bhuvar-svar

2. Lotus – the Heart Centre – the Divine within; Thunder – the Crown Centre – the Divine above. >

3. The Consciousness – moves upward, it cannot be tied down upon the earth.

      4. Jewel Centre – the highest centre at the top of the head re­presenting the highest seat of mind beyond which is the Vast and Infinite Consciousness.

5. Mother-in-law – ordinary consciousness.

6. Sun and Moon – day and night, the cycle of ordinary con­sciousness.

7. Purusha and Prakriti in right relation means the victory of the Supreme Consciousness

 

V

 

The world flows fast like a river deep and sombre.

On either side muddy banks, in between fathomless depths.

For the sake of the Law Chatila has built the bridge

So that travellers to the other shore may easily cross over

The tree of delusion has been cut down and the planks tied

together

Affirm the single, use the axe of Nirvana;

Once on the bridge look not to the right nor to the left.

 

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The awakening is near, do not wander far.

O people who want to go to the other shore.

Ask of Chatila – the Master has no peer.

 

NOTES

 

Life is a dangerous river. You have to cross it to go over to the other shore of safety, the spiritual life. But once in it, you are doomed. You are drowned in its fathomless depths or if you try to clamber up its sides you are bogged down in their sticky mud. The one thing to do is to build a bridge – it can be only out of the materials of life itself. Life's experiences form the materials. They are trees, as it were, luxuriant in growth. You have to cut them down, dry them – they must be dead before they can be used as planks for the bridge. The sharp edge of a concentrated consciousness – the sense of the unreality and inanity of this existence – is the axe for cutting the growth of life.

 

VI

 

Whom do you accept? Where do you cling?

A great call encircles me all around.

The deer is an enemy to himself, because of his own flesh.¹

Bhushuk is a hunter, he never relaxes a moment.

But the deer touches not grass, drinks not water. ²

And he knows not the abode of his mate.

But the mate tells him, "O darling, listen, leave the forest

and go forth".

The galloping deer now shows not his hooves.

Bhushuk says: It is a thing that does not enter into the head

of the deluded!

 

NOTES

1. The deer is the individual self; his mate, the doe, is the secret deity, the conscious being in the heart, the immanent divine consciousness.

2. He gives up the joys of ordinary life.

 

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VII

 

Illusion and Delusion – the twin blocked the way;

This has confused the mind of Kanhu – ­

Where can he go and live?

They who see with the mind stay away.

Three are there: although three, the three are one.

Kanhu says, the world is cut away from him –

Whoever that came has gone:

Because of this coming and going Kanhu is confused.

It is visible, the city of victory is near to Kanhu.

Yet, Kanhu says, "It does not enter into my heart!"

 

NOTES

The goal is the city of God – the city of victory for Kanhu. He must go there and live for ever. But with the active mind, with its illusions and delusions, none can enter. Illusion is to see a thing which is not there, delusion is to see one thing for another. They remain outside, Kanhu sees the world abolished for him, the three worlds of the mind, the life and the body which although three are really one – their truth is behind and beyond in the unity. That destination seems to be near and yet Kanhu has not completely entered into it.

 

VIII

 

The boat of Grace is filled with gold,

There is no room for silver in it,

Kamali rows towards the heaven;

How is it then that the past life returns again?

Pull out the peg, spread out the rigging;

Row on, Kamali, and ask of the true Guru.

The helm is not there? How to ply and who can ply?

Press evenly to the right and to the left as you go:

So do you find on the way the Great happiness.

 

NOTES

Through the supreme Grace your being carries only gold – pure consciousness. The impure, mixed worldly consciousness is the silverware

 

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– it must not be allowed to return. With this pure Consciousness firm in you, let yourself go ahead. Do not turn to the right, nor to the left – go forward keeping a watchful eye all around.

>

 

IX

 

The solid stake of Dual Consciousness Purusha and Prakriti

is broken, .

Broken all the bondages that encircle:

Kanhu revels drunk with the sweetest wine,

He enters Self-born's lotus-grove and attains the calmness;

Even like the elephant in rut for his mate

He rains Truth's own realities.

All the sixfold movements in his nature are purified:

Whether in the Presence or in the Absence even

            the hair's end does not stir. ­

From the ten sides the ten delightful treasures

            have been gathered, .

To capture the Consciousness, as one does an elephant

            with ease.

 

NOTES

 

All the ties of the world are broken. Kanhu is free, he is free in the Supreme Ecstasy.

 

X

 

Your hut stands outside the city,

my untouchable maid;

The bald Brahmin passes sneaking close by.

O my maid, I would make of you my companion.

Kanhu is a Kapali, a Yogi, he has no disgust

and he has no robe on.

There is one lotus and it has sixty-four petals:

Upon that the maid will climb with this poor self

and dance.

a my Beauty, I ask you frankly:

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Whose boat is it by which, you come and go?

My outcaste maid sells twines and

weaves baskets­ –

The actor's make up for your sake I throwaway!

You are the maid, I am the Kapali;

For your sake I have embraced the garland of bones.

My love churns the lake and devours the lotus-stalk­ –

I will beat and batter you, take your life out of you!

 

PARAPHRASE

 

The inner being – the soul – lives outside the pale of the ordinary consciousness. It is, as it were, an outcaste from the civilised, cultured, moral, ceremonial social mentality.

Even so, the best minds there, the Brahmin, harbour some- times a secret hankering for the outcaste Beauty.

But only a Kapali – an extreme Tantrik of the left – an outcaste himself, free and nude in every respect, having no bondages, nor prejudices nor preoccupations nor presumptions nor pretensions, whether of the mind or the life or the body, can aspire to be the fit companion of the deity within.

He can then revel with his Soul Beauty, the Divinity which is at the core of the heart, the full-blown lotus of the divine consciousness with its sixty-four petals of integral delight in­fusing its fragrant vibration into every nook and corner of the adhara from the crown of the head to the tip of the toe.

Yes, one must give up all, all worldly conventions and respectabilities. The Kapali has given up all that for the sake of his divine companion and chosen her life of austere labour and renunciation, outside the pale of genteel falsehood and Ignorance.

The soul comes down and enters into the muddy pool of earthly life. She seeks there the lotus of immortality that grows and blooms there in the mud. She seizes it and devours it with mad eagerness.

The aspirant too joins her in the battle of life, he battles with her also to win her, and win her gift of immortality. >

 

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He is a violent warrior (Kapali) and seeks to wrest Heaven by violence.

 

XI

 

The central cord is set firm in its frame;

And in the heart the soundless drum

resounds valiantly;

Kanhu the Kapali, the yogi, is engaged in his rites.

He wanders in the city of his body

in perfect identity;

The duals – vowels and consonants – are like

tinkling bells and anklets on his feet;

The sun and the moon are his carvings.

Love and hate and delusion are burnt to ashes.

He has put on the pearl-necklace

of Supreme Liberation;

He has slain the mother-in-law and the sister-in-law

   who held the house­ –

Indeed Kanhu has slain maya and become Kapali.

 

NOTES

 

The central cord: the cords (nadi) are the lines or channels of psycho-vital forces that govern the human organism, control the general functions of the body. These lines or channels are sometimes identified with the nervous system but they are more subtle than the material substance, more vital than physical. Their effective expres­sion, their principal agency in the physical is the respiratory system. Their numbers are variously counted, sometimes sixty-four, sometimes thirty-four, but the principal ones are three. These form a trinity and follow the line of the spinal cord. They are the famous 'Ida', 'Pingala' and 'Susumna.' Ida and Pingala are on either side of the spinal cord, the central one being the Susumna. The two on either side are the ascending and the descending lines, (sometimes they are represented as the twins, knowledge and power); the central holds the balance between the two, representing the consciousness of unity or synthesis. These are the triple forces -that control the breath and are made use of in Hathayoga – the intaking, the outgoing and the holding in of >

 

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the breath (Purak, Rechak and Kumbhak); these are described as the means of controlling and matsering the life-force, Prana.

The two lines on either side of the central one form a circulatory system, distributing the forces through the body; the central one, as I said, balancing the two, maintains the poise; it has also a special function of its own not only to guide the forces around itself but also to direct them upward. Along with the physico-vital movement there is also a psychological movement, a movement of consciousness that establishes harmony among the forces around and also rises upward and through the crown of the head goes beyond. The whole operation may be transcribed as a movement of consciousness or consciousness­ force (chit-tapas) seeking to establish a new purified order in the human system in relation to a higher order.

 

XII

 

I play chess upon the board of Grace:¹

With the consciousness of the Guru one wins the world-game.

The two were removed and the King taken prisoner. ²

The Guide directing Kanhu came by the city of victory.³

The first thing to do, pursue and kill the pawns.

Then lift the Bishop and kill the five;

By the Queen the King is dethroned, disabled,

the world-power is won.6

Kanhu says, "I am an expert in chess:

And I count and capture all the sixty-four squares.

NOTES

 

1. The Grace abounding spread everywhere, which always helps the sadhak and ensures the victory.

2. Two = Duality (dvandvas). One must be dvandvatita, beyond the dualities and divisions to find the supreme unity.

King == the Ego (ahamāra)

3. Guide = Antaryāmin, the Inner Ruler.

4. Pawns = ignorant instincts. Samskāras.

5. Bishop = Indian term 'tusker' (elephant) which means material power.

Five = the senses.

 

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6. Queen = the Divine Consciousness-Power. Chit-Shakti.

King = the ignorant being (Purusha) that normally rules the ignorant nature.

7. 64. squares = fullness, integrality of life. Kali, Mother Nature, is said to have 64 yoginis, powers and instruments. There are also 64 arts (kalas) embellishing a full life.

 

XIII

 

The threefold adherence is the boat and there are

            eight rooms in it.¹

My own body is the Compassion, the dwelling

            inside is emptiness. ²

I have crossed the world-ocean as through a

            vain dream.

When within the boat, my mind dwells on the

waves as a witness:

The five luminous Beings are made the oars;³

Ply your boat, this body of yours, O Kanhu, through

the mazes of Maya:

Touch and taste and smell shall remain as they are,

Even like a sleepless dream.

With his consciousness holding the helm through

            the Void,

Kanhu moves towards the confluence of the Supreme

            Delight.

 

NOTES

 

1. Threefold Adherence: to the Truth, the Guru, and the Divine Family (Dharma, Buddha, Samgha).

Eight Rooms = the seven planes of consciousness (Sat-chit­ananda-mahas-manas-prana-anna) and the Supreme. >

2. The Buddha consciousness: within, it is nothingness, outside it is compassion incarnate.

3. luminous beings = illumined senses.

4. sleepless = conscious, not unconscious, vigilant. dream = unreality,' from the spiritual consciousness.

 

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XIV

 

Oh! the boat plies between Ganga and Yamuna.

The Sea-elephant lies there plunged,

            he ferries easily the yogi across.

Oh my mate, ply on, oh, ply on, my love,

            it is late on the way.

Through the Grace of the Guru's feet

            I will reach again the city of Victory.

Five oars are rowing, the ropes are tied

            to the peg in the rear.

Emptiness is the pan, bale out the water with it

so that no chink permits a drop.

The sun and the moon are the agents that create and destroy.

Neither to the right nor to the left look for the way­ –

            Row on at ease.

She takes nor dole nor obole, she ferries you

            of her own will.

One who rides a chariot and knows not how to ply a boat

            wanders from shore to shore.

 

NOTES

 

Ganga and Yamuna: the upward and the downward currents of consciousness and force. The ascending current leads the being to the higher and higher levels, while the descending current brings the riches from above into the lower regions. The companion who is with you and helps you through the journey is your inner deity represented here as the sea-elephant.

This is a familiar image in the orthodox Tantra. It also represents the Purusha-Prakriti play. Tantra speaks of the confluence of the Ganga and Yamuna where one is to seize by violence the divine damsel.

Sri Aurobindo refers to the same dual phenomenon as "aspiration from below" and "Grace from above". Emptiness or Neutral: the original word "pulinda" is taken by the Sanskrit commentator as representing the neuter. Evidently it means the Void in which all creation ceases, the sun and the moon being the motors of creation

 

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XV

 

You seek to weigh the true reality

of your self-experience:

But what is beyond ken leaves no trace for recognition.

Whoever went the straight upward way

     came to the end of all ways.

O fool, move not from shore to shore,

            there is a straight road in the world.

May no curve turn you aside, O child,

            the King's way is covered with velvet.

Lo, the ocean of illusions and delusions

            and you know neither its end nor its bottom:

 

No boat nor raft is in sight­ –

            what an error not to ask it of the Guru!

A bare expanse, no frontier anywhere!

            Oh! make no error in your going.

Here are the eight great accomplishments

            for one who goes the straight way.

Leave all other ways, right or left – ­

            says Shantipada in brief­ –

Close your eyes and go the way that has

            no steps, nor shrubs nor herbs!¹

        ¹ A smooth, clean pathway.

 

XVI

 

The soul's cry, like the roar of a dark cloud,

            fell upon the triple¹ altars:

The terrible Adversary² heard it and fled

            with all his cohort.

The Conscient Being like a mad elephant

rushed out

And in his thirst began churning the high heavens.³

The twin chains – virtue and sin – he tore off

and uprooted the pegs:

He reached the top heaven and entered into Nirvana.

He is drunk with the supreme Wine, oblivious of

     all the three worlds.

 

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Master of the five agents, none is against.

Burning with the hot rays of the sun

he dives into the heavenly Ganga.6

Mahinda says, "Yes, I entered here and lost sight of all else."

 

NOTES

 

1. triple – mind, life, body.

2. Adversary – Maya.

3. heavens – the mind – churning in order to go through.

4. Bhutas; elements or indriyas (senses).

5. Sun of the Truth-Consciousness.

6. Ganga = Supreme Delight.

 

XVII

 

The sun is the gourd-shell,

the moon is the string tied to it;

The heart's silence is the rod,

and the ascetic woman does the rest.

            O my mate, Heruka is playing on the Veena;

            The Voice with its stringed melody

flashes forth the compassion

Vowels and consonants form the twin rows of cadence,

The bridge, elephant-shaped, marks the equal enjoying.

As the fingers press tight upon the palm,

All the thirty-two notes ring out and spread everywhere:

The Deity dances, the Goddess sings,

the Buddha play is played out.

 

 

NOTES

 

Dried gourd is used as the base or hub of the instrument.

Sun is the Supreme Knowledge, moon is the Supreme Delight.

The creation is a stringed musical instrument. Knowledge is its base, the delight is the row of strings tied to the base, the inner silence is the body (rod) on which the strings are laid. The woman is the inspiration of the inner soul, creating the music, she is the mate of the singer, the poet himself. What kind of music is it? It is the music

 

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of the Void pouring out the light of compassion all over the creation. The strings are in two layers; the vowels (beginning with a – alpha series) are the top series, the consonants the series below (Indian K series, European beta series). That marks the echoing and the re­-echoing of the melody, also the right hand and the left hand move­ments of the consciousness (Knowledge and Power) according to the occultists – it means the total encircling consciousness, the global music. The bridge tightens and maintains the poise of the strings. We may remember here the two subtle nervous lines of 'Ida' and 'Pingala' and the middle one, 'Sushumna' that balances the two. The psychological sense is that the dualities of the world-experience are resolved in the consciousness of the sadhak by a supreme sense of equality. The elephant may mean the strength of physical resolution. The fingers pressing indicate the same thing, the pressure of almost physical consciousness to bring out the vast music that is Nirvana. The Gods and Goddesses are all happy for the curtain is rung down on the play, it is the end – Nirvana.

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XVIII

 

All the three worlds I have moved through at ease

And now I am fast asleep revelling in the supreme happiness.

O my woman, how playful you are!

On either side the troop of caste people

And in the middle this outcaste Kapali.

O woman, you have upset everything;

Without rhyme or reason you have shelved the moon away.

Some call you a harlot,

But the wise wear you as a necklace.

Kanhu sings: she is a lustful outcaste,

And a greater wanton there is none.

 

NOTES

 

You have to cross the three worlds – physical, vital and mental, pass through the three states of consciousness – jāgrat (waking), swapna (dreaming) and susupta (sleeping)-to enjoy the transcendent delight. It is the ecstasy of union with one's soul, the divine Beloved secreted within our inner heart. This divinity, this beloved deity is utter

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freedom – no mental reservations or restrictions, no vital preferences or prejudices, no physical rules or regulations.

 

 

XIX

 

Birth and Death are the drum and the kettle,

Mind and Life are the cymbals and tambours:

The bugles blow vying with peals of vivat.

Lo, Kanhu goes to marry his bride.

This marriage will bring him a new birth,

The dowry being the supreme states of consciousness.

The day and the night pass in the game of enjoyment,

In the company of Yoginis till the dawn breaks.

One who is attached to the outcaste woman

Never leaves for a moment the maddening intoxicant.

 

NOTES

 

Outcaste – because she is cast out of the normal human conscious­ness, which does not recognise the worth of such a status. Woman – because it is Power, Shakti and Delight (ananda). Yoginis – all the attendant powers that aid and vivify the game.

 

XX

 

I am she the desireless, my spouse is the Void:

The knowledge I carry is beyond words.

O Mother, as I cast my look into the womb,

it all burst forth­

But what I wanted here is not here.

The first-born out of me is a mass of desires:

That too vanished as its life-line was pursued to the end.

A new youthfulness I achieved

The original spearhead did the killing;

Kukkuripada says: stable now is the world­ –

And he who knows here understands is a hero here.

 

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NOTES

 

This poem or song is an outright cryptogram. It speaks of mysterious things in an even more mysterious way. First of all, we must note that the poet is a woman. She calls herself kukkuri. But why of all names a "bitch"? Well, she is in good company. One remembers the Vedic Sarama or Sarameya. The West too has its Hound of Heaven. Only the term here has been put in its vernacular form. Anyhow it is a yogini who embodies or represents the divine Being, nairatma devi, as the Buddhist commentator says.

The opening lines have a clear Vedic ring, they take us back to the famous Devi Sukta where the poetess – there too it is a Rishika, Vak or Vagambhrini – feels herself one with the Supreme Shakti and declares her mightinesses.

Here also the woman-singer, filled with the divine afflatus, intones her inexpressible experiences. Her individual consciousness is identi­fied with the universal Mother consciousness. And as such while she casts her glance into herself, into the depth of her womb, she finds the entire universe there and it comes out in a burst. But she notes that the first creation is only a world of the mere senses, the world of desires and it was not what she wanted. Therefore she severed the life-line that held it – as though the umbilical cord – by a stroke of the concentrated luminous energy that her consciousness was. So the wrong manifestation, the false world (of Maya and Mara) dissolved. and disappeared. And in its stead the true, the world of truth – that is the void – was firmly established, never to move or change. The process is a difficult path and only a heroic soul can go through it.

 

XXI

 

The night is dark, the mouse stirring:

Immortality is his food and he takes it.

Slay the mouse, O Yogi, the mouse that is like the wind.

So may he stop his coming and going.

The mouse pierces into the earth, he digs a hole.

Restless is the black mouse, be firm and kill it.

Black is the mouse; it is not visible for its colour.

When it ascends to the sky, then it enters into

a mindless meditation.

 

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The mouse is restless; it is at rest when it has the

consciousness of the Great Master.

When its wandering ceases, then only,

Bhushuka says, all its bond ages break away.

 

NOTES

 

This poem presents a simpler allegory and expresses a more familiar experience of the spiritual life.

The mouse is the ignorant being, the small being of ignorance­ – the restless desire – soul full of hunger and hankerings – moved by the untamed vital urge ('the wind'). It is difficult to spot it, because it is a black thing moving in blackness – ignorance enveloped in ignorance. Tamo asit tamasa gudham. It burrows a hole in the earth consciousness, enters into the basic inconscience, steals all the light and happiness from above and hides them in the underground darkness. No spiritual realisation can come and stay unless this nibbling enemy is tracked and brought to light. The Veda gives a similar image. The panis, the dark Asuras seize even the sun and store it away in their secret caverns. Indra, the lord of the Divine Mind, has to come and with his fulgurating thunderbolt pierce the hills – the earth-built consciousnes and rescue and release the Light. Even so, here the poet says, the mouse, the ignorant consciousness, must rise into the sky of the luminous mindlessness, attain a steadfast concentration, then it will lose its normal restlessness; when it is filled with the consciousness of the true Guru, the divine Master, then it becomes stable and tran­quillised – it is no more fidgety bound in its inferior consciousness – its bondages snap, it is free. The little ignorant being of small mind is freed into the luminous vastness of the Buddha-consciousness. Then only can he taste of the nectar of immortality for which he yearned even in his ignorant states.

 

XXII

 

You build up yourself your birth and death.

You create yourself your illusory bondage.

We know not what is beyond thought, we know not

how birth and death and rebirth occur:

 

As is the birth, even so is death, there is no difference

between the dead and the living.

One who is afraid here of birth and death,

One who hankers for the alchemy of delight,

One who wanders about in the three worlds­ –

Such people can never be deathless and ageless.

Does action come from birth or does the birth

come from action?

Saraha says, that law is beyond the reach of thought.

 

XXIII

 

Bhusuk, if you go ahunting, do not fail

to kill the five creatures.¹

Be single-minded as you enter the lotus grove. ²

Like one not alive, for whom death has come,³

Bhusuk also has lost his flesh, he enters the lotus grove.

So have you spread your illusive net and caught the

deer that is Illusion.

It is with the consciousness of the Guru that you have

understood whose is the story and what it is!

 

NOTES

 

1. Five creatures – the five senses.

2. Lotus grove – the divine Consciousness.

3. When one enters the divine Consciousness one becomes dead to the world, to the life of flesh.

4. Illusion – the life of the flesh.

5. Story – the Story of the Soul, the soul's union with the Divine.

 

XXIV

 

[The original text of these two pieces is missing. The text is available only in its Tibetan translation, which was translated again into Bengali. The Bengali version is translated here into English in its turn].

 

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The moon rises, so shines the soul in its kingship:

The dark ignorance is dispelled by the Guru's words,

            and all the senses dissolve in the Sky.

Heaven's seed goes back into the heavens

            and sprouts, and spreads its shadow over the three worlds.

The Sun rising, the night ends and all the earth's

            delusion dissolves.

The Swan-King takes in only the pure water,

            so here too is taken in, Kanhu says, earth's pure rasa.

 

XXV

 

How does the Great Law arise? How is it established?

            The Lightning-centre¹ alone can tell.

Five are the epochs² of Time, the robe is woven into

            its warp and woof.

I am the weaver,³ the threads are of me

            yet I know not the kind and quality.

The carpet spread is three cubit and a half long:

            it extends into the three worlds:

The whole sky is woven out into the robe.

 

NOTES

 

1. The Lightning-centre: the Divine in the heart.

2. Five epochs: the five senses out of which is made the world of experiences that the soul puts on as its garb.

3. The weaver: the soul or self. It weaves the world upon its sense­ experiences, it weaves out also the infinite space of Shunya or Nirvana.

4. The human body is the robe and it extends infinitely (that is to say, in its consciousness) and melts into the Void.

 

XXVI

 

The cotton is beaten and beaten into fleecy shreds;

            The shreds are beaten into nothingness:

Even then the source is not reached,

            says Shanti, however much one may think of it. ¹

 

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The cotton is beaten into shreds

and the shreds are collected into nothingness.

Moving into nothingness I abolished myself.

The path is muddy, neither side is visible:²

Shanti says, there is no passage even for a hair to enter.³

It is neither the cause nor the effect­ –

such is the argument,

Shanti declares from his own experience.

 

 

NOTES

 

1. In spite of our efforts to think to the contrary.

2. Narrow is the passage to Truth.

3. Normally one argues from cause to effect, or goes back from effect to cause. Here neither is there.           

 

 

XXVII

 

The whole midnight the lotus blooms:¹

Thirty-two sisters (yoginis) are there,

their limbs rejoice. ²

The moon follows the path of the Mother:

She indeed speaks to the One for the riches of delight:

The moon moves on and enters into Nirvana, ³

The Goddess of the lotus bears the lotus on the lotus ten:

Th delight of cessation carries no sign, it is all pure.

He who understands this is the wise one here.

Bhusuku says, "I have understood through union,

Through the play of the Great Delight, the Supreme

Beatitude.

 

NOTES

 

1. Midnight: the absence of the ordinary daylight consciousness, entry into inner consciousness.

     Lotus:      the inner consciousness and being.

2. Sisters:     the powers that control the ādhāra: 32, perhaps body, life, mind, and each containing

                      five jñānendriyas and five karmendriyas plus the one above and the one

 

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below (Purusha and Prakriti); the Vedas also speak of ten sisters.

3. Moon:     the being of delight.

 

 

XXVIII

 

Tier upon tier the hills arise,

            there dwells the forest girl;

She wears the peacock feather in her hair,

            and around her neck the garland of gunja flowers.

 

The forest-man is mad, he is wild:

Oh, do not worry, I implore you:

Your own house-wife is there, her name, beauty pure and simple.

Varied trees are in flower, their branches reach out to the skies.

The lone forest-woman wanders in this woodland;

            her ear-rings dangle, her arms carry the thunder-bolt:

The cot of triple substance is put in place

            and the forest-man spreads his bed in great joy.

The forest-man, a hooded passion, and the luminous Nought

            a harlot pass the Night in love's revel.

In his heart he tasted of betel and camphor in glee;

the lovely lady, the Void Selflessness –

her arms round his neck he passed the whole night in revel!

 

The Master's word is the bow,

            hit the mark with the arrow of your mind:

Aim with the one single arrow­ –

and hit, oh hit, the supreme Void.

 

The forest-man is wild with passion;

The forest-man has entered into the cleft

            on the top of the hill – how to find him out?

 

XXIX

 

It does not become existence,

            nor does it become non-existence.

 

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Who would believe in such an experience?

Luy says: my boy, true knowledge is hard to glimpse:

It flashes in the triple substance and one does not know it.

It is a thing with no colour or sign or feature that is known.

How can one explain it through scriptures and holy books?

To whom and in what way should I speak of the riddle?

It is like the moon in the water, neither true nor false!

Lui says, what am I to think of it?

The thing I live with has neither a purpose

nor a roadway.

 

XXX

 

It was a ceaseless cloud-burst of Grace,

Abolished all conflict between 'is' and 'is-not';

Lo, in the mid-heaven rises a marvel:

Bhusuku, look at your old intimate being,

The very awareness of which tears up the net of senses,

And your mind, of its own accord, brings forth

the supreme ecstasy from behind.

The sense-objects are purified and so I know

what joy is:

Even as the heavens brighten with the moon-light:

This is the true essence of all the three worlds,

This is how Bhusuku, the yogi, has sundered the darkness.

 

XXXI

 

When the mind and the sense-winds die away,

I know not where my self enters and disappears.

The drum of the Grace beats wonderous,

And Ajdeb dwells aloof and lonesome;

Even as the moonbeams are reflections upon the moon,

The mind's reflexes lapse and enter into itself.

I have cast away fear and disgust and rules and customs,

I gaze and gaze upon the Void without a ripple:

Ajdeb has routed everything,

He has driven fear and disgust far away.

 

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XXXII

 

Nor sound nor its fount

nor sun nor moon is there.

The consciousness, a king, is free by nature.

Leaving the straightness of the straight

do not take to the crooked;

The Light is near, do not go far away.

The bangles are on your wrist,

do not take up a mirror.

Understand by yourself your own mind –

Thus can one go to the other shore.

But with the wrong man you go downward.

To the right and to the left lie bogs and marshes–

Sarahu says, my boy, the straight road is the best.

 

NOTES

 

The supreme Reality is beyond any form or formulation. The consciousness there is straight, simple, free. You need not go to a foreign land to find it, it is close by, within you. You can know it by yourself, you need no extraneous help. If you seek others' help you are likely to be wrongly guided and lose yourself in bogs and marshes. Go simply and straight. For only that way lies the consciousness that is absolute freedom.

 

XXXIII

 

My house is on the top of the mound

            and I have no neighbour.

I have no food in my bowl

and everyday there comes a lover.

The worldly life grows on apace:

But does the milk that is drawn go back to the udder?

A barren cow has given birth to a bullock:

Pailful of milk has been milked these three evenings.

One who understands this has a sharp understanding;

It is the thief who is the guard.

Always there is a fight – an equal fight –

between the lion and the jackal.

The song of Dhendhanpa is comprehensible to a few.

 

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NOTES

 

The poem expresses the relation of the ascetic to the world. He lives aloof and alone, and without any ration. Yet the hungers from the world below mount up and try to tempt him. That is the way of the world. But one above the world cannot retrace his steps backward, even as the milk once out cannot go back to the udder. If at all it is another cow, another milk-yielder, another milk. It is not ignorant Nature's phenomenon; it is the consciousness of super-Nature pouring out the great delight. Nirvana is the barren cow, the bullock is its energy or tapas and the milk is the supreme Joy. The three evenings must be the close or end or setting of the three domains of worldly existence – body, life and mind. The thief is the higher consciousness guarding at the top and he has stolen away the world and the worldly objects. Similarly the lion is the Power of the Higher Consciousness and the jackal the prowling creature of the dark world. But the fight between the two is hard and equal, neither wanting to give up.

 

XXXIV

 

Through The single action of the Void and its grace

in his Body and speech and mind;

Darika rejoices on the other shore of the Heavens.

His consciousness seizing on the Unseizable in utter delight.

Darika rejoices on the other shore of the Heaven.

What is the use of the holy word, what is the use of the holy rite,

            what is the use of meditation and dissertation?

If you are not merged firmly in the supreme Happiness,

            then the Final Consummation remains out of sight.

The wiseman enjoys through the senses, equating pleasure and

                                                                                                pain

He makes no difference between himself and others,

Darika cognises only the One Supreme.

A king, a king, a king, you say? But he is bound by Ignorance!

Through the grace of Luipada, Darika has gained all the

   twelve worlds.

 

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XXXV

 

So long I lay in perfect ignorance.

Now I have come to understand

through the guidance of a true Guru.

Now the reign of my consciousness is ended:

It has tilted and is sunk in the seas of Heaven.

Now I find all the ten directions are empty;

Even the consciousness is empty, neither sin nor

virtue is there.

Bajula has told me of the mystery of Ignorance:

And I drank of the waters of Heaven;

Bhade says: "It is my misfortune,

But I have eaten up the dominion of my consciousness!"

 

NOTES

 

The poet, that is to say,the Siddhacharya, speaks of his experience or realisation of the annihilation of the ego-consciousness resulting in his attainment of the supreme Delight in the Heaven of Nirvana. He says graphically that he has eaten up the entire heap of egoism and adds with a sly witticism that it is a misfortune, for the egoism, but it brings him enjoyment to satiation.

 

XXXVI

 

The Void is my home,

            and Truth my striking sword:

I seized the whole treasure of illusion

and swallowed it.

He sleeps unaware of the rift between mine and others,

The nude Kanhu is full of sleep of the Inner Being:

There is no awareness, no sensation;

He is gone into the depth of sleep.

He has accomplished all and lies happy in his sleep.

I saw in sleep the three worlds a Void,

As though a wheel that revolves no more.

Jalandhripada, my Guru, I have as witness.

The learned scholars are never by my side.

 

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XXXVII

 

I myself am no more,–

whom should I fear?

My desire even for the supreme act has vanished.

O Yogi, forget not the simple perception;

Stand free, stand free full square:

As you have been, so be for ever.

O Yogi, make no mistake about the simple path.

When you swim then only you know the burdens you carry

But how to explain what is beyond the way of words

Taraka declares there is no passage to enter into it.

If you say you understand you are hanged.

 

XXXVIII

 

The body is the boat, the mind the oar

And the word of the Guru the helm upon the seas;

Calm your mind and hold to the wheel:

There is no other way to cross over to the other shore.

The boatman tugs the boat by the rope:

Even so you must move on and merge into the goal:

go not elsewhere.

There is fear on the way, the brigand is strong;

In the high flood of the world all is lost.

Follow the coast-line, up the rushing current;

Saraha says, "Thus you will enter the heaven."

 

 

XXXIX

 

Even in dream, O my mind, you roam and revel in your ignorance;

                        it is your own error.

How can you then take delight in your voyage

 through the words of the Master?

Strange, this heaven is born out of a mystic roar!

And as your wife in Bengal¹ is taken away,

   your consciousness broke up.

 

 

¹ The old ignorant life. Why

Bengal? Perhaps he is now up somewhere else –in the Himalayas? – leaving the plains of Bengal.

 

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O strange is this world illusion

            that marks out oneself and others.

This world is but an image upon water­ –

            empty yourself in the mystic consciousness.

The nectar is there and yet you swallow poison;

your own mind is a slave to others.

When I came to understand what is here at home and what is

                        there abroad,

            then I eat up all my wicked kins.

Saraha says: Better an empty stable

            than one full of wicked bullocks.

All alone I have annihilated the world and now I wander free.

 

XL

 

What the mind perceives is the maze of illusion­ –

Scriptures and books, beads and rosaries,­

Tell me, how can the simple truth be uttered?

The body, the word, the consciousness cannot enter into it.

In vain does the Guru teach the disciple.

That which is beyond the way of speech,

how can it be expressed?

The more you speak, the farther you go astray;

The Master is dumb, the disciple deaf­   

How is the victor delight like? – Kanhu says­ –

It is as though the dumb were to explain to the deaf.

 

XLI

 

This world was never born and, had no beginning,

            through illusion it appears to exist.

When you mistake a rope for a snake

and get frightened,

You are not then actually bitten even by a harmless snake!

It is all a wonder! O Yogi, do not wash your hands with salty

                                                                             water.¹

If you understand the world in its very nature,

            then all your bonds will snap.

                                   

                                    ¹ I.e., not pure clean.

 

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Even like the desert mirage or the airy city

or the image in the mirror

Or like the water's spout that stands solid as a stone-pillar

It is like the child of a barren woman playing odd plays:

It is like oil out of sand, like the horn of a rabbit,

            like a flower blooming in the sky.

Raoutu says: Indeed, and Bhusuku says also, such

            is the nature of things:

If you are in ignorance, go and ask of a true Guru.

 

XLII

 

The consciousness when normal is a total zero.

Do not be sorry when deprived of your limbs.

But how do you say Kanhu is not?

He is vibrant, constantly entering into the three worlds.

The ignorant are afflicted when they do not see the seen.

But when the waves break does the ocean dry up?

The ignorant do not see the worlds that yet exist.

They do not see the cream within the milk.

In this world none goes out, none comes in:

This is the consciousness in which yogi Kanhu revels.

 

 

XLIII

 

The Simple,¹ even like a mighty tree has spread itself in all the

three worlds;

In a state of perfect delight who is bound, who is free?

Water poured into water shows no difference:

Even so the jewelled mind melts and enters into the one and

equal taste of the spaces.

Where there is no oneself, the other does not exist.

That which is uncreated has neither birth nor death.

Bhusuku says, even Raoutu says: such is the nature of things;

Here nothing goes, nothing comes, there is

neither presence nor absence.

 

¹ Simple – Self-born, Absolute.

 

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XLIV

 

Where the void unites with the void,

There arises the All-Law.¹

But I am four square with the perfect consciousness:

In between all else is shut out and there is the

unsurpassing knowledge

The creative Sound did not enter into my heart:

I looked to one side and the other vanished:

You must know wherefore you have come here:

Hold yourself midwise and from there deal with things.

Loudly declares Kankanapada: the roar of the Truth disinter-

­grates the universe.

 

¹ All-Law-Dharma.

 

NOTES

 

The ultimate reality is a very simple thing: it is utterly simple, beyond all the complexities and contradictions and divisions, all the dualities that make up this creation, this illusory world.

It is as simple as the tree growing spontaneously and effortlessly and spreading and filling up the great space, one with its silence and equal calmness.

It is simple for it is zero, as the next poem says.

 

PARAPHRASE

 

1. When the ordinary consciousness – the world conscious­ness – dissolves, becomes zero and vanishes into the transcendent zero.

2. Then that supreme zero – consciousness expresses, embodies, the dharma, the supreme law of right living.

3. There the individual is one with the Supreme Reality on all the four levels of consciousness – the soul or self, mind, life and body.

4. Because of this inmost consciousness in the middle, that is to say, the intervening or intermediate consciousness, the world itself is shut out, becomes an illusion.

5. One passes by the vibrations that create the illusory world.

 

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6. For when one's consciousness is fixed upon the transcendent the relative, the cosmos disappear.

7. The true source of all becoming is this transcendent zero.

8. The middle course, the course of the heart is the course of the truth, that turns neither to the left nor to the right but moves straight upward.

9. The voice of the void has another vibration and effect, it does not create the world of ignorance, it disintegrates that world.

 

NOTES

 

There is a suggestion here of the Raja-yogic process. In the Raja­yoga-image the consciousness ascends and descends with the rise and fall of respiration along two ducts on either side of the spine (naturally on the subtle plane): there is a third duct in between along which operates the holding of the breath and the withdrawal of consciousness leading towards the Super-consciousness beyond, the dual movement on either side represents the illusory worlds outside; the middle path absorbs all the noises of creation which are transformed into the final cry of the concentrated consciousness at its apex leaping into the great void.

 

XLV

 

Mind is the tree and the five senses its branches

            And the leaves are the many desires that it carries.

O, cut it down with the axe that is the Guru's word:

            Kanhu says, the tree must not grow again.

Good and evil are the waters that nourish the tree;

            Directed by the Guru the wise one knows how to fell it.

And he who knows not the trick

            Goes astray, the fool, and accepts the cycle of birth.

The Void is the tree, 1 the sky2 the axe:

            Cut down the tree, leave neither roots nor branches.

 

¹ The tree is the illusion, cut it away.

² Sky is the wide pure consciousness (of the mind).

 

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XLVI

        

One sees in a dream as though in a mirror:

Even so the illusion is there within.

When the mind is freed from the illusion,

Then only cease the coming and the going.

Fire does not burn it nor waters moisten it

nor is it ever torn;

Still behold, again and again it binds itself

to one illusion or another.

The shadow, the image, the body are all one and the same:

In true knowledge there is no taking sides1.

Purify your consciousness with truth nature:

Jayanandi openly says, thus alone and in no other way.

 

¹

I.e., it is beyond the dualities.

 

XLVII

 

Between the lotus and the thunderbolt my union was made:¹

The Outcast Woman blazed fierce in utter equanimity.²

The house of the untouchable woman is burning,

it is on fire:

Take up the Moon and pour out the waters upon it. 3

It does not scorch, it does not burn, nor any smoke is seen.

By the northern pole it enters the heavens.

All the Gods and Godheads are burnt.

Burnt are the sacred threads and the tablet of rules.

Dhama says, he has a clear knowledge now

And the waters rise up the fivefold channel.

 

NOTES

 

1. lotus = lotus of the heart.

thunderbolt = referring to the solidity and luminosity of the Supreme Consciousness, Nirvana.

2. Outcast Woman = the Divine Soul in man; the name Chandali literally means she, the fierce one; outcast because usually not accepted or recognised by the ordinary consciousness.

We may remember the union achieved in between

Ganga and Yamuna spoken of in the Tantras; vide also poem No. XIV.

 

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3. Moon = Soma; immortality.

Waters = streams of immortality.

4. Northern pole: the summit of being or consciousness, the sou­thern pole being the lower end corresponding to sahasrara at the top and muladhara at the bottom, of the Tantras, Sumeru and Kumeru.

5. Fivefold channel: the five senses; also compare the fivefold sheaths of the Upanishads.

 

XLVIII

 

[The original text is lost. Only a Tibetan translation exists.]

 

XLIX

 

The boat made of the thunderbolt I ply across the bosom of the Padma.¹

The cruel robbers looted all my burden.

Today, O Bhusuku, truly you have become a Bengali,²

Your own wife is taken away by the outcast villains.

The five tablets, the sense-objects are now burnt.

I do not know where has entered my consciousness,

No more do I possess gold or silver;

In my own sphere I dwell in great happiness.

My four square treasury is now exhausted­ –

There is no difference between life and death.³

 

NOTES

 

1. Padma: the river of life.

2. Bengali: I am now my true self.

3. Four square: full, complete.

 

L

 

In each heaven there is a three-stonyed building:

            and my heart is an axe;

 

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In my throat is awake the beautiful girl –

            the jewel of a void.

Abandon the illusion, abandon the delusion,

            abandon all extreme dualities.

Shabara revels in the great delight

with his girl, the void.

I see my three-storeyed house, it is even like the heavens,

It is so well-built as if cotton flowers have opened out

in all their whiteness.

Beside the three-storeyed¹ building there rose a moon-beam

building;

Then darkness burst open as though into flowers of heaven.

The fruits are all ripened, Shabara and his spouse are revelling;

Night and day, Shabara² passed in the great delight.

he has no other consciousness.

With bamboo sticks a cot was prepared,

Shabara was placed upon it and was burnt.

            Alas, vultures and jackals are mad with grief.

The one addicted to birth died in this way,

            the last rites done, offerings distributed.

Behold, Shabara has attained Nirvana and

            his shabarahood vanished.

 

 

NOTES

 

1. Three storeyed = the body, the life and the mind. There is a double set of this structure – one, is dark, made of ignorance, alongside there is another, luminous, made of moonlight, that is to say, made of pure delight and immortality (Soma).

2. Shabara = the original, unregenerate, unclean, impure man, the man of ordinary, ignorant consciousness.

 

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