Free autobiography of a yogi

Autobiography of a Yogi

By
Paramhansa Yogananda

WITH A PREFACE BY
W. Y. Evans-Wentz, M.A., ,

"Except ye see signs and wonders,


ye will not believe."-John

, , by
Paramhansa Yogananda
Dedicated To The Memory Of
LUTHER BURBANK
An American Saint

Contents

Preface, By W.

Y. EVANS-WENTZ
List of Illustrations

Chapter

1. My Parents and Early Life


2. Mother's Death and the Amulet
3. The Saint with Two Bodies (Swami Pranabananda)
4. My Interrupted Flight Toward the Himalaya
5. A "Perfume Saint" Performs his Wonders
6. The Tiger Swami
7.

The Levitating Saint (Nagendra Nath Bhaduri)
8. India's Great Scientist and Inventor, Jagadis Chandra Bose
9. The Blissful Devotee and his Cosmic Romance (Master Mahasaya)
I Meet my Master, Sri Yukteswar
Two Penniless Boys in Brindaban
Years in my Master's Hermitage
The Sleepless Saint (Ram Gopal Muzumdar)
An Experience in Cosmic Consciousness
The Cauliflower Robbery
Outwitting the Stars
Sasi and the Three Sapphires
A Mohammedan Wonder-Worker (Afzal Khan)
My Guru Appears Simultaneously in Calcutta and Serampore
We Do Not Visit Kashmir
We Visit Kashmir
The Heart of a Stone Image
My University Degree
I Become a Monk of the Swami Order
Brother Ananta and Sister Nalini
The Science of Kriya Yoga
Founding of a Yoga School at Ranchi
Kashi, Reborn and Rediscovered
Rabindranath Tagore and I Compare Schools
The Law of Miracles
An Interview with the Sacred Mother (Kashi Moni Lahiri)
Rama is Raised from the Dead
Babaji, the Yogi-Christ of Modern India
Materializing a Palace in the Himalayas
The Christlike Life of Lahiri Mahasaya
Babaji's Interest in the West
I Go to America
Luther Burbank -- An American Saint
Therese Neumann, the Catholic Stigmatist of Bavaria
I Return to India
An Idyl in South India
Last Days with my Guru
The Resurrection of Sri Yukteswar
With Mahatma Gandhi at Wardha
The Bengali "Joy-Permeated Mother" (Ananda Moyi Ma)
The Woman Yogi who Never Eats (Giri Bala)
I Return to the West
At Encinitas in California

ILLUSTRATIONS

Frontispiece
Map of India
My Father, Bhagabati Charan Ghosh
My Mother
Swami Pranabananda, "The Saint With Two Bodies"
My Elder Brother, Ananta
Festival Gathering in the Courtyard of my Guru's Hermitage in Serampore
Nagendra Nath Bhaduri, "The Levitating Saint"
Myself at Age 6
Jagadis Chandra Bose, Famous Scientist
Two Brothers of Therese Neumann, at Konnersreuth
Master Mahasaya, the Blissful Devotee
Jitendra Mazumdar, my Companion on the "Penniless Test" at Brindaban
Ananda Moyi Ma, the "Joy-Permeated Mother"
Himalayan Cave Occupied by Babaji
Sri Yukteswar, My Master
Self-Realization Fellowship, Los Angeles Headquarters
Self-Realization Church of All Religions, Hollywood
My Guru's Seaside Hermitage at Puri
Self-Realization Church of All Religions, San Diego
My Sisters -- Roma, Nalini, and Uma
My Sister Uma
The Lord in His Aspect as Shiva
Yogoda Math, Hermitage at Dakshineswar
Ranchi School, Main Building
Kashi, Reborn and Rediscovered
Bishnu, Motilal Mukherji, my Father, Mr.

Wright, T.N. Bose, Swami Satyananda
Group of Delegates to the International Congress of Religious Liberals, Boston,
A Guru and Disciple in an Ancient Hermitage
Babaji, the Yogi-Christ of Modern India
Lahiri Mahasaya
A Yoga Class in Washington, D.C.
Luther Burbank
Therese Neumann of Konnersreuth, Bavaria
The Taj Mahal at Agra
Shankari Mai Jiew, Only Living Disciple of the great Trailanga Swami
Krishnananda with his Tame Lioness
Group on the Dining Patio of my Guru's Serampore Hermitage
Miss Bletch, Mr.

Wright, and myself -- in Egypt
Rabindranath Tagore
Swami Keshabananda, at his Hermitage in Brindaban
Krishna, Ancient Prophet of India
Mahatma Gandhi, at Wardha
Giri Bala, the Woman Yogi Who Never Eats
Mr. E. E. Dickinson
My Guru and Myself
Ranchi Students
Encinitas
Conference in San Francisco
Swami Premananda
My Father
Map of India

PREFACE

By W.

Y. EVANS-WENTZ, M.A., ,


Jesus College, Oxford; Author of
The Tibetan Book of the Dead,
Tibet's Great Yogi Milarepa,
Tibetan Yoga and Secret Doctrines, etc.

The value of Yogananda's Autobiography is greatly enhanced by the fact that it is one of the few books in
English about the wise men of India which has been written, not by a journalist or foreigner, but by one of
their own race and training--in short, a book about yogis by a yogi.

As an eyewitness recountal of the
extraordinary lives and powers of modern Hindu saints, the book has importance both timely and timeless.
To its illustrious author, whom I have had the pleasure of knowing both in India and America, may every
reader render due appreciation and gratitude. His unusual life-document is certainly one of the most
revealing of the depths of the Hindu mind and heart, and of the spiritual wealth of India, ever to be
published in the West.

It has been my privilege to have met one of the sages whose life- history is herein narrated-Sri Yukteswar
Giri.

A likeness of the venerable saint appeared as part of the frontispiece of my Tibetan Yoga and Secret
Doctrines. It was at Puri, in Orissa, on the Bay of Bengal, that I encountered Sri Yukteswar. He was then
the head of a quiet ashrama near the seashore there, and was chiefly occupied in the spiritual training of a
group of youthful disciples.

He expressed keen interest in the welfare of the people of the United States and
of all the Americas, and of England, too, and questioned me concerning the distant activities, particularly
those in California, of his chief disciple, Paramhansa Yogananda, whom he dearly loved, and whom he had
sent, in , as his emissary to the West.

Sri Yukteswar was of gentle mien and voice, of pleasing presence, and worthy of the veneration which his
followers spontaneously accorded to him.

Every person who knew him, whether of his own community or
not, held him in the highest esteem. I vividly recall his tall, straight, ascetic figure, garbed in the saffron-
colored garb of one who has renounced worldly quests, as he stood at the entrance of the hermitage to give
me welcome. His hair was long and somewhat curly, and his face bearded.

His body was muscularly firm,
but slender and well-formed, and his step energetic. He had chosen as his place of earthly abode the holy city
of Puri, whither multitudes of pious Hindus, representative of every province of India, come daily on
pilgrimage to the famed Temple of Jagannath, "Lord of the World." It was at Puri that Sri Yukteswar closed
his mortal eyes, in , to the scenes of this transitory state of being and passed on, knowing that his
incarnation had been carried to a triumphant completion.

I am glad, indeed, to be able to record this
testimony to the high character and holiness of Sri Yukteswar. Content to remain afar from the multitude, he
gave himself unreservedly and in tranquillity to that ideal life which Paramhansa Yogananda, his disciple,
has now described for the ages. W. Y. EVANS-WENTZ

Oxford University Press,

Author's Acknowledgments

I am deeply indebted to Miss L.

V. Pratt for her long editorial labors over the manuscript of this book. My
thanks are due also to Miss Ruth Zahn for preparation of the index, to Mr. C. Richard Wright for permission
to use extracts from his Indian travel diary, and to Dr. W. Y. Evans-Wentz for suggestions and
encouragement.

PARAMHANSA YOGANANDA
October 28,
Encinitas, California

CHAPTER: 1

My Parents and Early Life

The characteristic features of Indian culture have long been a search for ultimate verities and the
concomitant disciple-guru relationship.

My own path led me to a Christlike sage whose
beautiful life was chiseled for the ages. He was one of the great masters who are India's sole
remaining wealth. Emerging in every generation, they have bulwarked their land against the fate
of Babylon and Egypt.

I find my earliest memories covering the anachronistic features of a previous incarnation.

Clear
recollections came to me of a distant life, a yogi amidst the Himalayan snows. These glimpses
of the past, by some dimensionless link, also afforded me a glimpse of the future.

The helpless humiliations of infancy are not banished from my mind. I was resentfully conscious
of not being able to walk or express myself freely.

Prayerful surges arose within me as I realized
my bodily impotence. My strong emotional life took silent form as words in many languages.
Among the inward confusion of tongues, my ear gradually accustomed itself to the
circumambient Bengali syllables of my people. The beguiling scope of an infant's mind! adultly
considered limited to toys and toes.

Psychological ferment and my unresponsive body brought me to many obstinate crying-spells.

I


recall the general family bewilderment at my distress. Happier memories, too, crowd in on me:
my mother's caresses, and my first attempts at lisping phrase and toddling step. These early
triumphs, usually forgotten quickly, are yet a natural basis of self-confidence.

My far-reaching memories are not unique. Many yogis are known to have retained their self-
consciousness without interruption by the dramatic transition to and from "life" and "death." If
man be solely a body, its loss indeed places the final period to identity.

But if prophets down the
millenniums spake with truth, man is essentially of incorporeal nature. The persistent core of
human egoity is only temporarily allied with sense perception.

Although odd, clear memories of infancy are not extremely rare. During travels in numerous
lands, I have listened to early recollections from the lips of veracious men and women.

I was born in the last decade of the nineteenth century, and passed my first eight years at
Gorakhpur.

This was my birthplace in the United Provinces of northeastern India. We were eight
children: four boys and four girls. I, Mukunda Lal Ghosh , was the second son and the fourth
child.

Father and Mother were Bengalis, of the kshatriya caste. Both were blessed with saintly
nature. Their mutual love, tranquil and dignified, never expressed itself frivolously.

A perfect
parental harmony was the calm center for the revolving tumult of eight young lives.

Father, Bhagabati Charan Ghosh, was kind, grave, at times stern. Loving him dearly, we children
yet observed a certain reverential distance. An outstanding mathematician and logician, he was
guided principally by his intellect.

But Mother was a queen of hearts, and taught us only through
love. After her death, Father displayed more of his inner tenderness. I noticed then that his gaze
often metamorphosed into my mother's.

In Mother's presence we tasted our earliest bitter-sweet acquaintance with the scriptures. Tales
from the mahabharata and ramayana were resourcefully summoned to meet the exigencies
of discipline.

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  • Instruction and chastisement went hand in hand.

    A daily gesture of respect to Father was given by Mother's dressing us carefully in the afternoons
    to welcome him home from the office. His position was similar to that of a vice-president, in the
    Bengal-Nagpur Railway, one of India's large companies. His work involved traveling, and our
    family lived in several cities during my childhood.

    Mother held an open hand toward the needy.

    Father was also kindly disposed, but his respect for
    law and order extended to the budget. One fortnight Mother spent, in feeding the poor, more than
    Father's monthly income.

    "All I ask, please, is to keep your charities within a reasonable limit." Even a gentle rebuke from
    her husband was grievous to Mother.

    She ordered a hackney carriage, not hinting to the children
    at any disagreement.

    "Good-by; I am going away to my mother's home." Ancient ultimatum!

    We broke into astounded lamentations. Our maternal uncle arrived opportunely; he whispered to
    Father some sage counsel, garnered no doubt from the ages.

    After Father had made a few
    conciliatory remarks, Mother happily dismissed the cab. Thus ended the only trouble I ever
    noticed between my parents. But I recall a characteristic discussion.

    "Please give me ten rupees for a hapless woman who has just arrived at the house." Mother's
    smile had its own persuasion.

    "Why ten rupees?

    One is enough." Father added a justification: "When my father and
    grandparents died suddenly, I had my first taste of poverty. My only breakfast, before walking
    miles to my school, was a small banana.

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  • Later, at the university, I was in such need that I applied
    to a wealthy judge for aid of one rupee per month. He declined, remarking that even a rupee is
    important."

    "How bitterly you recall the denial of that rupee!" Mother's heart had an instant logic. "Do you
    want this woman also to remember painfully your refusal of ten rupees which she needs
    urgently?"

    "You win!" With the immemorial gesture of vanquished husbands, he opened his wallet.

    "Here is
    a ten-rupee note. Give it to her with my good will."

    Father tended to first say "No" to any new proposal. His attitude toward the strange woman who
    so readily enlisted Mother's sympathy was an example of his customary caution. Aversion to
    instant acceptance- typical of the French mind in the West-is really only honoring the principle of
    "due reflection." I always found Father reasonable and evenly balanced in his judgments.

    If I
    could bolster up my numerous requests with one or two good arguments, he invariably put the
    coveted goal within my reach, whether it were a vacation trip or a new motorcycle.
    Father was a strict disciplinarian to his children in their early years, but his attitude toward
    himself was truly Spartan.

    He never visited the theater, for instance, but sought his recreation in
    various spiritual practices and in reading the bhagavad gita. Shunning all luxuries, he would
    cling to one old pair of shoes until they were useless. His sons bought automobiles after they
    came into popular use, but Father was always content with the trolley car for his daily ride to the
    office.

    The accumulation of money for the sake of power was alien to his nature. Once, after
    organizing the Calcutta Urban Bank, he refused to benefit himself by holding any of its shares. He
    had simply wished to perform a civic duty in his spare time.

    Several years after Father had retired on a pension, an English accountant arrived to examine the
    books of the Bengal-Nagpur Railway Company.

    The amazed investigator discovered that Father
    had never applied for overdue bonuses.

    "He did the work of three men!" the accountant told the company. "He has rupees , (about
    $41,) owing to him as back compensation." The officials presented Father with a check for
    this amount. He thought so little about it that he overlooked any mention to the family.

    Much
    later he was questioned by my youngest brother Bishnu, who noticed the large deposit on a bank
    statement.

    "Why be elated by material profit?" Father replied. "The one who pursues a goal of
    evenmindedness is neither jubilant with gain nor depressed by loss. He knows that man arrives
    penniless in this world, and departs without a single rupee."

    FATHER
    Bhagabati Charan Ghosh
    A Disciple of Lahiri Mahasaya
    Early in their married life, my parents became disciples of a great master, Lahiri Mahasaya of
    Benares.

    This contact strengthened Father's naturally ascetical temperament. Mother made a
    remarkable admission to my eldest sister Roma: "Your father and myself live together as man and
    wife only once a year, for the purpose of having children."

    Father first met Lahiri Mahasaya through Abinash Babu, an employee in the Gorakhpur office
    of the Bengal-Nagpur Railway.

    Abinash instructed my young ears with engrossing tales of many
    Indian saints. He invariably concluded with a tribute to the superior glories of his own guru.

    "Did you ever hear of the extraordinary circumstances under which your father became a disciple
    of Lahiri Mahasaya?"

    It was on a lazy summer afternoon, as Abinash and I sat together in the compound of my home,
    that he put this intriguing question.

    I shook my head with a smile of anticipation.

    "Years ago, before you were born, I asked my superior officer-your father-to give me a week's
    leave from my Gorakhpur duties in order to visit my guru in Benares. Your father ridiculed my
    plan.

    "'Are you going to become a religious fanatic?' he inquired.

    'Concentrate on your office work if
    you want to forge ahead.'

    "Sadly walking home along a woodland path that day, I met your father in a palanquin. He
    dismissed his servants and conveyance, and fell into step beside me. Seeking to console me, he
    pointed out the advantages of striving for worldly success.

    But I heard him listlessly. My heart
    was repeating: 'Lahiri Mahasaya! I cannot live without seeing you!'

    "Our path took us to the edge of a tranquil field, where the rays of the late afternoon sun were still
    crowning the tall ripple of the wild grass. We paused in admiration. There in the field, only a few
    yards from us, the form of my great guru suddenly appeared!

    "'Bhagabati, you are too hard on your employee!' His voice was resonant in our astounded ears.
    He vanished as mysteriously as he had come. On my knees I was exclaiming, 'Lahiri Mahasaya!
    Lahiri Mahasaya!' Your father was motionless with stupefaction for a few moments.

    "'Abinash, not only do I give you leave, but I give myself leave to start for Benares tomorrow.

    I
    must know this great Lahiri Mahasaya, who is able to materialize himself at will in order to
    intercede for you! I will take my wife and ask this master to initiate us in his spiritual path. Will
    you guide us to him?'

    "'Of course.' Joy filled me at the miraculous answer to my prayer, and the quick, favorable turn of
    events.

    "The next evening your parents and I entrained for Benares.

    We took a horse cart the following
    day, and then had to walk through narrow lanes to my guru's secluded home. Entering his little
    parlor, we bowed before the master, enlocked in his habitual lotus posture. He blinked his
    piercing eyes and leveled them on your father.

    "'Bhagabati, you are too hard on your employee!' His words were the same as those he had used
    two days before in the Gorakhpur field.

    He added, 'I am glad that you have allowed Abinash to
    visit me, and that you and your wife have accompanied him.'

    "To their joy, he initiated your parents in the spiritual practice of Kriya Yoga. Your father
    and I, as brother disciples, have been close friends since the memorable day of the vision.

    Lahiri
    Mahasaya took a definite interest in your own birth. Your life shall surely be linked with his own:
    the master's blessing never fails."

    Lahiri Mahasaya left this world shortly after I had entered it. His picture, in an ornate frame,
    always graced our family altar in the various cities to which Father was transferred by his office.
    Many a morning and evening found Mother and me meditating before an improvised shrine,
    offering flowers dipped in fragrant sandalwood paste.

    With frankincense and myrrh as well as our
    united devotions, we honored the divinity which had found full expression in Lahiri Mahasaya.

    His picture had a surpassing influence over my life. As I grew, the thought of the master grew
    with me. In meditation I would often see his photographic image emerge from its small frame
    and, taking a living form, sit before me.

    When I attempted to touch the feet of his luminous body,
    it would change and again become the picture. As childhood slipped into boyhood, I found Lahiri
    Mahasaya transformed in my mind from a little image, cribbed in a frame, to a living,
    enlightening presence. I frequently prayed to him in moments of trial or confusion, finding within
    me his solacing direction.

    At first I grieved because he was no longer physically living. As I began
    to discover his secret omnipresence, I lamented no more. He had often written to those of his
    disciples who were over-anxious to see him: "Why come to view my bones and flesh, when I am
    ever within range of your kutastha (spiritual sight)?"

    I was blessed about the age of eight with a wonderful healing through the photograph of Lahiri
    Mahasaya.

    This experience gave intensification to my love. While at our family estate in Ichapur,
    Bengal, I was stricken with Asiatic cholera. My life was despaired of; the doctors could do
    nothing. At my bedside, Mother frantically motioned me to look at Lahiri Mahasaya's picture on
    the wall above my head.

    "Bow to him mentally!" She knew I was too feeble even to lift my hands in salutation.

    "If you
    really show your devotion and inwardly kneel before him, your life will be spared!"

    I gazed at his photograph and saw there a blinding light, enveloping my body and the entire
    room. My nausea and other uncontrollable symptoms disappeared; I was well. At once I felt
    strong enough to bend over and touch Mother's feet in appreciation of her immeasurable faith in
    her guru.

    Mother pressed her head repeatedly against the little picture.

    "O Omnipresent Master, I thank thee that thy light hath healed my son!"
    I realized that she too had witnessed the luminous blaze through which I had instantly recovered
    from a usually fatal disease.

    One of my most precious possessions is that same photograph.

    Given to Father by Lahiri
    Mahasaya himself, it carries a holy vibration. The picture had a miraculous origin. I heard the
    story from Father's brother disciple, Kali Kumar Roy.

    It appears that the master had an aversion to being photographed. Over his protest, a group
    picture was once taken of him and a cluster of devotees, including Kali Kumar Roy.

    It was an
    amazed photographer who discovered that the plate which had clear images of all the disciples,
    revealed nothing more than a blank space in the center where he had reasonably expected to find
    the outlines of Lahiri Mahasaya. The phenomenon was widely discussed.

    A certain student and expert photographer, Ganga Dhar Babu, boasted that the fugitive figure
    would not escape him.

    The next morning, as the guru sat in lotus posture on a wooden bench with
    a screen behind him, Ganga Dhar Babu arrived with his equipment. Taking every precaution for
    success, he greedily exposed twelve plates. On each one he soon found the imprint of the wooden
    bench and screen, but once again the master's form was missing.

    With tears and shattered pride, Ganga Dhar Babu sought out his guru.

    It was many hours before
    Lahiri Mahasaya broke his silence with a pregnant comment:

    "I am Spirit. Can your camera reflect the omnipresent Invisible?"

    "I see it cannot! But, Holy Sir, I lovingly desire a picture of the bodily temple where alone, to my
    narrow vision, that Spirit appears fully to dwell."

    "Come, then, tomorrow morning.

    I will pose for you."

    Again the photographer focused his camera. This time the sacred figure, not cloaked with
    mysterious imperceptibility, was sharp on the plate. The master never posed for another picture;
    at least, I have seen none.

    The photograph is reproduced in this book. Lahiri Mahasaya's fair features, of a universal cast,
    hardly suggest to what race he belonged.

    His intense joy of God-communion is slightly revealed in
    a somewhat enigmatic smile. His eyes, half open to denote a nominal direction on the outer
    world, are half closed also. Completely oblivious to the poor lures of the earth, he was fully awake
    at all times to the spiritual problems of seekers who approached for his bounty.

    Shortly after my healing through the potency of the guru's picture, I had an influential spiritual
    vision.

    Sitting on my bed one morning, I fell into a deep reverie.

    "What is behind the darkness of closed eyes?" This probing thought came powerfully into my
    mind. An immense flash of light at once manifested to my inward gaze. Divine shapes of saints,
    sitting in meditation posture in mountain caves, formed like miniature cinema pictures on the
    large screen of radiance within my forehead.

    "Who are you?" I spoke aloud.

    "We are the Himalayan yogis." The celestial response is difficult to describe; my heart was
    thrilled.

    "Ah, I long to go to the Himalayas and become like you!" The vision vanished, but the silvery
    beams expanded in ever-widening circles to infinity.

    "What is this wondrous glow?"

    "I am Iswara I am Light." The voice was as murmuring clouds.

    "I want to be one with Thee!"

    Out of the slow dwindling of my divine ecstasy, I salvaged a permanent legacy of inspiration to
    seek God.

    "He is eternal, ever-new Joy!" This memory persisted long after the day of rapture.

    Another early recollection is outstanding; and literally so, for I bear the scar to this day. My elder
    sister Uma and I were seated in the early morning under a neem tree in our Gorakhpur
    compound. She was helping me with a Bengali primer, what time I could spare my gaze from the
    near-by parrots eating ripe margosa fruit.

    Uma complained of a boil on her leg, and fetched a jar
    of ointment. I smeared a bit of the salve on my forearm.

    "Why do you use medicine on a healthy arm?"

    "Well, Sis, I feel I am going to have a boil tomorrow. I am testing your ointment on the spot where
    the boil will appear."

    "You little liar!"

    "Sis, don't call me a liar until you see what happens in the morning." Indignation filled me.

    Uma was unimpressed, and thrice repeated her taunt.

    An adamant resolution sounded in my
    voice as I made slow reply.

    "By the power of will in me, I say that tomorrow I shall have a fairly large boil in this exact place
    on my arm; and your boil shall swell to twice its present size!"

    Morning found me with a stalwart boil on the indicated spot; the dimensions of Uma's boil had
    doubled.

    With a shriek, my sister rushed to Mother. "Mukunda has become a necromancer!"
    Gravely, Mother instructed me never to use the power of words for doing harm. I have always
    remembered her counsel, and followed it.

    My boil was surgically treated. A noticeable scar, left by the doctor's incision, is present today.

    On
    my right forearm is a constant reminder of the power in man's sheer word.

    Those simple and apparently harmless phrases to Uma, spoken with deep concentration, had
    possessed sufficient hidden force to explode like bombs and produce definite, though injurious,
    effects. I understood, later, that the explosive vibratory power in speech could be wisely directed
    to free one's life from difficulties, and thus operate without scar or rebuke.

    Our family moved to Lahore in the Punjab. There I acquired a picture of the Divine Mother in the
    form of the Goddess Kali. It sanctified a small informal shrine on the balcony of our home. An
    unequivocal conviction came over me that fulfillment would crown any of my prayers uttered in
    that sacred spot.

    Standing there with Uma one day, I watched two kites flying over the roofs of the
    buildings on the opposite side of the very narrow lane.

    "Why are you so quiet?" Uma pushed me playfully.

    "I am just thinking how wonderful it is that Divine Mother gives me whatever I ask."

    "I suppose She would give you those two kites!" My sister laughed derisively.

    "Why not?" I began silent prayers for their possession.

    Matches are played in India with kites whose strings are covered with glue and ground glass.
    Each player attempts to sever the string of his opponent.

    A freed kite sails over the roofs; there is
    great fun in catching it. Inasmuch as Uma and I were on the balcony, it seemed impossible that
    any loosed kite could come into our hands; its string would naturally dangle over the roofs.

    The players across the lane began their match. One string was cut; immediately the kite floated in
    my direction.

    It was stationary for a moment, through sudden abatement of breeze, which
    sufficed to firmly entangle the string with a cactus plant on top of the opposite house. A perfect
    loop was formed for my seizure. I handed the prize to Uma.

    "It was just an extraordinary accident, and not an answer to your prayer. If the other kite comes
    to you, then I shall believe." Sister's dark eyes conveyed more amazement than her words.

    I continued my prayers with a crescendo intensity.

    A forcible tug by the other player resulted in
    the abrupt loss of his kite. It headed toward me, dancing in the wind. My helpful assistant, the
    cactus plant, again secured the kite string in the necessary loop by which I could grasp it. I
    presented my second trophy to Uma.

    "Indeed, Divine Mother listens to you! This is all too uncanny for me!" Sister bolted away like a
    frightened fawn.

    Spiritual teacher; from Sanskrit root gur, to raise, to uplift.

    A practitioner of yoga, "union," ancient Indian science of meditation on God.


    My name was changed to Yogananda when I entered the ancient monastic Swami Order in My guru bestowed
    the religious title of Paramhansa on me in (see chapters 24 and 42).

    Traditionally, the second caste of warriors and rulers.

    These ancient epics are the hoard of India's history, mythology, and philosophy.

    An "Everyman's Library" volume,
    Ramayana and Mahabharata, is a condensation in English verse by Romesh Dutt (New York: E. P. Dutton).

    This noble Sanskrit poem, which occurs as part of the Mahabharata epic, is the Hindu Bible. The most poetical
    English translation is Edwin Arnold's The Song Celestial (Philadelphia: David McKay, 75 cents).

    One of the best
    translations with detailed commentary is Sri Aurobindo's Message Of The Gita (Jupiter Press, 16 Semudoss St., Madras,
    India, $).

    Babu (Mister) is placed in Bengali names at the end.

    The phenomenal powers possessed by great masters are explained in chapter 30, "The Law of Miracles."

    A yogic technique whereby the sensory tumult is stilled, permitting man to achieve an ever-increasing identity with
    cosmic consciousness.

    (See chapter )

    A Sanskrit name for God as Ruler of the universe; from the root Is , to rule. There are names for God in the
    Hindu scriptures, each one carrying a different shade of philosophical meaning.

    The infinite potencies of sound derive from the Creative Word, Aum , the cosmic vibratory power behind all atomic
    energies.

    Any word spoken with clear realization and deep concentration has a materializing value. Loud or silent
    repetition of inspiring words has been found effective in Coueism and similar systems of psychotherapy; the secret lies in
    the stepping-up of the mind's vibratory rate. The poet Tennyson has left us, in his Memoirs , an account of his repetitious
    device for passing beyond the conscious mind into superconsciousness:

    "A kind of waking trance-this for lack of a better word-I have frequently had, quite up from boyhood, when I have been
    all alone," Tennyson wrote.

    "This has come upon me through repeating my own name to myself silently, till all at once,
    as it were out of the intensity of the consciousness of individuality, individuality itself seemed to dissolve and fade away
    into boundless being, and this not a confused state but the clearest, the surest of the surest, utterly beyond words-where
    death was an almost laughable impossibility-the loss of personality (if so it were) seeming no extinction, but the only
    true life." He wrote further: "It is no nebulous ecstasy, but a state of transcendent wonder, associated with absolute
    clearness of mind."

    Kali is a symbol of God in the aspect of eternal Mother Nature.

    CHAPTER: 2

    My Mother's Death And The Mystic Amulet

    My mother's greatest desire was the marriage of my elder brother.

    "Ah, when I behold the face of
    Ananta's wife, I shall find heaven on this earth!" I frequently heard Mother express in these words
    her strong Indian sentiment for family continuity.

    I was about eleven years old at the time of Ananta's betrothal. Mother was in Calcutta, joyously
    supervising the wedding preparations.

    Father and I alone remained at our home in Bareilly in
    northern India, whence Father had been transferred after two years at Lahore.

    I had previously witnessed the splendor of nuptial rites for my two elder sisters, Roma and Uma;
    but for Ananta, as the eldest son, plans were truly elaborate.

    Barry letts autobiography of a yogi pdf free download My Parents and Early Life 2. Mother's Death and the Amulet 3. My Interrupted Flight Toward the Himalaya 5. A "Perfume Saint" Performs his Wonders 6. The Tiger Swami 7.

    Mother was welcoming numerous
    relatives, daily arriving in Calcutta from distant homes. She lodged them comfortably in a large,
    newly acquired house at 50 Amherst Street. Everything was in readiness-the banquet delicacies,
    the gay throne on which Brother was to be carried to the home of the bride-to-be, the rows of
    colorful lights, the mammoth cardboard elephants and camels, the English, Scottish and Indian
    orchestras, the professional entertainers, the priests for the ancient rituals.

    Father and I, in gala spirits, were planning to join the family in time for the ceremony.

    Shortly
    before the great day, however, I had an ominous vision.

    It was in Bareilly on a midnight. As I slept beside Father on the piazza of our bungalow, I was
    awakened by a peculiar flutter of the mosquito netting over the bed. The flimsy curtains parted
    and I saw the beloved form of my mother.

    "Awaken your father!" Her voice was only a whisper.

    "Take the first available train, at four o'clock
    this morning. Rush to Calcutta if you would see me!" The wraithlike figure vanished.

    "Father, Father! Mother is dying!" The terror in my tone aroused him instantly. I sobbed out the
    fatal tidings.

    "Never mind that hallucination of yours." Father gave his characteristic negation to a new
    situation.

    "Your mother is in excellent health. If we get any bad news, we shall leave tomorrow."

    "You shall never forgive yourself for not starting now!" Anguish caused me to add bitterly, "Nor
    shall I ever forgive you!"

    The melancholy morning came with explicit words: "Mother dangerously ill; marriage postponed;
    come at once."

    Father and I left distractedly.

    One of my uncles met us en route at a transfer point. A train
    thundered toward us, looming with telescopic increase. From my inner tumult, an abrupt
    determination arose to hurl myself on the railroad tracks. Already bereft, I felt, of my mother, I
    could not endure a world suddenly barren to the bone. I loved Mother as my dearest friend on
    earth.

    Her solacing black eyes had been my surest refuge in the trifling tragedies of childhood.

    "Does she yet live?" I stopped for one last question to my uncle.
    "Of course she is alive!" He was not slow to interpret the desperation in my face. But I scarcely
    believed him.

    When we reached our Calcutta home, it was only to confront the stunning mystery of death.

    I
    collapsed into an almost lifeless state. Years passed before any reconciliation entered my heart.
    Storming the very gates of heaven, my cries at last summoned the Divine Mother. Her words
    brought final healing to my suppurating wounds:

    "It is I who have watched over thee, life after life, in the tenderness of many mothers!

    See in My
    gaze the two black eyes, the lost beautiful eyes, thou seekest!"

    Father and I returned to Bareilly soon after the crematory rites for the well-beloved. Early every
    morning I made a pathetic memorial- pilgrimage to a large sheoli tree which shaded the smooth,
    green-gold lawn before our bungalow.

    In poetical moments, I thought that the white sheoli
    flowers were strewing themselves with a willing devotion over the grassy altar. Mingling tears
    with the dew, I often observed a strange other-worldly light emerging from the dawn. Intense
    pangs of longing for God assailed me. I felt powerfully drawn to the Himalayas.

    One of my cousins, fresh from a period of travel in the holy hills, visited us in Bareilly.

    I listened
    eagerly to his tales about the high mountain abode of yogis and swamis.

    "Let us run away to the Himalayas." My suggestion one day to Dwarka Prasad, the young son of
    our landlord in Bareilly, fell on unsympathetic ears. He revealed my plan to my elder brother,
    who had just arrived to see Father. Instead of laughing lightly over this impractical scheme of a
    small boy, Ananta made it a definite point to ridicule me.

    "Where is your orange robe?

    You can't be a swami without that!"

    But I was inexplicably thrilled by his words. They brought a clear picture of myself roaming about
    India as a monk. Perhaps they awakened memories of a past life; in any case, I began to see with
    what natural ease I would wear the garb of that anciently-founded monastic order.

    Chatting one morning with Dwarka, I felt a love for God descending with avalanchic force.

    My
    companion was only partly attentive to the ensuing eloquence, but I was wholeheartedly listening
    to myself.

    I fled that afternoon toward Naini Tal in the Himalayan foothills. Ananta gave determined chase;
    I was forced to return sadly to Bareilly. The only pilgrimage permitted me was the customary one
    at dawn to the sheoli tree.

    My heart wept for the lost Mothers, human and divine.

    The rent left in the family fabric by Mother's death was irreparable. Father never remarried
    during his nearly forty remaining years. Assuming the difficult role of Father-Mother to his little
    flock, he grew noticeably more tender, more approachable.

    With calmness and insight, he solved
    the various family problems. After office hours he retired like a hermit to the cell of his room,
    practicing Kriya Yoga in a sweet serenity. Long after Mother's death, I attempted to engage an
    English nurse to attend to details that would make my parent's life more comfortable. But Father
    shook his head.

    My Mother

    A Disciple of Lahiri Mahasaya

    "Service to me ended with your mother." His eyes were remote with a lifelong devotion.

    "I will not
    accept ministrations from any other woman."

    Fourteen months after Mother's passing, I learned that she had left me a momentous message.
    Ananta was present at her deathbed and had recorded her words. Although she had asked that
    the disclosure be made to me in one year, my brother delayed.

    He was soon to leave Bareilly for
    Calcutta, to marry the girl Mother had chosen for him. One evening he summoned me to his
    side.

    "Mukunda, I have been reluctant to give you strange tidings." Ananta's tone held a note of
    resignation. "My fear was to inflame your desire to leave home. But in any case you are bristling
    with divine ardor.

    When I captured you recently on your way to the Himalayas, I came to a
    definite resolve. I must not further postpone the fulfillment of my solemn promise." My brother
    handed me a small box, and delivered Mother's message.

    "Let these words be my final blessing, my beloved son Mukunda!" Mother had said. "The hour is
    here when I must relate a number of phenomenal events following your birth.

    I first knew your
    destined path when you were but a babe in my arms. I carried you then to the home of my guru in
    Benares. Almost hidden behind a throng of disciples, I could barely see Lahiri Mahasaya as he sat
    in deep meditation.
    "While I patted you, I was praying that the great guru take notice and bestow a blessing. As my
    silent devotional demand grew in intensity, he opened his eyes and beckoned me to approach.
    The others made a way for me; I bowed at the sacred feet.

    My master seated you on his lap,
    placing his hand on your forehead by way of spiritually baptizing you.

    "'Little mother, thy son will be a yogi. As a spiritual engine, he will carry many souls to God's
    kingdom.'

    "My heart leaped with joy to find my secret prayer granted by the omniscient guru.

    Shortly before
    your birth, he had told me you would follow his path.

    "Later, my son, your vision of the Great Light was known to me and your sister Roma, as from the
    next room we observed you motionless on the bed. Your little face was illuminated; your voice
    rang with iron resolve as you spoke of going to the Himalayas in quest of the Divine.

    "In these ways, dear son, I came to know that your road lies far from worldly ambitions.

    The most
    singular event in my life brought further confirmation-an event which now impels my deathbed
    message.

    "It was an interview with a sage in the Punjab. While our family was living in Lahore, one
    morning the servant came precipitantly into my room.

    "'Mistress, a strange sadhu is here. He insists that he "see the mother of Mukunda."'

    "These simple words struck a profound chord within me; I went at once to greet the visitor.
    Bowing at his feet, I sensed that before me was a true man of God.

    "'Mother,' he said, 'the great masters wish you to know that your stay on earth will not be long.
    Your next illness shall prove to be your last.' There was a silence, during which I felt no alarm
    but only a vibration of great peace.

    Finally he addressed me again:

    "'You are to be the custodian of a certain silver amulet. I will not give it to you today; to
    demonstrate the truth in my words, the talisman shall materialize in your hands tomorrow as you
    meditate. On your deathbed, you must instruct your eldest son Ananta to keep the amulet for one
    year and then to hand it over to your second son.

    Mukunda will understand the meaning of the
    talisman from the great ones. He should receive it about the time he is ready to renounce all
    worldly hopes and start his vital search for God. When he has retained the amulet for some years,
    and when it has served its purpose, it shall vanish. Even if kept in the most secret spot, it shall
    return whence it came.'

    "I proffered alms to the saint, and bowed before him in great reverence.

    Not taking the
    offering, he departed with a blessing. The next evening, as I sat with folded hands in meditation, a
    silver amulet materialized between my palms, even as the sadhu had promised. It made itself
    known by a cold, smooth touch. I have jealously guarded it for more than two years, and now
    leave it in Ananta's keeping.

    Autobiography of a yogi free pdf Evans-Wentz, M. Wright, T. The value of Yogananda's Autobiography is greatly enhanced by the fact that it is one of the few books in English about the wise men of India which has been written, not by a journalist or foreigner, but by one of their own race and training--in short, a book about yogis by a yogi. As an eyewitness recountal of the extraordinary lives and powers of modern Hindu saints, the book has importance both timely and timeless. To its illustrious author, whom I have had the pleasure of knowing both in India and America, may every reader render due appreciation and gratitude.

    Do not grieve for me, as I shall have been ushered by my great guru
    into the arms of the Infinite. Farewell, my child; the Cosmic Mother will protect you."

    A blaze of illumination came over me with possession of the amulet; many dormant memories
    awakened. The talisman, round and anciently quaint, was covered with Sanskrit characters.

    I
    understood that it came from teachers of past lives, who were invisibly guiding my steps. A
    further significance there was, indeed; but one does not reveal fully the heart of an amulet.

    How the talisman finally vanished amidst deeply unhappy circumstances of my life; and how its
    loss was a herald of my gain of a guru, cannot be told in this chapter.

    But the small boy, thwarted in his attempts to reach the Himalayas, daily traveled far on the
    wings of his amulet.

    Sanskrit root meaning of swami is "he who is one with his Self (Swa)." Applied to a member of the Indian order of
    monks, the title has the formal respect of "the reverend."

    The Indian custom, whereby parents choose the life-partner for their child, has resisted the blunt assaults of time.
    The percentage is high of happy Indian marriages.

    An anchorite; one who pursues a sadhana or path of spiritual discipline.

    When I discovered by these words that Mother had possessed secret knowledge of a short life, I understood for the
    first time why she had been insistent on hastening the plans for Ananta's marriage.

    Though she died before the wedding,
    her natural maternal wish had been to witness the rites.

    A customary gesture of respect to sadhus .

    CHAPTER: 3

    The Saint With Two Bodies

    "Father, if I promise to return home without coercion, may I take a sight-seeing trip to Benares?"

    My keen love of travel was seldom hindered by Father.

    He permitted me, even as a mere boy, to
    visit many cities and pilgrimage spots. Usually one or more of my friends accompanied me; we
    would travel comfortably on first-class passes provided by Father. His position as a railroad
    official was fully satisfactory to the nomads in the family.

    Father promised to give my request due consideration.

    The next day he summoned me and held
    out a round-trip pass from Bareilly to Benares, a number of rupee notes, and two letters.

    "I have a business matter to propose to a Benares friend, Kedar Nath Babu. Unfortunately I have
    lost his address. But I believe you will be able to get this letter to him through our common friend,
    Swami Pranabananda.

    The swami, my brother disciple, has attained an exalted spiritual stature.
    You will benefit by his company; this second note will serve as your introduction."

    Father's eyes twinkled as he added, "Mind, no more flights from home!"

    I set forth with the zest of my twelve years (though time has never dimmed my delight in new
    scenes and strange faces).

    Reaching Benares, I proceeded immediately to the swami's residence.
    The front door was open; I made my way to a long, hall-like room on the second floor. A rather
    stout man, wearing only a loincloth, was seated in lotus posture on a slightly raised platform. His
    head and unwrinkled face were clean-shaven; a beatific smile played about his lips.

    To dispel my
    thought that I had intruded, he greeted me as an old friend.

    "Baba anand (bliss to my dear one)." His welcome was given heartily in a childlike voice. I knelt
    and touched his feet.

    "Are you Swami Pranabananda?"

    He nodded. "Are you Bhagabati's son?" His words were out before I had had time to get Father's
    letter from my pocket.

    In astonishment, I handed him the note of introduction, which now
    seemed superfluous.

    "Of course I will locate Kedar Nath Babu for you." The saint again surprised me by his
    clairvoyance. He glanced at the letter, and made a few affectionate references to my parent.

    "You know, I am enjoying two pensions. One is by the recommendation of your father, for whom I
    once worked in the railroad office.

    The other is by the recommendation of my Heavenly Father,
    for whom I have conscientiously finished my earthly duties in life."

    I found this remark very obscure.

    Autobiography of a yogi in telugu: The value of Yogananda's Autobiography is greatly enhanced by the fact that it is one of the few books in English about the wise men of India which has been written, not by a journalist or foreigner, but by one of.

    "What kind of pension, sir, do you receive from the Heavenly
    Father? Does He drop money in your lap?"

    He laughed. "I mean a pension of fathomless peace-a reward for many years of deep meditation. I
    never crave money now. My few material needs are amply provided for. Later you will understand
    the significance of a second pension."

    Abruptly terminating our conversation, the saint became gravely motionless.

    A sphinxlike air
    enveloped him. At first his eyes sparkled, as if observing something of interest, then grew dull. I
    felt abashed at his pauciloquy; he had not yet told me how I could meet Father's friend. A trifle
    restlessly, I looked about me in the bare room, empty except for us two. My idle gaze took in his
    wooden sandals, lying under the platform seat.
    "Little sir, don't get worried.

    The man you wish to see will be with you in half an hour." The
    yogi was reading my mind-a feat not too difficult at the moment!

    Again he fell into inscrutable silence. My watch informed me that thirty minutes had elapsed.

    The swami aroused himself. "I think Kedar Nath Babu is nearing the door."

    I heard somebody coming up the stairs.

    An amazed incomprehension arose suddenly; my


    thoughts raced in confusion: "How is it possible that Father's friend has been summoned to this
    place without the help of a messenger? The swami has spoken to no one but myself since my
    arrival!"

    Abruptly I quitted the room and descended the steps. Halfway down I met a thin, fair-skinned
    man of medium height.

    He appeared to be in a hurry.

    "Are you Kedar Nath Babu?" Excitement colored my voice.

    "Yes. Are you not Bhagabati's son who has been waiting here to meet me?" He smiled in friendly
    fashion.

    "Sir, how do you happen to come here?" I felt baffled resentment over his inexplicable presence.

    "Everything is mysterious today!

    Less than an hour ago I had just finished my bath in the Ganges
    when Swami Pranabananda approached me. I have no idea how he knew I was there at that time.

    "'Bhagabati's son is waiting for you in my apartment,' he said. 'Will you come with me?' I gladly
    agreed. As we proceeded hand in hand, the swami in his wooden sandals was strangely able to
    outpace me, though I wore these stout walking shoes.

    "'How long will it take you to reach my place?' Pranabanandaji suddenly halted to ask me this
    question.

    "'About half an hour.'

    "'I have something else to do at present.' He gave me an enigmatical glance.

    'I must leave you
    behind. You can join me in my house, where Bhagabati's son and I will be awaiting you.'

    "Before I could remonstrate, he dashed swiftly past me and disappeared in the crowd. I walked
    here as fast as possible."

    This explanation only increased my bewilderment. I inquired how long he had known the swami.

    "We met a few times last year, but not recently.

    I was very glad to see him again today at the
    bathing ghat ."

    "I cannot believe my ears! Am I losing my mind? Did you meet him in a vision, or did you actually
    see him, touch his hand, and hear the sound of his feet?"

    "I don't know what you're driving at!" He flushed angrily.

    "I am not lying to you.

    Barry letts autobiography of a yogi pdf in hindi

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    Can't you
    understand that only through the swami could I have known you were waiting at this place for
    me?"

    "Why, that man, Swami Pranabananda, has not left my sight a moment since I first came about
    an hour ago." I blurted out the whole story.

    His eyes opened widely. "Are we living in this material age, or are we dreaming?

    I never expected
    to witness such a miracle in my life! I thought this swami was just an ordinary man, and now I
    find he can materialize an extra body and work through it!" Together we entered the saint's room.

    "Look, those are the very sandals he was wearing at the ghat ," Kedar Nath Babu whispered. "He
    was clad only in a loincloth, just as I see him now."

    As the visitor bowed before him, the saint turned to me with a quizzical smile.

    "Why are you stupefied at all this?

    The subtle unity of the phenomenal world is not hidden from
    true yogis. I instantly see and converse with my disciples in distant Calcutta. They can similarly
    transcend at will every obstacle of gross matter."

    It was probably in an effort to stir spiritual ardor in my young breast that the swami had
    condescended to tell me of his powers of astral radio and television.

    But instead of
    enthusiasm, I experienced only an awe-stricken fear. Inasmuch as I was destined to undertake my
    divine search through one particular guru-Sri Yukteswar, whom I had not yet met-I felt no
    inclination to accept Pranabananda as my teacher. I glanced at him doubtfully, wondering if it
    were he or his counterpart before me.
    Swami Pranabananda
    "The Saint With Two Bodies"
    An Exalted Disciple of Lahiri Mahasaya

    The master sought to banish my disquietude by bestowing a soul- awakening gaze, and by some
    inspiring words about his guru.

    "Lahiri Mahasaya was the greatest yogi I ever knew.

    He was Divinity Itself in the form of flesh."

    If a disciple, I reflected, could materialize an extra fleshly form at will, what miracles indeed could
    be barred to his master?

    "I will tell you how priceless is a guru's help. I used to meditate with another disciple for eight
    hours every night.

    We had to work at the railroad office during the day. Finding difficulty in
    carrying on my clerical duties, I desired to devote my whole time to God. For eight years I
    persevered, meditating half the night. I had wonderful results; tremendous spiritual perceptions
    illumined my mind. But a little veil always remained between me and the Infinite.

    Even with
    super-human earnestness, I found the final irrevocable union to be denied me. One evening I
    paid a visit to Lahiri Mahasaya and pleaded for his divine intercession. My importunities
    continued during the entire night.

    "'Angelic Guru, my spiritual anguish is such that I can no longer bear my life without meeting the
    Great Beloved face to face!'

    "'What can I do?

    You must meditate more profoundly.'

    "'I am appealing to Thee, O God my Master! I see Thee materialized before me in a physical body;
    bless me that I may perceive Thee in Thine infinite form!'

    "Lahiri Mahasaya extended his hand in a benign gesture. 'You may go now and meditate. I have
    interceded for you with Brahma.'

    "Immeasurably uplifted, I returned to my home.

    In meditation that night, the burning Goal of my
    life was achieved. Now I ceaselessly enjoy the spiritual pension. Never from that day has the
    Blissful Creator remained hidden from my eyes behind any screen of delusion."

    Pranabananda's face was suffused with divine light. The peace of another world entered my heart;
    all fear had fled.

    The saint made a further confidence.

    "Some months later I returned to Lahiri Mahasaya and tried to thank him for his bestowal of the
    infinite gift. Then I mentioned another matter.

    "'Divine Guru, I can no longer work in the office. Please release me. Brahma keeps me
    continuously intoxicated.'
    "'Apply for a pension from your company.'

    "'What reason shall I give, so early in my service?'

    "'Say what you feel.'

    "The next day I made my application.

    The doctor inquired the grounds for my premature request.

    "'At work, I find an overpowering sensation rising in my spine. It permeates my whole body,
    unfitting me for the performance of my duties.'

    "Without further questioning the physician recommended me highly for a pension, which I soon
    received.

    I know the divine will of Lahiri Mahasaya worked through the doctor and the railroad
    officials, including your father. Automatically they obeyed the great guru's spiritual direction, and
    freed me for a life of unbroken communion with the Beloved."

    After this extraordinary revelation, Swami Pranabananda retired into one of his long silences.

    As
    I was taking leave, touching his feet reverently, he gave me his blessing:

    "Your life belongs to the path of renunciation and yoga. I shall see you again, with your father,
    later on." The years brought fulfillment to both these predictions.

    Kedar Nath Babu walked by my side in the gathering darkness. I delivered Father's letter, which
    my companion read under a street lamp.

    "Your father suggests that I take a position in the Calcutta office of his railroad company.

    How
    pleasant to look forward to at least one of the pensions that Swami Pranabananda enjoys! But it is
    impossible; I cannot leave Benares. Alas, two bodies are not yet for me!"

    Choto Mahasaya is the term by which a number of Indian saints addressed me. It translates "little sir.".

    In its own way, physical science is affirming the validity of laws discovered by yogis through mental science.

    For
    example, a demonstration that man has televisional powers was given on Nov. 26, at the Royal University of Rome.
    "Dr. Giuseppe Calligaris, professor of neuro-psychology, pressed certain points of a subject's body and the subject
    responded with minute descriptions of other persons and objects on the opposite side of a wall.

    Dr. Calligaris told the
    other professors that if certain areas on the skin are agitated, the subject is given super-sensorial impressions enabling
    him to see objects that he could not otherwise perceive. To enable his subject to discern things on the other side of a
    wall, Professor Calligaris pressed on a spot to the right of the thorax for fifteen minutes.

    Dr. Calligaris said that if other
    spots of the body were agitated, the subjects could see objects at any distance, regardless of whether they had ever
    before seen those objects.".

    God in His aspect of Creator; from Sanskrit root brih , to expand. When Emerson's poem Brahma appeared in the
    Atlantic Monthly in , most the readers were bewildered.

    Emerson chuckled. "Tell them," he said, "to say 'Jehovah'
    instead of 'Brahma' and they will not feel any perplexity."

    In deep meditation, the first experience of Spirit is on the altar of the spine, and then in the brain. The torrential
    bliss is overwhelming, but the yogi learns to control its outward manifestations.

    After his retirement, Pranabananda wrote one of the most profound commentaries on the Bhagavad Gita, available
    in Bengali and Hindi.
    See chapter

    CHAPTER: 4

    My Interrupted Flight Toward The Himalayas

    "Leave your classroom on some trifling pretext, and engage a hackney carriage.

    Stop in the lane
    where no one in my house can see you."

    These were my final instructions to Amar Mitter, a high school friend who planned to accompany
    me to the Himalayas. We had chosen the following day for our flight. Precautions were necessary,
    as Ananta exercised a vigilant eye. He was determined to foil the plans of escape which he
    suspected were uppermost in my mind.

    The amulet, like a spiritual yeast, was silently at work
    within me. Amidst the Himalayan snows, I hoped to find the master whose face often appeared to
    me in visions.

    The family was living now in Calcutta, where Father had been permanently transferred. Following
    the patriarchal Indian custom, Ananta had brought his bride to live in our home, now at 4 Gurpar
    Road.

    There in a small attic room I engaged in daily meditations and prepared my mind for the
    divine search.

    The memorable morning arrived with inauspicious rain. Hearing the wheels of Amar's carriage in
    the road, I hastily tied together a blanket, a pair of sandals, Lahiri Mahasaya's picture, a copy of
    the Bhagavad Gita, a string of prayer beads, and two loincloths.

    This bundle I threw from my
    third-story window. I ran down the steps and passed my uncle, buying fish at the door.

    "What is the excitement?" His gaze roved suspiciously over my person.

    I gave him a noncommittal smile and walked to the lane. Retrieving my bundle, I joined Amar
    with conspiratorial caution.

    We drove to Chadni Chowk, a merchandise center. For months we
    had been saving our tiffin money to buy English clothes. Knowing that my clever brother could
    easily play the part of a detective, we thought to outwit him by European garb.

    On the way to the station, we stopped for my cousin, Jotin Ghosh, whom I called Jatinda.

    He was
    a new convert, longing for a guru in the Himalayas. He donned the new suit we had in readiness.
    Well- camouflaged, we hoped! A deep elation possessed our hearts.
    "All we need now are canvas shoes." I led my companions to a shop displaying rubber-soled
    footwear. "Articles of leather, gotten only through the slaughter of animals, must be absent on
    this holy trip." I halted on the street to remove the leather cover from my Bhagavad Gita, and the
    leather straps from my English-made sola topee (helmet).

    At the station we bought tickets to Burdwan, where we planned to transfer for Hardwar in the
    Himalayan foothills.

    As soon as the train, like ourselves, was in flight, I gave utterance to a few of
    my glorious anticipations.

    "Just imagine!" I ejaculated. "We shall be initiated by the masters and experience the trance of
    cosmic consciousness. Our flesh will be charged with such magnetism that wild animals of the
    Himalayas will come tamely near us.

    Tigers will be no more than meek house cats awaiting our
    caresses!"

    This remark-picturing a prospect I considered entrancing, both metaphorically and literally-


    brought an enthusiastic smile from Amar. But Jatinda averted his gaze, directing it through the
    window at the scampering landscape.

    "Let the money be divided in three portions." Jatinda broke a long silence with this suggestion.
    "Each of us should buy his own ticket at Burdwan.

    Thus no one at the station will surmise that we
    are running away together."

    I unsuspectingly agreed. At dusk our train stopped at Burdwan. Jatinda entered the ticket office;
    Amar and I sat on the platform. We waited fifteen minutes, then made unavailing inquiries.
    Searching in all directions, we shouted Jatinda's name with the urgency of fright.

    But he had
    faded into the dark unknown surrounding the little station.

    I was completely unnerved, shocked to a peculiar numbness. That God would countenance this
    depressing episode! The romantic occasion of my first carefully-planned flight after Him was
    cruelly marred.

    "Amar, we must return home." I was weeping like a child.

    "Jatinda's callous departure is an ill
    omen. This trip is doomed to failure."

    "Is this your love for the Lord? Can't you stand the little test of a treacherous companion?"

    Through Amar's suggestion of a divine test, my heart steadied itself. We refreshed ourselves with
    famous Burdwan sweetmeats, sitabhog (food for the goddess) and motichur (nuggets of sweet
    pearl).

    In a few hours, we entrained for Hardwar, via Bareilly. Changing trains at Moghul Serai,
    we discussed a vital matter as we waited on the platform.

    "Amar, we may soon be closely questioned by railroad officials. I am not underrating my brother's
    ingenuity! No matter what the outcome, I will not speak untruth."
    "All I ask of you, Mukunda, is to keep still.

    Don't laugh or grin while I am talking."

    At this moment, a European station agent accosted me. He waved a telegram whose import I
    immediately grasped.

    "Are you running away from home in anger?"

    "No!" I was glad his choice of words permitted me to make emphatic reply.

    Not anger but
    "divinest melancholy" was responsible, I knew, for my unconventional behavior.

    The official then turned to Amar. The duel of wits that followed hardly permitted me to maintain
    the counseled stoic gravity.

    "Where is the third boy?" The man injected a full ring of authority into his voice. "Come on; speak
    the truth!"

    "Sir, I notice you are wearing eyeglasses.

    Can't you see that we are only two?" Amar smiled
    impudently. "I am not a magician; I can't conjure up a third companion."

    The official, noticeably disconcerted by this impertinence, sought a new field of attack.

    "What is your name?"

    "I am called Thomas. I am the son of an English mother and a converted Christian Indian father."

    "What is your friend's name?"

    "I call him Thompson."

    By this time my inward mirth had reached a zenith; I unceremoniously made for the train,
    whistling for departure.

    Amar followed with the official, who was credulous and obliging enough
    to put us into a European compartment. It evidently pained him to think of two half- English boys
    traveling in the section allotted to natives. After his polite exit, I lay back on the seat and laughed
    uncontrollably. My friend wore an expression of blithe satisfaction at having outwitted a veteran
    European official.

    On the platform I had contrived to read the telegram.

    From my brother, it went thus: "Three
    Bengali boys in English clothes running away from home toward Hardwar via Moghul Serai.
    Please detain them until my arrival. Ample reward for your services."

    "Amar, I told you not to leave marked timetables in your home." My glance was reproachful.
    "Brother must have found one there."

    My friend sheepishly acknowledged the thrust.

    We halted briefly in Bareilly, where Dwarka
    Prasad awaited us with a telegram from Ananta. My old friend tried valiantly to detain us; I
    convinced him that our flight had not been undertaken lightly. As on a previous occasion, Dwarka
    refused my invitation to set forth to the Himalayas.

    While our train stood in a station that night, and I was half asleep, Amar was awakened by
    another questioning official.

    He, too, fell a victim to the hybrid charms of "Thomas" and
    "Thompson." The train bore us triumphantly into a dawn arrival at Hardwar. The majestic
    mountains loomed invitingly in the distance. We dashed through the station and entered the
    freedom of city crowds. Our first act was to change into native costume, as Ananta had somehow
    penetrated our European disguise.

    A premonition of capture weighed on my mind.

    Deeming it advisable to leave Hardwar at once, we bought tickets to proceed north to Rishikesh, a
    soil long hallowed by feet of many masters. I had already boarded the train, while Amar lagged on
    the platform. He was brought to an abrupt halt by a shout from a policeman. Our unwelcome
    guardian escorted us to a station bungalow and took charge of our money.

    He explained
    courteously that it was his duty to hold us until my elder brother arrived.

    Learning that the truants' destination had been the Himalayas, the officer related a strange story.

    "I see you are crazy about saints! You will never meet a greater man of God than the one I saw
    only yesterday. My brother officer and I first encountered him five days ago.

    We were patrolling
    by the Ganges, on a sharp lookout for a certain murderer. Our instructions were to capture him,
    alive or dead. He was known to be masquerading as a sadhu in order to rob pilgrims. A short way
    before us, we spied a figure which resembled the description of the criminal. He ignored our
    command to stop; we ran to overpower him.

    Approaching his back, I wielded my ax with
    tremendous force; the man's right arm was severed almost completely from his body.

    "Without outcry or any glance at the ghastly wound, the stranger astonishingly continued his
    swift pace. As we jumped in front of him, he spoke quietly.

    "'I am not the murderer you are seeking.'

    "I was deeply mortified to see I had injured the person of a divine- looking sage.

    Prostrating
    myself at his feet, I implored his pardon, and offered my turban-cloth to staunch the heavy spurts
    of blood.

    "'Son, that was just an understandable mistake on your part.' The saint regarded me kindly. 'Run
    along, and don't reproach yourself. The Beloved Mother is taking care of me.' He pushed his
    dangling arm into its stump and lo!

    it adhered; the blood inexplicably ceased to flow.

    "'Come to me under yonder tree in three days and you will find me fully healed. Thus you will feel
    no remorse.'

    "Yesterday my brother officer and I went eagerly to the designated spot. The sadhu was there and
    allowed us to examine his arm.

    It bore no scar or trace of hurt!

    "'I am going via Rishikesh to the Himalayan solitudes.' He blessed us as he departed quickly. I
    feel that my life has been uplifted through his sanctity."

    The officer concluded with a pious ejaculation; his experience had obviously moved him beyond
    his usual depths.

    With an impressive gesture, he handed me a printed clipping about the miracle.
    In the usual garbled manner of the sensational type of newspaper (not missing, alas! even in
    India), the reporter's version was slightly exaggerated: it indicated that the sadhu had been
    almost decapitated!

    Amar and I lamented that we had missed the great yogi who could forgive his persecutor in such a
    Christlike way.

    India, materially poor for the last two centuries, yet has an inexhaustible fund of
    divine wealth; spiritual "skyscrapers" may occasionally be encountered by the wayside, even by
    worldly men like this policeman.

    We thanked the officer for relieving our tedium with his marvelous story. He was probably
    intimating that he was more fortunate than we: he had met an illumined saint without effort; our
    earnest search had ended, not at the feet of a master, but in a coarse police station!

    So near the Himalayas and yet, in our captivity, so far, I told Amar I felt doubly impelled to seek
    freedom.

    "Let us slip away when opportunity offers.

    We can go on foot to holy Rishikesh." I smiled
    encouragingly.

    But my companion had turned pessimist as soon as the stalwart prop of our money had been
    taken from us.

    "If we started a trek over such dangerous jungle land, we should finish, not in the city of saints,
    but in the stomachs of tigers!"

    Ananta and Amar's brother arrived after three days.

    Amar greeted his relative with affectionate
    relief. I was unreconciled; Ananta got no more from me than a severe upbraiding.

    "I understand how you feel." My brother spoke soothingly. "All I ask of you is to accompany me to
    Benares to meet a certain saint, and go on to Calcutta to visit your grieving father for a few days.
    Then you can resume your search here for a master."

    Amar entered the conversation at this point to disclaim any intention of returning to Hardwar
    with me.

    He was enjoying the familial warmth. But I knew I would never abandon the quest for
    my guru.

    Our party entrained for Benares. There I had a singular and instant response to my prayers.

    A clever scheme had been prearranged by Ananta. Before seeing me at Hardwar, he had stopped
    in Benares to ask a certain scriptural authority to interview me later.

    Both the pundit and his son
    had promised to undertake my dissuasion from the path of a sannyasi .
    Ananta took me to their home. The son, a young man of ebullient manner, greeted me in the
    courtyard. He engaged me in a lengthy philosophic discourse. Professing to have a clairvoyant
    knowledge of my future, he discountenanced my idea of being a monk.

    "You will meet continual misfortune, and be unable to find God, if you insist on deserting your
    ordinary responsibilities!

    You cannot work out your past karma without worldly experiences."

    Krishna's immortal words rose to my lips in reply: "'Even he with the worst of karma who
    ceaselessly meditates on Me quickly loses the effects of his past bad actions. Becoming a high-
    souled being, he soon attains perennial peace. Arjuna, know this for certain: the devotee who puts
    his trust in Me never perishes!'"

    But the forceful prognostications of the young man had slightly shaken my confidence.

    With all
    the fervor of my heart I prayed silently to God:

    "Please solve my bewilderment and answer me, right here and now, if Thou dost desire me to lead
    the life of a renunciate or a worldly man!"

    I noticed a sadhu of noble countenance standing just outside the compound of the pundit's house.
    Evidently he had overheard the spirited conversation between the self-styled clairvoyant and
    myself, for the stranger called me to his side.

    I felt a tremendous power flowing from his calm
    eyes.

    "Son, don't listen to that ignoramus. In response to your prayer, the Lord tells me to assure you
    that your sole path in this life is that of the renunciate."

    With astonishment as well as gratitude, I smiled happily at this decisive message.

    "Come away from that man!" The "ignoramus" was calling me from the courtyard.

    My saintly
    guide raised his hand in blessing and slowly departed.

    "That sadhu is just as crazy as you are." It was the hoary-headed pundit who made this charming
    observation. He and his son were gazing at me lugubriously. "I heard that he too has left his home
    in a vague search for God."

    I turned away.

    To Ananta I remarked that I would not engage in further discussion with our
    hosts. My brother agreed to an immediate departure; we soon entrained for Calcutta.
    I stand behind my elder brother, Ananta.

    Last Solstice Festival celebrated by Sri Yukteswar, December, My Guru is


    seated in the center; I am at his right, in the large courtyard of his hermitage in
    Serampore.

    "Mr.

    Detective, how did you discover I had fled with two companions?" I vented my lively
    curiosity to Ananta during our homeward journey. He smiled mischievously.

    "At your school, I found that Amar had left his classroom and had not returned. I went to his
    home the next morning and unearthed a marked timetable.

    Amar's father was just leaving by
    carriage and was talking to the coachman.

    "'My son will not ride with me to his school this morning. He has disappeared!' the father
    moaned.

    "'I heard from a brother coachman that your son and two others, dressed in European suits,
    boarded the train at Howrah Station,' the man stated.

    'They made a present of their leather shoes
    to the cab driver.'

    "Thus I had three clues-the timetable, the trio of boys, and the English clothing."

    I was listening to Ananta's disclosures with mingled mirth and vexation. Our generosity to the
    coachman had been slightly misplaced!

    "Of course I rushed to send telegrams to station officials in all the cities which Amar had
    underlined in the timetable.

    He had checked Bareilly, so I wired your friend Dwarka there. After
    inquiries in our Calcutta neighborhood, I learned that cousin Jatinda had been absent one night
    but had arrived home the following morning in European garb. I sought him out and invited him
    to dinner. He accepted, quite disarmed by my friendly manner. On the way I led him
    unsuspectingly to a police station.

    He was surrounded by several officers whom I had previously
    selected for their ferocious appearance. Under their formidable gaze, Jatinda agreed to account
    for his mysterious conduct.

    "'I started for the Himalayas in a buoyant spiritual mood,' he explained. 'Inspiration filled me at
    the prospect of meeting the masters.

    But as soon as Mukunda said, "During our ecstasies in the
    Himalayan caves, tigers will be spellbound and sit around us like tame pussies," my spirits froze;
    beads of perspiration formed on my brow. "What then?" I thought. "If the vicious nature of the
    tigers be not changed through the power of our spiritual trance, shall they treat us with the
    kindness of house cats?" In my mind's eye, I already saw myself the compulsory inmate of some
    tiger's stomach-entering there not at once with the whole body, but by installments of its several
    parts!'"

    My anger at Jatinda's vanishment was evaporated in laughter.

    The hilarious sequel on the train
    was worth all the anguish he had caused me. I must confess to a slight feeling of satisfaction:
    Jatinda too had not escaped an encounter with the police!

    "Ananta, you are a born sleuthhound!" My glance of amusement was not without some
    exasperation. "And I shall tell Jatinda I am glad he was prompted by no mood of treachery, as it
    appeared, but only by the prudent instinct of self-preservation!"

    At home in Calcutta, Father touchingly requested me to curb my roving feet until, at least, the
    completion of my high school studies.

    In my absence, he had lovingly hatched a plot by arranging
    for a saintly pundit, Swami Kebalananda, to come regularly to the house.

    "The sage will be your Sanskrit tutor," my parent announced confidently.


    Father hoped to satisfy my religious yearnings by instructions from a learned philosopher.

    But
    the tables were subtly turned: my new teacher, far from offering intellectual aridities, fanned the
    embers of my God-aspiration. Unknown to Father, Swami Kebalananda was an exalted disciple of
    Lahiri Mahasaya. The peerless guru had possessed thousands of disciples, silently drawn to him
    by the irresistibility of his divine magnetism.

    I learned later that Lahiri Mahasaya had often
    characterized Kebalananda as rishi or illumined sage.

    Luxuriant curls framed my tutor's handsome face. His dark eyes were guileless, with the
    transparency of a child's. All the movements of his slight body were marked by a restful
    deliberation. Ever gentle and loving, he was firmly established in the infinite consciousness.
    Many of our happy hours together were spent in deep Kriya meditation.

    Kebalananda was a noted authority on the ancient shastras or sacred books: his erudition had
    earned him the title of "Shastri Mahasaya," by which he was usually addressed.

    But my progress
    in Sanskrit scholarship was unnoteworthy. I sought every opportunity to forsake prosaic
    grammar and to talk of yoga and Lahiri Mahasaya. My tutor obliged me one day by telling me
    something of his own life with the master.

    "Rarely fortunate, I was able to remain near Lahiri Mahasaya for ten years. His Benares home
    was my nightly goal of pilgrimage.

    The guru was always present in a small front parlor on the first
    floor. As he sat in lotus posture on a backless wooden seat, his disciples garlanded him in a
    semicircle. His eyes sparkled and danced with the joy of the Divine. They were ever half closed,
    peering through the inner telescopic orb into a sphere of eternal bliss.

    He seldom spoke at length.
    Occasionally his gaze would focus on a student in need of help; healing words poured then like an
    avalanche of light.

    "An indescribable peace blossomed within me at the master's glance. I was permeated with his
    fragrance, as though from a lotus of infinity. To be with him, even without exchanging a word for
    days, was experience which changed my entire being.

    If any invisible barrier rose in the path of
    my concentration, I would meditate at the guru's feet. There the most tenuous states came easily
    within my grasp. Such perceptions eluded me in the presence of lesser teachers. The master was a
    living temple of God whose secret doors were open to all disciples through devotion.

    "Lahiri Mahasaya was no bookish interpreter of the scriptures.

    Effortlessly he dipped into the
    'divine library.' Foam of words and spray of thoughts gushed from the fountain of his
    omniscience. He had the wondrous clavis which unlocked the profound philosophical science
    embedded ages ago in the Vedas. If asked to explain the different planes of consciousness
    mentioned in the ancient texts, he would smilingly assent.

    "'I will undergo those states, and presently tell you what I perceive.' He was thus diametrically
    unlike the teachers who commit scripture to memory and then give forth unrealized abstractions.

    "'Please expound the holy stanzas as the meaning occurs to you.' The taciturn guru often gave this
    instruction to a near-by disciple.

    'I will guide your thoughts, that the right interpretation be
    uttered.' In this way many of Lahiri Mahasaya's perceptions came to be recorded, with
    voluminous commentaries by various students.

    "The master never counseled slavish belief. 'Words are only shells,' he said. 'Win conviction of
    God's presence through your own joyous contact in meditation.'

    "No matter what the disciple's problem, the guru advised Kriya Yoga for its solution.

    "'The yogic key will not lose its efficiency when I am no longer present in the body to guide you.
    This technique cannot be bound, filed, and forgotten, in the manner of theoretical inspirations.
    Continue ceaselessly on your path to liberation through Kriya, whose power lies in practice.'

    "I myself consider Kriya the most effective device of salvation through self-effort ever to be
    evolved in man's search for the Infinite." Kebalananda concluded with this earnest testimony.
    "Through its use, the omnipotent God, hidden in all men, became visibly incarnated in the flesh
    of Lahiri Mahasaya and a number of his disciples."

    A Christlike miracle by Lahiri Mahasaya took place in Kebalananda's presence.

    My saintly tutor
    recounted the story one day, his eyes remote from the Sanskrit texts before us.

    "A blind disciple, Ramu, aroused my active pity. Should he have no light in his eyes, when he
    faithfully served our master, in whom the Divine was fully blazing? One morning I sought to
    speak to Ramu, but he sat for patient hours fanning the guru with a hand-made palm-leaf
    punkha.

    When the devotee finally left the room, I followed him.

    "'Ramu, how long have you been blind?'

    "'From my birth, sir! Never have my eyes been blessed with a glimpse of the sun.'

    "'Our omnipotent guru can help you. Please make a supplication.'

    "The following day Ramu diffidently approached Lahiri Mahasaya.

    The disciple felt almost
    ashamed to ask that physical wealth be added to his spiritual superabundance.

    "'Master, the Illuminator of the cosmos is in you. I pray you to bring His light into my eyes, that I
    perceive the sun's lesser glow.'

    "'Ramu, someone has connived to put me in a difficult position.

    I have no healing power.'

    "'Sir, the Infinite One within you can certainly heal.'

    "'That is indeed different, Ramu. God's limit is nowhere! He who ignites the stars and the cells of
    flesh with mysterious life- effulgence can surely bring luster of vision into your eyes.'

    "The master touched Ramu's forehead at the point between the eyebrows.

    "'Keep your mind
    concentrated there, and frequently chant the name of the prophet Rama for seven days. The
    splendor of the sun shall have a special dawn for you.'

    "Lo! in one week it was so. For the first time, Ramu beheld the fair face of nature. The Omniscient
    One had unerringly directed his disciple to repeat the name of Rama, adored by him above all
    other saints.

    Ramu's faith was the devotionally ploughed soil in which the guru's powerful seed of
    permanent healing sprouted." Kebalananda was silent for a moment, then paid a further tribute
    to his guru.

    "It was evident in all miracles performed by Lahiri Mahasaya that he never allowed the ego-
    principle to consider itself a causative force.

    By perfection of resistless surrender, the master
    enabled the Prime Healing Power to flow freely through him.

    "The numerous bodies which were spectacularly healed through Lahiri Mahasaya eventually had
    to feed the flames of cremation. But the silent spiritual awakenings he effected, the Christlike
    disciples he fashioned, are his imperishable miracles."

    I never became a Sanskrit scholar; Kebalananda taught me a diviner syntax.

    Literally, "renunciate." From Sanskrit verb roots, "to cast aside."

    Effects of past actions, in this or a former life; from Sanskrit kri, "to do."

    Bhagavad Gita, IX, Krishna was the greatest prophet of India; Arjuna was his foremost disciple.

    I always addressed him as Ananta-da.

    Da is a respectful suffix which the eldest brother in an Indian family receives
    from junior brothers and sisters.

    At the time of our meeting, Kebalananda had not yet joined the Swami Order and was generally called "Shastri
    Mahasaya." To avoid confusion with the name of Lahiri Mahasaya and of Master Mahasaya (chapter 9), I am referring to
    my Sanskrit tutor only by his later monastic name of Swami Kebalananda.

    His biography has been recently published in
    Bengali. Born in the Khulna district of Bengal in , Kebalananda gave up his body in Benares at the age of sixty-eight.
    His family name was Ashutosh Chatterji.

    The ancient four Vedas comprise over extant canonical books. Emerson paid the following tribute in his Journal
    to Vedic thought: "It is sublime as heat and night and a breathless ocean.

    It contains every religious sentiment, all the
    grand ethics which visit in turn each noble poetic mind. . . . It is of no use to put away the book; if I trust myself in the
    woods or in a boat upon the pond, Nature makes a Brahmin of me presently: eternal necessity, eternal compensation,
    unfathomable power, unbroken silence.

    . . . This is her creed. Peace, she saith to me, and purity and absolute
    abandonment- these panaceas expiate all sin and bring you to the beatitude of the Eight Gods."

    The seat of the "single" or spiritual eye. At death the consciousness of man is usually drawn to this holy spot,
    accounting for the upraised eyes found in the dead.

    The central sacred figure of the Sanskrit epic, Ramayana.

    Ahankara, egoism; literally, "I do." The root cause of dualism or illusion of maya, whereby the subject (ego) appears
    as object; the creatures imagine themselves to be creators.
    CHAPTER: 5

    A "Perfume Saint" Displays His Wonders

    "To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven."

    I did not have this wisdom of Solomon to comfort me; I gazed searchingly about me, on any
    excursion from home, for the face of my destined guru.

    But my path did not cross his own until
    after the completion of my high school studies.

    Two years elapsed between my flight with Amar toward the Himalayas, and the great day of Sri
    Yukteswar's arrival into my life. During that interim I met a number of sages-the "Perfume Saint,"
    the "Tiger Swami," Nagendra Nath Bhaduri, Master Mahasaya, and the famous Bengali scientist,
    Jagadis Chandra Bose.

    My encounter with the "Perfume Saint" had two preambles, one harmonious and the other
    humorous.

    "God is simple.

    Everything else is complex. Do not seek absolute values in the relative world of
    nature."

    These philosophical finalities gently entered my ear as I stood silently before a temple image of
    Kali. Turning, I confronted a tall man whose garb, or lack of it, revealed him a wandering sadhu.

    "You have indeed penetrated the bewilderment of my thoughts!" I smiled gratefully.

    "The
    confusion of benign and terrible aspects in nature, as symbolized by Kali, has puzzled wiser
    heads than mine!"

    "Few there be who solve her mystery! Good and evil is the challenging riddle which life places
    sphinxlike before every intelligence. Attempting no solution, most men pay forfeit with their lives,
    penalty now even as in the days of Thebes.

    Here and there, a towering lonely figure never cries
    defeat. From the maya of duality he plucks the cleaveless truth of unity."

    "You speak with conviction, sir."

    "I have long exercised an honest introspection, the exquisitely painful approach to wisdom. Self-
    scrutiny, relentless observance of one's thoughts, is a stark and shattering experience.

    It
    pulverizes the stoutest ego. But true self-analysis mathematically operates to produce seers. The
    way of 'self-expression,' individual acknowledgments, results in egotists, sure of the right to their
    private interpretations of God and the universe."

    "Truth humbly retires, no doubt, before such arrogant originality." I was enjoying the discussion.

    "Man can understand no eternal verity until he has freed himself from pretensions.

    The human
    mind, bared to a centuried slime, is teeming with repulsive life of countless world-delusions.
    Struggles of the battlefields pale into insignificance here, when man first contends with inward
    enemies! No mortal foes these, to be overcome by harrowing array of might! Omnipresent,
    unresting, pursuing man even in sleep, subtly equipped with a miasmic weapon, these soldiers of
    ignorant lusts seek to slay us all.

    Thoughtless is the man who buries his ideals, surrendering to
    the common fate. Can he seem other than impotent, wooden, ignominious?"

    "Respected Sir, have you no sympathy for the bewildered masses?"

    The sage was silent for a moment, then answered obliquely.

    "To love both the invisible God, Repository of All Virtues, and visible man, apparently possessed
    of none, is often baffling!

    But ingenuity is equal to the maze. Inner research soon exposes a unity
    in all human minds-the stalwart kinship of selfish motive. In one sense at least, the brotherhood
    of man stands revealed. An aghast humility follows this leveling discovery. It ripens into
    compassion for one's fellows, blind to the healing potencies of the soul awaiting exploration."

    "The saints of every age, sir, have felt like yourself for the sorrows of the world."

    "Only the shallow man loses responsiveness to the woes of others' lives, as he sinks into narrow
    suffering of his own." The SADHU'S austere face was noticeably softened.

    "The one who practices
    a scalpel self-dissection will know an expansion of universal pity. Release is given him from the
    deafening demands of his ego. The love of God flowers on such soil. The creature finally turns to
    his Creator, if for no other reason than to ask in anguish: 'Why, Lord, why?' By ignoble whips of
    pain, man is driven at last into the Infinite Presence, whose beauty alone should lure him."

    The sage and I were present in Calcutta's Kalighat Temple, whither I had gone to view its famed
    magnificence.

    With a sweeping gesture, my chance companion dismissed the ornate dignity.

    "Bricks and mortar sing us no audible tune; the heart opens only to the human chant of being."

    We strolled to the inviting sunshine at the entrance, where throngs of devotees were passing to
    and fro.

    "You are young." The sage surveyed me thoughtfully.

    "India too is young. The ancient rishis
    laid down ineradicable patterns of spiritual living. Their hoary dictums suffice for this day and
    land. Not outmoded, not unsophisticated against the guiles of materialism, the disciplinary
    precepts mold India still. By millenniums-more than embarrassed scholars care to compute!-the
    skeptic Time has validated Vedic worth.

    Take it for your heritage."
    As I was reverently bidding farewell to the eloquent sadhu, he revealed a clairvoyant perception:

    "After you leave here today, an unusual experience will come your way."

    I quitted the temple precincts and wandered along aimlessly. Turning a corner, I ran into an old
    acquaintance-one of those long-winded fellows whose conversational powers ignore time and
    embrace eternity.

    "I will let you go in a very short while, if you will tell me all that has happened during the six years
    of our separation."

    "What a paradox!

    I must leave you now."

    But he held me by the hand, forcing out tidbits of information. He was like a ravenous wolf, I
    thought in amusement; the longer I spoke, the more hungrily he sniffed for news. Inwardly I
    petitioned the Goddess Kali to devise a graceful means of escape.

    My companion left me abruptly.

    I sighed with relief and doubled my pace, dreading any relapse
    into the garrulous fever. Hearing rapid footsteps behind me, I quickened my speed. I dared not
    look back. But with a bound, the youth rejoined me, jovially clasping my shoulder.

    "I forgot to tell you of Gandha Baba (Perfume Saint), who is gracing yonder house." He pointed to
    a dwelling a few yards distant.

    "Do meet him; he is interesting. You may have an unusual
    experience. Good-by," and he actually left me.

    The similarly worded prediction of the sadhu at Kalighat Temple flashed to my mind. Definitely
    intrigued, I entered the house and was ushered into a commodious parlor. A crowd of people
    were sitting, Orient-wise, here and there on a thick orange-colored carpet.

    An awed whisper
    reached my ear:

    "Behold Gandha Baba on the leopard skin. He can give the natural perfume of any flower to a
    scentless one, or revive a wilted blossom, or make a person's skin exude delightful fragrance."

    I looked directly at the saint; his quick gaze rested on mine.

    He was plump and bearded, with
    dark skin and large, gleaming eyes.

    "Son, I am glad to see you. Say what you want. Would you like some perfume?"

    "What for?" I thought his remark rather childish.

    "To experience the miraculous way of enjoying perfumes."

    "Harnessing God to make odors?"

    "What of it?

    God makes perfume anyway."


    "Yes, but He fashions frail bottles of petals for fresh use and discard. Can you materialize
    flowers?"

    "I materialize perfumes, little friend."

    "Then scent factories will go out of business."

    "I will permit them to keep their trade! My own purpose is to demonstrate the power of God."

    "Sir, is it necessary to prove God?

    Isn't He performing miracles in everything, everywhere?"

    "Yes, but we too should manifest some of His infinite creative variety."

    "How long did it take to master your art?"

    "Twelve years."

    "For manufacturing scents by astral means! It seems, my honored saint, you have been wasting a
    dozen years for fragrances which you can obtain with a few rupees from a florist's shop."

    "Perfumes fade with flowers."

    "Perfumes fade with death.

    Why should I desire that which pleases the body only?"

    "Mr.

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    Philosopher, you please my mind. Now, stretch forth your right hand." He made a gesture of
    blessing.

    I was a few feet away from Gandha Baba; no one else was near enough to contact my body. I
    extended my hand, which the yogi did not touch.

    "What perfume do you want?"

    "Rose."

    "Be it so."

    To my great surprise, the charming fragrance of rose was wafted strongly from the center of my
    palm.

    I smilingly took a large white scentless flower from a near-by vase.

    "Can this odorless blossom be permeated with jasmine?"

    "Be it so."

    A jasmine fragrance instantly shot from the petals. I thanked the wonder-worker and seated
    myself by one of his students. He informed me that Gandha Baba, whose proper name was
    Vishudhananda, had learned many astonishing yoga secrets from a master in Tibet.

    The Tibetan
    yogi, I was assured, had attained the age of over a thousand years.

    "His disciple Gandha Baba does not always perform his perfume-feats in the simple verbal
    manner you have just witnessed." The student spoke with obvious pride in his master. "His
    procedure differs widely, to accord with diversity in temperaments.

    He is marvelous! Many
    members of the Calcutta intelligentsia are among his followers."

    I inwardly resolved not to add myself to their number. A guru too literally "marvelous" was not to
    my liking. With polite thanks to Gandha Baba, I departed. Sauntering home, I reflected on the
    three varied encounters the day had brought forth.

    My sister Uma met me as I entered our Gurpar Road door.

    "You are getting quite stylish, using perfumes!"

    Without a word, I motioned her to smell my hand.

    "What an attractive rose fragrance!

    It is unusually strong!"

    Thinking it was "strongly unusual," I silently placed the astrally scented blossom under her
    nostrils.

    "Oh, I love jasmine!" She seized the flower. A ludicrous bafflement passed over her face as she
    repeatedly sniffed the odor of jasmine from a type of flower she well knew to be scentless.

    Her
    reactions disarmed my suspicion that Gandha Baba had induced an auto-suggestive state
    whereby I alone could detect the fragrances.

    Later I heard from a friend, Alakananda, that the "Perfume Saint" had a power which I wish were
    possessed by the starving millions of Asia and, today, of Europe as well.

    "I was present with a hundred other guests at Gandha Baba's home in Burdwan," Alakananda
    told me.

    "It was a gala occasion. Because the yogi was reputed to have the power of extracting
    objects out of thin air, I laughingly requested him to materialize some out-of-season tangerines.
    Immediately the luchis which were present on all the banana-leaf plates became puffed up.
    Each of the bread-envelopes proved to contain a peeled tangerine.

    I bit into my own with some
    trepidation, but found it delicious."

    Years later I understood by inner realization how Gandha Baba accomplished his
    materializations. The method, alas! is beyond the reach of the world's hungry hordes.

    The different sensory stimuli to which man reacts-tactual, visual, gustatory, auditory, and
    olfactory-are produced by vibratory variations in electrons and protons.

    The vibrations in turn
    are regulated by "lifetrons," subtle life forces or finer-than-atomic energies intelligently charged
    with the five distinctive sensory idea- substances.
    Gandha Baba, tuning himself with the cosmic force by certain yogic practices, was able to guide
    the lifetrons to rearrange their vibratory structure and objectivize the desired result.

    His perfume,
    fruit and other miracles were actual materializations of mundane vibrations, and not inner
    sensations hypnotically produced.

    Performances of miracles such as shown by the "Perfume Saint" are spectacular but spiritually
    useless. Having little purpose beyond entertainment, they are digressions from a serious search
    for God.

    Hypnotism has been used by physicians in minor operations as a sort of psychical chloroform for
    persons who might be endangered by an anesthetic.

    But a hypnotic state is harmful to those often
    subjected to it; a negative psychological effect ensues which in time deranges the brain cells.
    Hypnotism is trespass into the territory of another's consciousness. Its temporary phenomena
    have nothing in common with the miracles performed by men of divine realization. Awake in
    God, true saints effect changes in this dream-world by means of a will harmoniously attuned to
    the Creative Cosmic Dreamer.

    Ostentatious display of unusual powers are decried by masters.

    The Persian mystic, Abu Said,
    once laughed at certain fakirs who were proud of their miraculous powers over water, air, and
    space.

    "A frog is also at home in the water!" Abu Said pointed out in gentle scorn. "The crow and the
    vulture easily fly in the air; the Devil is simultaneously present in the East and in the West!

    A true
    man is he who dwells in righteousness among his fellow men, who buys and sells, yet is never for
    a single instant forgetful of God!" On another occasion the great Persian teacher gave his views on
    the religious life thus: "To lay aside what you have in your head (selfish desires and ambitions); to
    freely bestow what you have in your hand; and never to flinch from the blows of adversity!"

    Neither the impartial sage at Kalighat Temple nor the Tibetan-trained yogi had satisfied my
    yearning for a guru.

    My heart needed no tutor for its recognitions, and cried its own "Bravos!" the
    more resoundingly because unoften summoned from silence. When I finally met my master, he
    taught me by sublimity of example alone the measure of a true man.

    Kali represents the eternal principle in nature. She is traditionally pictured as a four-armed woman, standing on the
    form of the God Shiva or the Infinite, because nature or the phenomenal world is rooted in the Noumenon.

    The four arms
    symbolize cardinal attributes, two beneficent, two destructive, indicating the essential duality of matter or creation.

    Cosmic illusion; literally, "the measurer." maya is the magical power in creation by which limitations and divisions
    are apparently present in the Immeasurable and Inseparable.

    Emerson wrote the following poem, to which he gave the
    title of maya:

    Illusion works impenetrable, Weaving webs innumerable, Her gay pictures never fail, Crowd each other, veil on veil,
    Charmer who will be believed By man who thirsts to be deceived.

    The rishis, literally "seers," were the authors of the Vedas in an indeterminable antiquity..

    Flat, round Indian bread..


    Laymen scarcely realize the vast strides of twentieth-century science.

    Transmutation of metals and other alchemical
    dreams are seeing fulfillment every day in centers of scientific research over the world. The eminent French chemist, M.
    Georges Claude, performed "miracles" at Fontainebleau in before a scientific assemblage through his chemical
    knowledge of oxygen transformations.

    His "magician's wand" was simple oxygen, bubbling in a tube on a table. The
    scientist "turned a handful of sand into precious stones, iron into a state resembling melted chocolate and, after
    depriving flowers of their tints, turned them into the consistency of glass.

    "M. Claude explained how the sea could be turned by oxygen transformations into many millions of pounds of
    horsepower; how water which boils is not necessarily burning; how little mounds of sand, by a single whiff of the oxygen
    blowpipe, could be changed into sapphires, rubies, and topazes; and he predicted the time when it will be possible for
    men to walk on the bottom of the ocean minus the diver's equipment.

    Finally the scientist amazed his onlookers by
    turning their faces black by taking the red out of the sun's rays."

    This noted French scientist has produced liquid air by an expansion method in which he has been able to separate the
    various gases of the air, and has discovered various means of mechanical utilization of differences of temperature in sea
    water.

    CHAPTER: 6

    The Tiger Swami

    "I have discovered the Tiger Swami's address.

    Let us visit him tomorrow."

    This welcome suggestion came from Chandi, one of my high school friends. I was eager to meet
    the saint who, in his premonastic life, had caught and fought tigers with his naked hands. A
    boyish enthusiasm over such remarkable feats was strong within me.

    The next day dawned wintry cold, but Chandi and I sallied forth gaily.

    After much vain hunting in
    Bhowanipur, outside Calcutta, we arrived at the right house. The door held two iron rings, which I
    sounded piercingly. Notwithstanding the clamor, a servant approached with leisurely gait. His
    ironical smile implied that visitors, despite their noise, were powerless to disturb the calmness of
    a saint's home.

    Feeling the silent rebuke, my companion and I were thankful to be invited into the parlor.

    Our
    long wait there caused uncomfortable misgivings. India's unwritten law for the truth seeker is
    patience; a master may purposely make a test of one's eagerness to meet him. This psychological
    ruse is freely employed in the West by doctors and dentists!

    Finally summoned by the servant, Chandi and I entered a sleeping apartment.

    The famous
    Sohong Swami was seated on his bed. The sight of his tremendous body affected us strangely.
    With bulging eyes, we stood speechless. We had never before seen such a chest or such football-
    like biceps. On an immense neck, the swami's fierce yet calm face was adorned with flowing locks,
    beard and moustache.

    A hint of dovelike and tigerlike qualities shone in his dark eyes. He was
    unclothed, save for a tiger skin about his muscular waist.

    Finding our voices, my friend and I greeted the monk, expressing our admiration for his prowess
    in the extraordinary feline arena.

    "Will you not tell us, please, how it is possible to subdue with bare fists the most ferocious of
    jungle beasts, the royal Bengals?"

    "My sons, it is nothing to me to fight tigers.

    I could do it today if necessary." He gave a childlike
    laugh. "You look upon tigers as tigers; I know them as pussycats."

    "Swamiji, I think I could impress my subconsciousness with the thought that tigers are pussycats,
    but could I make tigers believe it?"

    "Of course strength also is necessary!

    One cannot expect victory from a baby who imagines a tiger
    to be a house cat! Powerful hands are my sufficient weapon."

    He asked us to follow him to the patio, where he struck the edge of a wall. A brick crashed to the
    floor; the sky peered boldly through the gaping lost tooth of the wall. I fairly staggered in
    astonishment; he who can remove mortared bricks from a solid wall with one blow, I thought,
    must surely be able to displace the teeth of tigers!

    "A number of men have physical power such as mine, but still lack in cool confidence.

    Those who
    are bodily but not mentally stalwart may find themselves fainting at mere sight of a wild beast
    bounding freely in the jungle. The tiger in its natural ferocity and habitat is vastly different from
    the opium-fed circus animal!

    "Many a man with herculean strength has nonetheless been terrorized into abject helplessness
    before the onslaught of a royal Bengal.

    Thus the tiger has converted the man, in his own mind, to
    a state as nerveless as the pussycat's. It is possible for a man, owning a fairly strong body and an
    immensely strong determination, to turn the tables on the tiger, and force it to a conviction of
    pussycat defenselessness. How often I have done just that!"

    I was quite willing to believe that the titan before me was able to perform the tiger-pussycat
    metamorphosis.

    He seemed in a didactic mood; Chandi and I listened respectfully.

    "Mind is the wielder of muscles. The force of a hammer blow depends on the energy applied; the
    power expressed by a man's bodily instrument depends on his aggressive will and courage. The
    body is literally manufactured and sustained by mind. Through pressure of instincts from past
    lives, strengths or weaknesses percolate gradually into human consciousness.

    They express as
    habits, which in turn ossify into a desirable or an undesirable body. Outward frailty has mental
    origin; in a vicious circle, the habit-bound body thwarts the mind. If the master allows himself to
    be commanded by a servant, the latter becomes autocratic; the mind is similarly enslaved by
    submitting to bodily dictation."

    At our entreaty, the impressive swami consented to tell us something of his own life.

    "My earliest ambition was to fight tigers.

    My will was mighty, but my body was feeble."

    An ejaculation of surprise broke from me. It appeared incredible that this man, now "with
    Atlantean shoulders, fit to bear," could ever have known weakness.

    "It was by indomitable persistency in thoughts of health and strength that I overcame my
    handicap.

    I have every reason to extol the compelling mental vigor which I found to be the real
    subduer of royal Bengals."

    "Do you think, revered swami, that I could ever fight tigers?" This was the first, and the last, time
    that the bizarre ambition ever visited my mind!

    "Yes." He was smiling. "But there are many kinds of tigers; some roam in jungles of human
    desires.

    No spiritual benefit accrues by knocking beasts unconscious. Rather be victor over the
    inner prowlers."

    "May we hear, sir, how you changed from a tamer of wild tigers to a tamer of wild passions?"

    The Tiger Swami fell into silence. Remoteness came into his gaze, summoning visions of bygone
    years.

    I discerned his slight mental struggle to decide whether to grant my request. Finally he
    smiled in acquiescence.

    "When my fame reached a zenith, it brought the intoxication of pride. I decided not only to fight
    tigers but to display them in various tricks. My ambition was to force savage beasts to behave like
    domesticated ones.

    I began to perform my feats publicly, with gratifying success.

    "One evening my father entered my room in pensive mood.

    "'Son, I have words of warning. I would save you from coming ills, produced by the grinding
    wheels of cause and effect.'

    "'Are you a fatalist, Father? Should superstition be allowed to discolor the powerful waters or my
    activities?'

    "'I am no fatalist, son.

    But I believe in the just law of retribution, as taught in the holy scriptures.
    There is resentment against you in the jungle family; sometime it may act to your cost.'

    "'Father, you astonish me! You well know what tigers are-beautiful but merciless! Even
    immediately after an enormous meal of some hapless creature, a tiger is fired with fresh lust at
    sight of new prey.

    It may be a joyous gazelle, frisking over the jungle grass. Capturing it and biting
    an opening in the soft throat, the malevolent beast tastes only a little of the mutely crying blood,
    and goes its wanton way.

    "'Tigers are the most contemptible of the jungle breed! Who knows? my blows may inject some
    slight sanity of consideration into their thick heads.

    I am headmaster in a forest finishing school,
    to teach them gentle manners!

    "'Please, Father, think of me as tiger tamer and never as tiger killer. How could my good actions
    bring ill upon me? I beg you not to impose any command that I change my way of life.'"

    Chandi and I were all attention, understanding the past dilemma.

    In India a child does not lightly
    disobey his parents' wishes.

    "In stoic silence Father listened to my explanation. He followed it with a disclosure which he
    uttered gravely.

    "'Son, you compel me to relate an ominous prediction from the lips of a saint. He approached me
    yesterday as I sat on the veranda in my daily meditation.

    "'"Dear friend, I come with a message for your belligerent son.

    Let him cease his savage activities.
    Otherwise, his next tiger-encounter shall result in his severe wounds, followed by six months of
    deathly sickness. He shall then forsake his former ways and become a monk."'

    "This tale did not impress me. I considered that Father had been the credulous victim of a
    deluded fanatic."

    The Tiger Swami made this confession with an impatient gesture, as though at some stupidity.
    Grimly silent for a long time, he seemed oblivious of our presence.

    When he took up the dangling
    thread of his narrative, it was suddenly, with subdued voice.

    "Not long after Father's warning, I visited the capital city of Cooch Behar. The picturesque
    territory was new to me, and I expected a restful change. As usual everywhere, a curious crowd
    followed me on the streets.

    I would catch bits of whispered comment:

    "'This is the man who fights wild tigers.'

    "'Has he legs, or tree-trunks?'

    "'Look at his face! He must be an incarnation of the king of tigers himself!'

    "You know how village urchins function like final editions of a newspaper! With what speed do
    the even-later speech-bulletins of the women circulate from house to house!

    Within a few hours,
    the whole city was in a state of excitement over my presence.

    "I was relaxing quietly in the evening, when I heard the hoofbeats of galloping horses. They
    stopped in front of my dwelling place. In came a number of tall, turbaned policemen.
    "I was taken aback. 'All things are possible unto these creatures of human law,' I thought.

    'I
    wonder if they are going to take me to task about matters utterly unknown to me.' But the officers
    bowed with unwonted courtesy.

    "'Honored Sir, we are sent to welcome you on behalf of the Prince of Cooch Behar. He is pleased
    to invite you to his palace tomorrow morning.'

    "I speculated awhile on the prospect.

    For some obscure reason I felt sharp regret at this
    interruption in my quiet trip. But the suppliant manner of the policemen moved me; I agreed to
    go.

    "I was bewildered the next day to be obsequiously escorted from my door into a magnificent
    coach drawn by four horses. A servant held an ornate umbrella to protect me from the scorching
    sunlight.

    I enjoyed the pleasant ride through the city and its woodland outskirts. The royal scion
    himself was at the palace door to welcome me. He proffered his own gold-brocaded seat,
    smilingly placing himself in a chair of simpler design.

    "'All this politeness is certainly going to cost me something!' I thought in mounting astonishment.
    The prince's motive emerged after a few casual remarks.

    "'My city is filled with the rumor that you can fight wild tigers with nothing more than your naked
    hands.

    Is it a fact?'

    "'It is quite true.'

    "'I can scarcely believe it! You are a Calcutta Bengali, nurtured on the white rice of city folk. Be
    frank, please; have you not been fighting only spineless, opium-fed animals?' His voice was loud
    and sarcastic, tinged with provincial accent.

    "I vouchsafed no reply to his insulting question.

    "'I challenge you to fight my newly-caught tiger, Raja Begum.

    If you can successfully resist
    him, bind him with a chain, and leave his cage in a conscious state, you shall have this royal
    Bengal! Several thousand rupees and many other gifts shall also be bestowed. If you refuse to
    meet him in combat, I shall blazon your name throughout the state as an impostor!'

    "His insolent words struck me like a volley of bullets.

    I shot an angry acceptance. Half risen from
    the chair in his excitement, the prince sank back with a sadistic smile. I was reminded of the
    Roman emperors who delighted in setting Christians in bestial arenas.

    "'The match will be set for a week hence. I regret that I cannot give you permission to view the
    tiger in advance.'

    "Whether the prince feared I might seek to hypnotize the beast, or secretly feed him opium, I
    know not!
    "I left the palace, noting with amusement that the royal umbrella and panoplied coach were now
    missing.

    "The following week I methodically prepared my mind and body for the coming ordeal.

    Through
    my servant I learned of fantastic tales. The saint's direful prediction to my father had somehow
    got abroad, enlarging as it ran. Many simple villagers believed that an evil spirit, cursed by the
    gods, had reincarnated as a tiger which took various demoniac forms at night, but remained a
    striped animal during the day. This demon-tiger was supposed to be the one sent to humble me.

    "Another imaginative version was that animal prayers to Tiger Heaven had achieved a response in
    the shape of Raja Begum.

    He was to be the instrument to punish me-the audacious biped, so
    insulting to the entire tiger species! A furless, fangless man daring to challenge a claw-armed,
    sturdy-limbed tiger! The concentrated venom of all humiliated tigers-the villagers declared-had
    gathered momentum sufficient to operate hidden laws and bring about the fall of the proud tiger
    tamer.

    "My servant further apprized me that the prince was in his element as manager of the bout
    between man and beast.

    He had supervised the erection of a storm-proof pavilion, designed to
    accommodate thousands. Its center held Raja Begum in an enormous iron cage, surrounded by
    an outer safety room. The captive emitted a ceaseless series of blood- curdling roars. He was fed
    sparingly, to kindle a wrathful appetite. Perhaps the prince expected me to be the meal of reward!

    "Crowds from the city and suburbs bought tickets eagerly in response to the beat of drums
    announcing the unique contest.

    The day of battle saw hundreds turned away for lack of seats.
    Many men broke through the tent openings, or crowded any space below the galleries."

    As the Tiger Swami's story approached a climax, my excitement mounted with it; Chandi also was
    raptly mute.

    "Amidst piercing sound-explosions from Raja Begum, and the hubbub of the somewhat terrified
    crowd, I quietly made my appearance.

    Scantily clad around the waist, I was otherwise
    unprotected by clothing. I opened the bolt on the door of the safety room and calmly locked it
    behind me. The tiger sensed blood. Leaping with a thunderous crash on his bars, he sent forth a
    fearsome welcome. The audience was hushed with pitiful fear; I seemed a meek lamb before the
    raging beast.

    "In a trice I was within the cage; but as I slammed the door, Raja Begum was headlong upon me.
    My right hand was desperately torn.

    Human blood, the greatest treat a tiger can know, fell in
    appalling streams. The prophecy of the saint seemed about to be fulfilled.

    "I rallied instantly from the shock of the first serious injury I had ever received. Banishing the
    sight of my gory fingers by thrusting them beneath my waist cloth, I swung my left arm in a bone-
    cracking blow.

    The beast reeled back, swirled around the rear of the cage, and sprang forward
    convulsively. My famous fistic punishment rained on his head.
    "But Raja Begum's taste of blood had acted like the maddening first sip of wine to a dipsomaniac
    long-deprived. Punctuated by deafening roar, the brute's assaults grew in fury. My inadequate
    defense of only one hand left me vulnerable before claws and fangs.

    But I dealt out dazing
    retribution. Mutually ensanguined, we struggled as to the death. The cage was pandemonium, as
    blood splashed in all directions, and blasts of pain and lethal lust came from the bestial throat.

    "'Shoot him!' 'Kill the tiger!' Shrieks arose from the audience.

    So fast did man and beast move,
    that a guard's bullet went amiss. I mustered all my will force, bellowed fiercely, and landed a final
    concussive blow. The tiger collapsed and lay quietly.

    "Like a pussycat!" I interjected.

    The swami laughed in hearty appreciation, then continued the engrossing tale.

    "Raja Begum was vanquished at last.

    His royal pride was further humbled: with my lacerated
    hands, I audaciously forced open his jaws. For a dramatic moment, I held my head within the
    yawning deathtrap. I looked around for a chain. Pulling one from a pile on the floor, I bound the
    tiger by his neck to the cage bars. In triumph I moved toward the door.

    "But that fiend incarnate, Raja Begum, had stamina worthy of his supposed demoniac origin.
    With an incredible lunge, he snapped the chain and leaped on my back.

    My shoulder fast in his
    jaws, I fell violently. But in a trice I had him pinned beneath me. Under merciless blows, the
    treacherous animal sank into semiconsciousness. This time I secured him more carefully. Slowly I
    left the cage.

    "I found myself in a new uproar, this time one of delight. The crowd's cheer broke as though from
    a single gigantic throat.

    Disastrously mauled, I had yet fulfilled the three conditions of the fight-
    stunning the tiger, binding him with a chain, and leaving him without requiring assistance for
    myself. In addition, I had so drastically injured and frightened the aggressive beast that he had
    been content to overlook the opportune prize of my head in his mouth!

    "After my wounds were treated, I was honored and garlanded; hundreds of gold pieces showered
    at my feet.

    The whole city entered a holiday period. Endless discussions were heard on all sides
    about my victory over one of the largest and most savage tigers ever seen. Raja Begum was
    presented to me, as promised, but I felt no elation. A spiritual change had entered my heart. It
    seemed that with my final exit from the cage I had also closed the door on my worldly ambitions.

    "A woeful period followed.

    For six months I lay near death from blood poisoning. As soon as I was
    well enough to leave Cooch Behar, I returned to my native town.

    "'I know now that my teacher is the holy man who gave the wise warning.' I humbly made this
    confession to my father. 'Oh, if I could only find him!' My longing was sincere, for one day the
    saint arrived unheralded.

    "'Enough of tiger taming.' He spoke with calm assurance.

    'Come with me; I will teach you to
    subdue the beasts of ignorance roaming in jungles of the human mind. You are used to an
    audience: let it be a galaxy of angels, entertained by your thrilling mastery of yoga!'

    "I was initiated into the spiritual path by my saintly guru. He opened my soul-doors, rusty and
    resistant with long disuse.

    Hand in hand, we soon set out for my training in the Himalayas."

    Chandi and I bowed at the swami's feet, grateful for his vivid outline of a life truly cyclonic. I felt
    amply repaid for the long probationary wait in the cold parlor!

    Sohong was his monastic name. He was popularly known as the "Tiger Swami."

    "Prince Princess"-so named to indicate that this beast possessed the combined ferocity of tiger and tigress.

    CHAPTER: 7

    The Levitating Saint

    "I saw a yogi remain in the air, several feet above the ground, last night at a group meeting." My
    friend, Upendra Mohun Chowdhury, spoke impressively.

    I gave him an enthusiastic smile.

    "Perhaps I can guess his name. Was it Bhaduri Mahasaya, of
    Upper Circular Road?"

    Upendra nodded, a little crestfallen not to be a news-bearer. My inquisitiveness about saints was
    well-known among my friends; they delighted in setting me on a fresh track.

    "The yogi lives so close to my home that I often visit him." My words brought keen interest to
    Upendra's face, and I made a further confidence.

    "I have seen him in remarkable feats.

    He has expertly mastered the various pranayamas of
    the ancient eightfold yoga outlined by Patanjali. Once Bhaduri Mahasaya performed the
    Bhastrika Pranayama before me with such amazing force that it seemed an actual storm had
    arisen in the room! Then he extinguished the thundering breath and remained motionless in a
    high state of superconsciousness.

    The aura of peace after the storm was vivid beyond
    forgetting."
    "I heard that the saint never leaves his home." Upendra's tone was a trifle incredulous.

    "Indeed it is true! He has lived indoors for the past twenty years. He slightly relaxes his self-
    imposed rule at the times of our holy festivals, when he goes as far as his front sidewalk!

    The
    beggars gather there, because Saint Bhaduri is known for his tender heart."

    "How does he remain in the air, defying the law of gravitation?"

    "A yogi's body loses its grossness after use of certain pranayamas. Then it will levitate or hop
    about like a leaping frog. Even saints who do not practice a formal yoga have been known to
    levitate during a state of intense devotion to God."

    "I would like to know more of this sage.

    Do you attend his evening meetings?" Upendra's eyes
    were sparkling with curiosity.

    "Yes, I go often. I am vastly entertained by the wit in his wisdom. Occasionally my prolonged
    laughter mars the solemnity of his gatherings. The saint is not displeased, but his disciples look
    daggers!"

    On my way home from school that afternoon, I passed Bhaduri Mahasaya's cloister and decided
    on a visit.

    The yogi was inaccessible to the general public. A lone disciple, occupying the ground
    floor, guarded his master's privacy. The student was something of a martinet; he now inquired
    formally if I had an "engagement." His guru put in an appearance just in time to save me from
    summary ejection.

    "Let Mukunda come when he will." The sage's eyes twinkled.

    "My rule of seclusion is not for my
    own comfort, but for that of others. Worldly people do not like the candor which shatters their
    delusions. Saints are not only rare but disconcerting. Even in scripture, they are often found
    embarrassing!"

    I followed Bhaduri Mahasaya to his austere quarters on the top floor, from which he seldom
    stirred.

    Masters often ignore the panorama of the world's ado, out of focus till centered in the
    ages. The contemporaries of a sage are not alone those of the narrow present.

    "Maharishi, you are the first yogi I have known who always stays indoors."

    "God plants his saints sometimes in unexpected soil, lest we think we may reduce Him to a rule!"

    The sage locked his vibrant body in the lotus posture.

    In his seventies, he displayed no unpleasing
    signs of age or sedentary life. Stalwart and straight, he was ideal in every respect. His face was
    that of a rishi, as described in the ancient texts. Noble-headed, abundantly bearded, he always sat
    firmly upright, his quiet eyes fixed on Omnipresence.

    The saint and I entered the meditative state.

    After an hour, his gentle voice roused me.
    "You go often into the silence, but have you developed anubhava?" He was reminding me to
    love God more than meditation. "Do not mistake the technique for the Goal."

    He offered me some mangoes. With that good-humored wit that I found so delightful in his grave
    nature, he remarked, "People in general are more fond of Jala Yoga (union with food) than of
    Dhyana Yoga (union with God)."

    His yogic pun affected me uproariously.

    "What a laugh you have!" An affectionate gleam came into his gaze.

    His own face was always
    serious, yet touched with an ecstatic smile. His large, lotus eyes held a hidden divine laughter.

    "Those letters come from far-off America." The sage indicated several thick envelopes on a table.
    "I correspond with a few societies there whose members are interested in yoga.

    They are
    discovering India anew, with a better sense of direction than Columbus! I am glad to help them.
    The knowledge of yoga is free to all who will receive, like the ungarnishable daylight.

    "What rishis perceived as essential for human salvation need not be diluted for the West. Alike in
    soul though diverse in outer experience, neither West nor East will flourish if some form of
    disciplinary yoga be not practiced."

    The saint held me with his tranquil eyes.

    I did not realize that his speech was a veiled prophetic
    guidance. It is only now, as I write these words, that I understand the full meaning in the casual
    intimations he often gave me that someday I would carry India's teachings to America.

    BHADURI MAHASAYA
    "The Levitating Saint"
    "Sir," I inquired, "why do you not write a book on yoga for the benefit of the world?"
    "I am training disciples," He replied.

    "They and their students will be living volumes,
    proof against the natural disintegrations of time and the unnatural interpretaations of
    the critics."

    "Maharishi, I wish you would write a book on yoga for the benefit of the world."

    "I am training disciples. They and their students will be living volumes, proof against the natural
    disintegrations of time and the unnatural interpretations of the critics." Bhaduri's wit put me into
    another gale of laughter.

    I remained alone with the yogi until his disciples arrived in the evening.

    Bhaduri Mahasaya
    entered one of his inimitable discourses. Like a peaceful flood, he swept away the mental debris of
    his listeners, floating them Godward. His striking parables were expressed in a flawless Bengali.

    This evening Bhaduri expounded various philosophical points connected with the life of Mirabai,
    a medieval Rajputani princess who abandoned her court life to seek the company of sadhus.

    One
    great-sannyasi refused to receive her because she was a woman; her reply brought him humbly to
    her feet.

    "Tell the master," she had said, "that I did not know there was any Male in the universe save God;
    are we all not females before Him?" (A scriptural conception of the Lord as the only Positive
    Creative Principle, His creation being naught but a passive maya.)

    Mirabai composed many ecstatic songs which are still treasured in India; I translate one of them
    here:

    "If by bathing daily God could be realized


    Sooner would I be a whale in the deep;
    If by eating roots and fruits He could be known
    Gladly would I choose the form of a goat;
    If the counting of rosaries uncovered Him
    I would say my prayers on mammoth beads;
    If bowing before stone images unveiled Him
    A flinty mountain I would humbly worship;
    If by drinking milk the Lord could be imbibed
    Many calves and children would know Him;
    If abandoning one's wife would summon God
    Would not thousands be eunuchs?
    Mirabai knows that to find the Divine One
    The only indispensable is Love."
    Several students put rupees in Bhaduri's slippers which lay by his side as he sat in yoga posture.
    This respectful offering, customary in India, indicates that the disciple places his material goods
    at the guru's feet.

    Grateful friends are only the Lord in disguise, looking after His own.

    "Master, you are wonderful!" A student, taking his leave, gazed ardently at the patriarchal sage.
    "You have renounced riches and comforts to seek God and teach us wisdom!" It was well-known
    that Bhaduri Mahasaya had forsaken great family wealth in his early childhood, when single-
    mindedly he entered the yogic path.

    "You are reversing the case!" The saint's face held a mild rebuke.

    "I have left a few paltry rupees, a
    few petty pleasures, for a cosmic empire of endless bliss. How then have I denied myself
    anything? I know the joy of sharing the treasure. Is that a sacrifice? The shortsighted worldly folk
    are verily the real renunciates! They relinquish an unparalleled divine possession for a poor
    handful of earthly toys!"

    I chuckled over this paradoxical view of renunciation-one which puts the cap of Croesus on any
    saintly beggar, whilst transforming all proud millionaires into unconscious martyrs.

    "The divine order arranges our future more wisely than any insurance company." The master's
    concluding words were the realized creed of his faith.

    "The world is full of uneasy believers in an
    outward security. Their bitter thoughts are like scars on their foreheads. The One who gave us air
    and milk from our first breath knows how to provide day by day for His devotees."

    I continued my after-school pilgrimages to the saint's door.

    With silent zeal he aided me to attain
    anubhava. One day he moved to Ram Mohan Roy Road, away from the neighborhood of my
    Gurpar Road home. His loving disciples had built him a new hermitage, known as "Nagendra
    Math."

    Although it throws me ahead of my story by a number of years, I will recount here the last words
    given to me by Bhaduri Mahasaya.

    Shortly before I embarked for the West, I sought him out and
    humbly knelt for his farewell blessing:

    "Son, go to America. Take the dignity of hoary India for your shield. Victory is written on your
    brow; the noble distant people will well receive you."

    Methods of controlling life-force through regulation of breath.

    The foremost ancient exponent of yoga.

    French professors were the first in the West to be willing to scientifically investigate the possibilities of the
    superconscious mind.

    Professor Jules-Bois, member of the L'Ecole de Psychologie of the Sorbonne, lectured in America in
    ; he told his audiences that French scientists have accorded recognition to the superconsciousness, "which is the
    exact opposite of Freud's subconscious mind and is the faculty which makes man really man and not just a super-
    animal." M.

    Jules-Bois explained that the awakening of the higher consciousness "was not to be confused with Coueism
    or hypnotism. The existence of a superconscious mind has long been recognized philosophically, being in reality the
    Oversoul spoken of by Emerson, but only recently has it been recognized scientifically." The French scientist pointed out
    that from the superconsciousness come inspiration, genius, moral values.

    "Belief in this is not mysticism though it
    recognized and valued the qualities which mystics preached."

    St. Theresa of Avila and other Christian saints were often observed in a state of levitation.

    "Great sage."

    Actual perception of God.

    The saint's full name was Nagendranath Bhaduri.

    Math means hermitage or ashram.

    CHAPTER: 8

    India's Great Scientist, J.C. Bose

    "Jagadis Chandra Bose's wireless inventions antedated those of Marconi."

    Overhearing this provocative remark, I walked closer to a sidewalk group of professors engaged in
    scientific discussion. If my motive in joining them was racial pride, I regret it.

    I cannot deny my
    keen interest in evidence that India can play a leading part in physics, and not metaphysics alone.

    "What do you mean, sir?"

    The professor obligingly explained. "Bose was the first one to invent a wireless coherer and an
    instrument for indicating the refraction of electric waves.

    But the Indian scientist did not exploit
    his inventions commercially. He soon turned his attention from the inorganic to the organic
    world. His revolutionary discoveries as a plant physiologist are outpacing even his radical
    achievements as a physicist."

    I politely thanked my mentor. He added, "The great scientist is one of my brother professors at
    Presidency College."

    I paid a visit the next day to the sage at his home, which was close to mine on Gurpar Road.

    I had
    long admired him from a respectful distance. The grave and retiring botanist greeted me
    graciously. He was a handsome, robust man in his fifties, with thick hair, broad forehead, and the
    abstracted eyes of a dreamer. The precision in his tones revealed the lifelong scientific habit.

    "I have recently returned from an expedition to scientific societies of the West.

    Their members
    exhibited intense interest in delicate instruments of my invention which demonstrate the
    indivisible unity of all life. The Bose crescograph has the enormity of ten million
    magnifications. The microscope enlarges only a few thousand times; yet it brought vital impetus
    to biological science. The crescograph opens incalculable vistas."

    "You have done much, sir, to hasten the embrace of East and West in the impersonal arms of
    science."

    "I was educated at Cambridge.

    How admirable is the Western method of submitting all theory to
    scrupulous experimental verification! That empirical procedure has gone hand in hand with the
    gift for introspection which is my Eastern heritage. Together they have enabled me to sunder the
    silences of natural realms long uncommunicative. The telltale charts of my crescograph are
    evidence for the most skeptical that plants have a sensitive nervous system and a varied
    emotional life.

    Love, hate, joy, fear, pleasure, pain, excitability, stupor, and countless appropriate
    responses to stimuli are as universal in plants as in animals."

    "The unique throb of life in all creation could seem only poetic imagery before your advent,
    Professor! A saint I once knew would never pluck flowers.

    'Shall I rob the rosebush of its pride in
    beauty? Shall I cruelly affront its dignity by my rude divestment?' His sympathetic words are
    verified literally through your discoveries!"

    "The poet is intimate with truth, while the scientist approaches awkwardly. Come someday to my
    laboratory and see the unequivocable testimony of the crescograph."

    Gratefully I accepted the invitation, and took my departure.

    I heard later that the botanist had left
    Presidency College, and was planning a research center in Calcutta.

    When the Bose Institute was opened, I attended the dedicatory services. Enthusiastic hundreds
    strolled over the premises. I was charmed with the artistry and spiritual symbolism of the new
    home of science. Its front gate, I noted, was a centuried relic from a distant shrine.

    Behind the
    lotus fountain, a sculptured female figure with a torch conveyed the Indian respect for woman
    as the immortal light-bearer. The garden held a small temple consecrated to the Noumenon
    beyond phenomena. Thought of the divine incorporeity was suggested by absence of any altar-
    image.
    Myself at Age six

    JAGADIS CHANDRA BOSE


    India's great physicist, botanist, and inventor of the Crescograph

    Bose's speech on this great occasion might have issued from the lips of one of the inspired ancient
    rishis.

    "I dedicate today this Institute as not merely a laboratory but a temple." His reverent solemnity
    stole like an unseen cloak over the crowded auditorium.

    "In the pursuit of my investigations I was
    unconsciously led into the border region of physics and physiology. To my amazement, I found
    boundary lines vanishing, and points of contact emerging, between the realms of the living and
    the non-living. Inorganic matter was perceived as anything but inert; it was athrill under the
    action of multitudinous forces.

    "A universal reaction seemed to bring metal, plant and animal under a common law.

    They all
    exhibited essentially the same phenomena of fatigue and depression, with possibilities of recovery
    and of exaltation, as well as the permanent irresponsiveness associated with death. Filled with
    awe at this stupendous generalization, it was with great hope that I announced my results before
    the Royal Society- results demonstrated by experiments.

    But the physiologists present advised me
    to confine myself to physical investigations, in which my success had been assured, rather than
    encroach on their preserves. I had unwittingly strayed into the domain of an unfamiliar caste
    system and so offended its etiquette.

    "An unconscious theological bias was also present, which confounds ignorance with faith.

    It is
    often forgotten that He who surrounded us with this ever-evolving mystery of creation has also
    implanted in us the desire to question and understand. Through many years of
    miscomprehension, I came to know that the life of a devotee of science is inevitably filled with
    unending struggle. It is for him to cast his life as an ardent offering-regarding gain and loss,
    success and failure, as one.

    "In time the leading scientific societies of the world accepted my theories and results, and
    recognized the importance of the Indian contribution to science.

    Can anything small or
    circumscribed ever satisfy the mind of India? By a continuous living tradition, and a vital power
    of rejuvenescence, this land has readjusted itself through unnumbered transformations. Indians
    have always arisen who, discarding the immediate and absorbing prize of the hour, have sought
    for the realization of the highest ideals in life-not through passive renunciation, but through
    active struggle.

    The weakling who has refused the conflict, acquiring nothing, has had nothing to
    renounce. He alone who has striven and won can enrich the world by bestowing the fruits of his
    victorious experience.

    "The work already carried out in the Bose laboratory on the response of matter, and the
    unexpected revelations in plant life, have opened out very extended regions of inquiry in physics,
    in physiology, in medicine, in agriculture, and even in psychology.

    Problems hitherto regarded as
    insoluble have now been brought within the sphere of experimental investigation.

    "But high success is not to be obtained without rigid exactitude. Hence the long battery of super-
    sensitive instruments and apparatus of my design, which stand before you today in their cases in
    the entrance hall.

    They tell you of the protracted efforts to get behind the deceptive seeming into
    the reality that remains unseen, of the continuous toil and persistence and resourcefulness called
    forth to overcome human limitations. All creative scientists know that the true laboratory is the
    mind, where behind illusions they uncover the laws of truth.

    "The lectures given here will not be mere repetitions of second-hand knowledge.

    They will
    announce new discoveries, demonstrated for the first time in these halls. Through regular
    publication of the work of the Institute, these Indian contributions will reach the whole world.
    They will become public property. No patents will ever be taken. The spirit of our national culture
    demands that we should forever be free from the desecration of utilizing knowledge only for
    personal gain.

    "It is my further wish that the facilities of this Institute be available, so far as possible, to workers
    from all countries.

    In this I am attempting to carry on the traditions of my country. So far back as
    twenty-five centuries, India welcomed to its ancient universities, at Nalanda and Taxila, scholars
    from all parts of the world.

    "Although science is neither of the East nor of the West but rather international in its
    universality, yet India is specially fitted to make great contributions.

    The burning Indian
    imagination, which can extort new order out of a mass of apparently contradictory facts, is held in
    check by the habit of concentration. This restraint confers the power to hold the mind to the
    pursuit of truth with an infinite patience."

    Tears stood in my eyes at the scientist's concluding words.

    Is "patience" not indeed a synonym of
    India, confounding Time and the historians alike?