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वीरेश्वराय विद्महे विवेकानन्दाय धीमहि । तन्नो
वीर: प्रचोदयात् ।
We have been soaring on the Heights, since I last wrote you. Swami
tells us to forget that there is any Detroit for the present —
that is, to allow no personal thoughts to occupy our minds while
taking this instruction. We are taught to see God in everything
from the blade of grass to man — "even in the diabolical man".
Really, it is almost impossible to find time to write here. We put
up with some inconveniences, as it is so crowded. There is no time
to relax, to rest, for we led the time is all too short, as the
Swami leaves soon for England. We scarcely lake time to array
ourselves properly, so afraid are we of losing some of the
precious jewels. His words are like jewels, and all that he says
fits together like a wonderfully beautiful mosaic. In his talks he
may go ever so far afield, but always he comes back to the one
fundamental, vital thing — "Find God! Nothing else matters".
I especially like Miss Waldo and Miss Ellis. although the whole
household is interesting. Some unique characters. One, a Dr.
Wright of Cambridge, a very cultured man, creates much merriment
at times. He becomes so absorbed in the teaching that he,
invariably, at the end of each discourse ends up with asking
Swamiji, "Well, Swamiji all amounts to this in the end, doesn't
it? I am Brahman, I am the Absolute." If you could only see
Swami's indulgent smile and hear him answer so gently. "Yes Dokie,
you are Brahman, you are the Absolute, in the real essence of your
being." Later, when the learned doctor comes to the table a trifle
late, Swami, with the utmost gravity but with a merry twinkle in
his eyes, will say. "Here comes Brahman" or "Here is the
Absolute".
Swamiji's fun-making is of the merry type. Sometimes he will say,
"Now I am going to cook for you!" He is a wonderful cook and
delights in serving the "brithrin". The food he prepares is
delicious but for "yours truly" too hot with various spices; but I
made up my mind to eat it if it strangled me, which it nearly did.
If a Vivekananda can cook for me, I guess the least I can do is to
eat it. Bless him!
At such times we have whirlwind of fun. Swamiji will stand on the
floor with a white napkin draped over his arm, a la the waiters on
the dining cars, and will in tone in perfect imitation their call
for dinner — "Last call fo' the dining cah. Dinner served". —
Irresistibly funny! And then, at table, such gales of laughter
over some quip or jest, for he unfailingly discovers. the little
idiosyncrasies of each one — but never sarcasm or malice — just
fun.
Since my last letter to you when I told you of Swamiji's capacity
for merriment, so many little things have occurred to make one see
how varied are the aspects of Vivekananda. We are trying to take
notes of all that he says but I find myself lost in listening and
forget the notes. His voice is wondrously beautiful. One might
well lose oneself in its divine music. However, dear Miss Waldo is
taking very full notes of the lessons and in that way they will be
preserved.
Some good fairy must have presided at our birth — C's and mine. We
do not. as yet, know much of karma and reincarnation but we are
beginning to see that both are involved in our being brought into
touch with Swamiji.
Sometimes I ask him rather daring questions, for I am so anxious
to know just how he would react under certain conditions. He takes
it so kindly when I in my impulsive way sometimes "rush in where
angels fear to tread". Once he said to some one, "Mrs. Funke rests
me, she is so naive". Wasn't that dear of him?
One evening, when it was raining and we were all sitting in the
living room, the Swami was talking about pure womanhood and told
us the story of Sita. How he can tell a story! You see it, and all
the characters become real. I found myself wondering just how some
of the beautiful society queens of the West would appear to him —
especially those versed in the art of allurement — and before I
took time to think, out popped the question, and immediately I was
covered with confusion. The Swami, however, looked at me calmly
with his big, serious eyes and gravely replied, "If the most
beautiful woman in the world were to look at me in an immodest or
unwomanly way she would immediately turn into a hideous, green
frog, and one does not, of course, admire frogs!"
Apropos of my name, something so funny happened. One day, we all
walked down to the village and passed a glass-blower's tent. Swami
was much interested in this and held a whispered conversation with
the glass-blower. Then he asked us to take a walk through the main
street of the village and upon our return the glass-blower handed
him sundry mysterious packages which proved to contain a gift for
each of us, a large crystal ball, each one different with our
names blown in the glass "With the love of Vivekananda". Upon
reaching the house, we opened our packages. My name was spelled —
Phunkey". We were convulsed with laughter but not where he could
hear us. He never having seen my name written, "Phunkey" was the
result.
And he was so sweet, so gentle and benign all that evening. just
like an indulgent father who had given his children beautiful
gifts, although many of us were much older than he.
The Swami has accepted C, as one fitted for his work in India. She
is so happy. I was very disappointed, because he would not
encourage me to go to India. I had a vague idea that to live in a
cave and wear a yellow robe would be the proper thing to do if one
wished to develop spiritually. How foolish of me and how wise
Swamiji was! He said, "You are a householder. Go back to Detroit,
find God in your husband and family. That is your path at
present."
Later: This morning we went to the village and Swami had tin-types
taken of himself at our request. He was so full of fun, so merry.
I am trying to write you in class as there is literally no other
time. I am sitting near the Swami, and he is saying these very
words. "The guru is like a crystal. He reflects perfectly the
consciousness of all who come to him, He thus understands how and
in what way to help." He means by this that a guru must be able to
see what each person needs and he must meet them on their own
plane of consciousness.
Now he has closed the class for the morning, and he has turned to
me, "Mrs. Funke, tell me a funny story. We are going to part soon,
and we must talk funny things, isn't it?"...
We take long walks every afternoon, and our favourite walk is back
of the cottage down a hill and then a rustic path to the river.
One day there was olfactory evidence of a polecat in the vicinity,
and ever since Swami will say, "Shall we walk down Skunk Avenue?"
Sometimes we stop several times and sit around on the grass and
listen to Swami's wonderful talks. A bird, a flower, a butterfly,
will start him off, and he will tell us stories from the Vedas or
recite Indian poetry. I recall that one poem started with the
line, "Her eyes are like the black bee on the lotus." He
considered must of our poetry to be obvious, banal, without the
delicacy of that of his own country.
Wednesday, August 7th: Alas, he has departed! Swamiji left this
evening at 9 o'clock on the steamer for Clayton where he will take
the train for New York and from there sail for England.
The last day has been a very wonderful and precious one. This
morning there was no class. He asked C. and me to take a walk, as
he wished to be alone with us. (The others had been with him all
summer, and he felt we, should have a last talk.) We went up a
hill about half a mile away. All was woods and solitude. Finally
he selected a low-branched tree, and we sat under the low
spreading branches. Instead of the expected talk, he suddenly
said, "Now we will meditate. We shall be like Buddha under the Bo
tree." He seemed to turn to bronze, so still was he. Then a
thunderstorm came up, and it poured. He never noticed it. 1I
raised my umbrella and protected him as much as possible.
Completely absorbed in his meditation, he was oblivious of
everything. Soon we heard shouts in the distance. The others had
come out after us with raincoats and umbrellas. Swamiji looked
around regretfully. for we had to go, and said, "Once more am I in
Calcutta in the rains."
He was so tender and sweet all this last day. As the steamer
rounded the bend in the river, he boyishly and joyously waved his
hat to us in farewell, and he had departed indeed!
As I finish these brief reminiscences, the calendar tells me that
it is February 14, 1925 — just thirty-one years almost to the very
hour I first saw and heard Swamiji at the Unitarian Church.
Ah, those blessed, halcyon days at Thousand Island Park! The
nights all glowing with the soft mystery of moonlight or golden
starlight. And yet the Swami's arrival amongst us held no mystery,
apparently. He came in simple guise.
We found later that anything which smacked of the mystery-monger
was abhorrent to him. He came to make manifest the Glory and
Radiance of the Self. Man's limitations are of his own making.
"Thine only is the hand that holds the rope that drags thee on."
This was the motif running through the Swami's teaching.
With infinite pains he tried to show us the path he himself had
trod. After thirty-one years Swamiji stands out in my
consciousness a colossal figure — a cleaver of bondage, knowing
when and where not to spare. With his two-edged flaming sword came
this Man "out of the East" — this Man of Fire and Flame, and some
there were who received him, and to those who received him he gave
Power.
Such was Vivekananda!
(Prabuddha Bharata, February 1927)
Today's-Special
: 10-August in Swami Vivekananda Life
10 August 1898 Letter To the Maharaja of Khetri from
SRINAGAR
YOUR HIGHNESS—
I have long not heard any news of you. How are things going on
with you both bodily and mentally?
I have been to see Shri Amarnathji. It was a very enjoyable
trip and the Darshana was glorious.
I will be here about a month more, then I return to the
plains. Kindly ask Jagmohan to write to the Dewan Saheb of
Kishangarh to get for me the copies of Nimbârka Bhâshya which
he promised.
10 Aug 1899 : Letter to Swami Brahmananda
....Sarada writes that the magazine is not going well. . .
. Let him publish the account of my travels, and thoroughly
advertise it beforehand — he will have subscribers rushing in.
Do people like a magazine if three-fourths of it are filled
with pious stuff? Anyway pay special attention to the
magazine. Mentally take it as though I were not. Act
independently on this basis. "We depend on the elder brother
for money, learning, everything" — such an attitude is the
road to ruin. If all the money even for the magazine is to be
collected by me and all the articles too are from my pen —
what will you all do? What are our Sahibs then doing? I have
finished my part. You do what remains to be done. Nobody is
there to collect a single penny, nobody to do any preaching,
none has brains enough to take proper care of his own affairs,
none has the capacity to write one line, and all are saints
for nothing! . . . If this be your condition, then for six
months give everything into the hands of the boys — magazine,
money, preaching work, etc. If they are also not able to do
anything, then sell off everything, and returning the proceeds
to the donors go about as mendicants. .... I want work, I want
vigour — no matter who lives or dies. What are death and life
to a Sannyasin?
Past & Future