0 - Bhagavan and Thayumanavar - David Goodman
0 - Bhagavan and Thayumanavar - David Goodman
0 - Bhagavan and Thayumanavar - David Goodman
Thayumanavar was a distinguished Tamil poet-saint who lived in the first half of the
eighteenth century, from 1705 to 1742 AD. His devotional poetry was frequently cited by
Bhagavan, with obvious approval, and many Ramanasramam books record fragments of
his poems that Bhagavan either read out or quoted from memory. However, in most cases
the full verse is not given in the ashram literature. In this article we are presenting the
complete versions of most the verses that Bhagavan referred to, giving, wherever
possible, the circumstances and context in which they were quoted.1 We do not propose
to analyse Thayumanavars poetry or philosophy in any great detail; we merely wish to
present, in a full form, those portions of his work that particularly appealed to Bhagavan.
Bhagavan was sometimes so emotionally moved when he read out verses by
Thayumanavar, he would be unable to continue. Devaraja Mudaliar, who was responsible
for recording many of Bhagavans references to Thayumanavar, wrote about this on two
occasions:
I may here record that I have noticed on more than one occasion in the
past how Bhagavan could not proceed with the reading of any deeply
devotional portions of Tamil works such as Thevaram and Thayumanavar.2
... when touching songs were recited or read out before him, or when he
himself was reading out to us poems or passages from the lives or works of
famous saints, he would be moved to tears and find it impossible to restrain
them. He would be reading out and explaining some passage and when he
came to a very moving part he would get so choked with emotion that he
could not continue but would lay aside the book. To quote a few instances,
such a thing happened when he was reading and explaining some incidents in
Sundaramurti Nayanars life in connection with the Tiruchuzhi Mahatmyam,
and also when he was reading out Akarabuvanam-Chidambara Rahasyam in
Thayumanavars works, and came to the twenty-fourth verse:
1
We have not been able to identify all the verses since some of the references are too general.
2
Day by Day with Bhagavan, 12th December 1945, afternoon session.
1
His [Bhagavans] eyes were so filled with tears and his throat so choked
with emotion [as he read these words] that he had to put aside the book and
break off his discourse.3
Thayumanavar was brought up in the Tanjavur District of Tamil Nadu in the coastal
town of Vedaranyam. His father, Kediliappa, came from an agricultural background but
progressed from being a farmer to being the administrator of the local Vedapureeswarar
Temple. He carried out this responsibility so well, he was subsequently offered the job of
palace manager and royal advisor by Vijayaranga Chokkalinga Naicker, the reigning
Prince of Tiruchirapalli. When Thayumanavar was born, his father named him after
Thayumaneswarar, the presiding deity in the temple of Siragiri, which is nowadays
known as the Tiruchirapalli Fort Temple.
Thayumanavar received a good education at court in which he ended up acquiring an
outstanding knowledge of both Sanskrit and Tamil language and literature. He must also
have made a good impression on the royal family because, when his father passed away,
Thayumanavar, who was still in his teens, was considered qualified to take over his job.
He subsequently managed the financial affairs of the kingdom and apparently fulfilled his
duties with some distinction. However, while this was going on, his religious yearnings
impelled him to look for a Guru who could help him to progress spiritually.
Unfortunately, as many seekers have discovered before and since, such beings are hard to
find. In later life Thayumanavar wrote about the qualifications that are necessary for one
who is looking for a qualified Guru. Bhagavan once cited this verse, and endorsed its
contents, in the following dialogue:
3
My Recollections of Bhagavan Sri Ramana, Devaraja Mudaliar, pp. 45-6, 1992 ed. The translation from
the Akarabuvanam-Chidambara Rahasyam verse was done by the joint authors of this article. We have
made new translations of all the Thayumanavar verses that appear in this article and have inserted them at
the appropriate places, that is, whenever Bhagavan quotes from them or refers to them.
4
Paraparakkanni, verse 156.
2
Only he who has done plenty of nishkamya punyas [austerities performed
without any thought of a reward or consequence] in previous births will get
abundant faith in the Guru. Having faith in the Gurus words, such a man will
follow the path and reach the goal of liberation.5
We can assume that Thayumanavar had the requisite qualifications since his search
for a teacher ultimately led him to a man called Arul Nandi Sivachariar, who was also
known as Mauna Guru. This teacher could trace his lineage back to the famous saint
Tirumular, whose book, Tirumantiram, written well over a thousand years ago, became
one of the canonical works of Saivism.
When Thayumanavar approached him and asked if he could become his disciple,
Mauna Guru nodded his head, thereby giving his consent. Thayumanavar then asked if he
could follow him wherever he went. Mauna Guru responded by telling him Summa iru,
which can mean Be still, Be quiet, and also Remain as you are. This one phrase
apparently brought about a major spiritual transformation in Thayumanavar. In later
years, when he began to write ecstatic devotional poetry, he frequently mentioned this
event, this phrase, and the effect it had on him. He frequently called it the unique word
in his verses (including the one cited in the last quotation).6
This phrase was also used by Bhagavan, often with similarly dramatic effect.
Muruganar has written in several of his poems that Bhagavan enlightened him by uttering
this phrase:
In a recent issue of The Mountain Path8 there was a report of how a shorter version of
this phrase, iru, meaning be or stay, effected a life-transforming change in Tinnai
Swami.
The unique word, summa iru, uttered by a qualified Guru, has an immediate and
liberating impact on those who are in a highly mature state. For the vast majority, though,
hearing this word from the Gurus lips is not enough. Bhagavan discussed this in the
following dialogue, which he illustrated with more verses from Thayumanavar.
5
Living by the Words of Bhagavan, 2nd ed., pp. 220-1.
6
Summa iru becomes one word in written Tamil by the addition of a v as a euphonic connection:
summaviru. The same process operates in Tiruvannamalai where the v connects a word that ends with
the letter u and a word that begins with an a.
7
Padamalai, Padams Grace Towards Muruganar, vv. 168, 170, p. 354.
8
The Mountain Path, Aradhana issue, 2004, pp. 75-83.
3
deliberate concentration. Would Bhagavan be pleased to explain how best to
practise meditation and what form the object of meditation should take?
This is the full version of the three verses that Mudaliar summarised:
9
Day by Day with Bhagavan, 11th January, 1946.
10
Udal Poyyuravu, verse 5.
4
Though I have listened unceasingly to the scriptures
that one and all declare,
To be still is bliss, is very bliss,
I lack, alas, true understanding,
and I failed even to heed
the teachings of my Lord, Mauna Guru.
Through this stupidity
I wandered in mayas cruel forest.
Woe is me, for this is my fated destiny.12
One may presume from the complaints in the last verse that Thayumanavar was not
one of the fortunate few who attained liberation instantly merely by hearing his Guru tell
him Summa iru. As Bhagavan remarked in an earlier quotation, it is necessary for
almost all people to make some conscious effort to control the mind. Mauna Guru,
Thayumanavars Guru, accepted that this was the case with Thayumanavar and he
consequently gave him detailed instructions on how he should pursue his sadhana.
Thayumanavar recorded many of these instructions in his verses, some of which were
selected by Bhagavan and included in the Tamil parayana at Ramanashram.13
During Bhagavans lifetime Tamil poetic works were chanted in his presence every
day. Initially, at Skandashram, only Aksharamanamalai was chanted, but as the years
went by, more and more works were added. By the 1940s there was a prescribed list of
poems, all selected by Bhagavan himself, that took fifteen days to complete at the rate of
about one hour per day.
These are some of the verses from Thayumanavar that Bhagavan selected. The first
three describe the suffering inherent in samsara, while the remainder contain Mauna
Gurus prescriptions for transcending it:
11
Udal Poyyuravu, verse 52.
12
Payappuli, verse 36. Bhagavan also quoted this verse Udal Poyyuravu, verse 52, in Talks with Sri
Ramana Maharshi, talk no. 646.
13
A reference to this selection was made in My Recollections of Bhagavan Sri Ramana, by Devaraja
Mudaliar, p. 54, 1992 ed.
5
as their gods, as their spiritual aspirants, and as the methods
described in many a treatise that bear witness to their practices;
and as the doctrinal wrangling amongst them?
It is like trying to count the fine grains of sand on the seashore.
The idea that God takes on a human form to catch other beings who have this same
form is one that appears in many spiritual texts. Bhagavan explained this particular
reference in the following reply:
The next six verses contain the upadesa that Mauna Guru gave to Thayumanavar,
and a description of the effect it had on him:
14
Akarabuvanam-Chidambara Rahasyam, vv. 15-17.
15
Talks with Sri Ramana Maharshi, talk no. 398.
6
listen as I explain to you the proper means:
May you live long, winning in your heart
the reality that is devoid of all qualities!
May you attain the state of bliss-consciousness,
so that all the dense accumulation of ignorance disappears!
May you liberate yourself from bondage!
16
This could also be translated as neither jiva nor Iswara appears.
17
This can also be translated as This is the state of the Self.
7
so that, in the nirvikalpa state of total tranquillity,
I may know and attain the condition of supreme bliss,
in accordance with your rule.
I shall not sleep or take up any other work
until I attain this state.18
Thayumanavars reverence for his Mauna Guru, for the teachings he gave him, and
for the experiences he ultimately bestowed on him, were the subject of another poem that
Bhagavan mentioned. The subject arose when Bhagavan was asked about the necessity of
having a Guru:
18
Akarabuvanam-Chidambara Rahasya, vv. 18-23.
19
Letters and Recollections of Sri Ramanasramam, p. 26.
The verse that follows was not specifically mentioned by Bhagavan. We have inserted it here because
it closely resembles the contents of a verse by another author that Bhagavan quoted immediately after
mentioning Thayumanavar. That verse said: O Gurudeva, your look falling upon it, a tiger becomes gentle
like a goat, a snake like a squirrel, and a bad man becomes a good man....
8
Mantra Guru! Yoga Tantra Guru!
Mauna Guru, sprung from Tirumulars ancestral line! 20
20
Maunaguru Vanakkam, verse 7.
21
Letters and Recollections of Sri Ramanasramam, p. 26.
9
places in Tamil Nadu, including Tiruvannamalai, Kanchipuram, Tiruvarur, Madurai and
Tiruvotriyur. His final destination was Rameswaram at the southern tip of India. Shortly
after his arrival there he made a very public appeal in the temple for God to intervene and
end a drought that had severely afflicted that part of the country. An immediate and
torrential downpour filled all the tanks and wells. Thayumanavar, who generally shunned
publicity as much as possible, found himself being carried in triumph through the streets
of Ramanathapuram on a palanquin. He was feted by the local king, the Raja of Ramnad,
and even offered a new job as a royal advisor.
Thayumanavar rejected all the royal honours and spent the remainder of his brief life
in a small hut, meditating and composing the songs that were to make him famous. His
two principal disciples, Arulayya and Kodikkarai Jnani, wrote down the poems and began
to sing them in public. They were immediately popular and spread widely even during
Thayumanavars lifetime.
In January 1742 he withdrew into his hut and left the following message pinned to
the outside of the door:
Dear friends,
Withdraw the mind from the senses and fix it in meditation. Control the
thought-current. Find out the thought-centre and fix yourself there. Then you
will be conscious of the divine Self; you will see it dancing in ecstasy. Live in
that delight. That delight-consciousness is the God in you. He is in every
heart. You need not go anywhere to find Him. Find your own core and feel
Him there. Peace, bliss, felicity, health everything is in you. Trust in the
divine in you. Entrust yourself to His Grace. Be as you are. Off with past
impressions! He who lives from within an ingathered soul is a real sage, even
though he may be a householder. He who allows his mind to wander with the
senses is an ignoramus, though he is learned. See as a witness, without the
burden of seeing. See the world just as you see a drama. See without
attachment. Look within. Look at the inner light unshaken by mental
impressions. Then, floods of conscious bliss shall come pouring in and around
you from all directions. This is the supreme Knowledge; realise! Aum! Aum!22
This was his final message. When Arulayya went in he found that Thayumanavar
had left his body. He was given a royal funeral in Ramanathapuram by the local raja, and
his songs were sung as his body was interred.
The remainder of this article is divided into several topics, each of which explores
some aspect of Thayumanavars teachings that Bhagavan referred to while he was
responding to questions from visitors.
This first section begins with a discussion that centred on experiences that Tennyson, the
famous 19th century English poet, induced in himself:
22
The Silent Sage, by Dr B. Natarajan, pub. The Himalayan Academy, 1978.
10
In continuation of yesterdays conversation about Tennyson, the relevant
passage was found in a footnote to the English translation of Upadesa Saram.
It was not in a poem but in a letter to B. P. Blood. Bhagavan asked me to read
it out, so I did: ...a kind of waking trance I have frequently had, quite up from
boyhood, when I have been all alone. This has generally come upon me
through repeating my own name two or three times to myself, silently, till all
at once, as it were out of the intensity of consciousness of individuality, the
individuality itself seemed to dissolve and fade away into boundless being:
and this is not a confused state, but the clearest of the clearest, the surest of the
surest, the weirdest of the weirdest, utterly beyond words, where death was a
laughable impossibility, the loss of personality (if so it were) seeming no
extinction but the only true life.
Bhagavan said: That state is called abidance in the Self. It is described in
a number of songs.
He took up Thayumanavar and it opened at the very page he was looking
for...23
23
Day by Day with Bhagavan, 17th June, 1946.
24
Chinmayanandaguru, verse 8. The last three lines, detached from the main verse, are the refrain.
Siragiri is the hill at Tiruchirapalli. Bindu and natham, which are mentioned in the middle of the verse, are
Saiva Siddhanta terms that denote the place or point from where the universe emerges and evolves.
11
Bhagavan quoted two other Thayumanavar verses on this occasion, but they are not
really expressions of what the Self is like. They are, instead, pleas from a disciple who
wants to attain this state. Bhagavan mentioned them because he said that they both
contained references or allusions to the sahaja nishta, the natural state of abidance in the
Self.25
In the next dialogue Bhagavan is questioned about turiya, the underlying substratum
of the Self in which the three states of waking, dreaming and sleeping appear and
disappear. He answered the query about these states and concluded with a brief quotation
from Thayumanavar:
25
Day by Day with Bhagavan, 17th June, 1946.
26
Asaienum, verse 2.
27
Paripurnanandam, verse 5. Maya and karma, mentioned in the middle of the verse, are, according to
Saiva Siddhanta, two of the three impurities of the individual self.
12
Question: How are the three states of consciousness inferior in degree of
reality to the fourth? What is the actual relation between these three and the
fourth?
Bhagavan: There is only one state, that of consciousness or awareness or
existence. The three states of waking, dream and sleep cannot be real. They
simply come and go. The real will always exist. The I or existence that alone
persists in all the three states is real. The other three are not real and so it is
not possible to say that they have such and such a degree of reality. We may
roughly put it like this. Existence or consciousness is the only reality.
Consciousness plus waking we call waking. Consciousness plus sleep we call
sleep. Consciousness plus dream, we call dream. Consciousness is the screen
on which all the pictures come and go. The screen is real, the pictures are
mere shadows on it. Because by long habit we have been regarding these three
states as real, we call the state of mere awareness or consciousness as the
fourth. There is, however, no fourth state, but only one state.
O Supreme of Supremes!
To remain,
free of sleep,
beyond thoughts corruption,
is this the pure state of grace?
Pray, speak!29
In the final verse in this section Thayumanavar describes the moment of Self-
realisation and some of the experiences that stem from it. Arthur Osborne wrote that this
was a verse that Bhagavan particularly liked,30 but there are no recorded instances of
Bhagavan quoting this verse in his replies to devotees.
28
Day by Day with Bhagavan, 11th January, 1946.
29
Paraparakkanni, verse 386.
30
Ramana Maharshi and the Path of Self Knowledge, p. 61, B. I. publications, 1979.
13
where there is neither abundance nor lack.
Our nature will become such,
that like babies, madmen or ghouls,
we should not rejoice,
though offered heaven and earth in their entirety.31
The translation recorded by Devaraja Mudaliar in Day by Day with Bhagavan comes
from the second part of the verse. G. V. Subbaramayya has noted33 that Bhagavan
explained the first half of the verse in the late 1930s, although neither the circumstances
nor the explanation itself is given.
This particular verse seems to have been one that particularly interested Bhagavan
for Devaraja Mudaliar has reported: On one occasion stanzas 8 to 11 of Mandalattin
and twelve of Sukavari [the verse just referred to] were elaborately explained by
Bhagavan and were translated into English by me for the benefit of those who did not
know Tamil. These stanzas used to be frequently referred to by Bhagavan.34
In the first half of the Sukavari verse the mind of Thayumanavar is complaining to
its jiva, its spirit or soul, about the division that has sprung up between them.
Like yourself [the jiva] who are spirit, have not I, the mind,
and my friend, the prana, always dwelt within the body?
Long ago someone or other separated us,
designating us as insentient and yourself as sentient.
From the day you heard that, right up to the present day,
31
Ninaivonru, verse 7.
32
Day by Day with Bhagavan, 26th June, 1946. In the same work it is stated that Bhagavan also explained
this verse to Dr Srinivasa Rao on 22nd November 1945, but the explanation itself was not recorded.
33
Sri Ramana Reminiscences, 1967 ed., p. 49.
34
My Recollections of Bhagavan Sri Ramana, Devaraja Mudaliar, pp. 54-5, 1992 ed.
14
you have unjustly erected a barrier between us and suppressed us,
exercising your oppressive rule. What a great task you have accomplished,
right before our eyes!
Supreme Godhead,
pure and devoid of all attributes!
Supernal Light! Ocean of bliss!35
On the occasion that Devaraja Mudaliar read out and translated the Sukavari verse
for Khannas benefit, there was a further dialogue on this subject, after which Bhagavan
quoted three more Thayumanavar verses, the same ones that Mudaliar said Bhagavan had
once given a lengthy explanation on:
Then I [Devaraja Mudaliar] said to Khanna: You are not the only one
who complains to Bhagavan like this. I have more than once complained in
the same way, and I still do, for I find no improvement in myself.
Khanna replied: It is not only that I find no improvement but I think I
have grown worse. The vasanas are stronger now. I cant understand it.
Bhagavan again quoted the last three stanzas of Mandalattin of
Thayumanavar, where the mind is coaxed as the most generous and
disinterested of givers, to go back to its birthplace or source and thus give the
devotee peace and bliss, and he asked me to read out a translation that I had
once made.36
35
Sukavari, verse 12, followed by three lines of the refrain.
36
Day by Day with Bhagavan, 26th June, 1946. The translation that Mudaliar made no longer exists. What
follows is a translation by the authors of this article.
15
Amongst those who have taken on bodies
to experience the [the world],
be they Brahma, or any of the gods,
it is true, is it not,
that for any of them to reject you [the mind],
and exist without you,
is impossible, quite impossible.
Without you, can anything be,
in this world or the next?
To vainly label you unreal is unjust.
So I shall praise you as real also.
In order that my wretched state may be ended,
you must return to the glorious land of your birth.
Though Thayumanavar mentioned in the last verse but one that siddhis would come
automatically when his mind had, through the grace of his Guru, ceased to function, he
37
Mandalattin, verses 8-11. The last four verses of Mandalattin are given here since Mudaliar has
already mentioned earlier in the article that Bhagavan once gave an extensive explanation of all four of
them. See My Recollections of Bhagavan Sri Ramana, Devaraja Mudaliar, pp. 54-5, 1992 ed.
16
generally disapproved of attempts to pursue such powers. Bhagavan mentioned this in the
following reply:
In the English version of Talks the Thayumanavar verse is not specified, but in the
Tamil edition, the translator and editor, Viswanatha Swami, states that the following
verse is the one that Bhagavan was referring to:
Thayumanavar did not merely disapprove of the pursuit of siddhis. His criticism
extended to extreme ascetic practices, attempts to prolong the lifespan of the body, and
methods which aimed to raise the kundalini to the sahasrara. In the following verse,
which Devaraja Mudaliar said Bhagavan occasionally referred to, Thayumanavar asserts
that none of these practices by themselves can lead to liberation.
38
Talks with Sri Ramana Maharshi, 1st January 1936, talk no. 122.
39
Tejomayanandam, verse 8.
17
without a thought of thirst or hunger,
stopping up the gnawing pangs with water, air and fallen leaves,
though we dwell in silence, retreat to lofty mountain caves,
though we purify the ten channels which ever endure,
though we contain within the sphere known as somavattam
the inner fire, along with the vital air which rises from the root,
tasting thus the nectar that no words can describe,
though we practise the acquisition of powerful siddhis,
to prolong this mere trifle of a body through every aeon of time,
other than through jnana can liberation be attained?
There are a few technical terms in this verse that may need to be explained:
(1) The five fires (panchakkini) are those amidst which an ascetic performs tapas four
at the cardinal points, and the fifth being the sun.
(2) The ten channels are the ida, pingala and sushumna nadis, along with seven lesser-
known ones.
(3) The somavattam, associated with the moon, is a circular area at the centre of the
sahasrara chakra, located in the area of the crown of the skull. When the vital
breath, originating in the muladhara or root chakra, combines with the kundalini
energy, it rises through all the six chakras until it becomes contained and held in the
seventh, the sahasrara chakra, the thousand-petalled lotus with the somavattam at
its centre. At this point a nectar is released through the melting effect of the fiery
energy. The yogi, in his state of absorption, is able to feed upon this nectar, and thus
remain in this state for long periods. Bhagavan referred to this practice when he
said: The yoga marga speaks of the six centres, each of which must be reached by
practice and transcended until one reaches the sahasrara where nectar is found and
thus immortality.41
The key line in this verse is the last one in which Thayumanavar asserts, other than
through jnana can liberation be attained?, a rhetorical question whose answer is clearly
no. This conclusion and the preceding comments about the pointlessness of pursuing
siddhis can both be found in a remarkably similar answer that Bhagavan gave out when
he was asked about the relationship between enlightenment and the attainment of siddhis.
40
Chinmayanandaguru, verse 11. Devaraja Mudaliar stated in My Recollections of Bhagavan Sri Ramana,
p. 55, that Bhagavan occasionally referred to this verse.
41
Talks with Sri Ramana Maharshi, talk no. 398.
18
cannot be real. They are accomplished with the object of enjoying fame,
pleasures, etc. They come unsought to some persons through their karma.
Know that union with Brahman is the attainment of the sum total of all the
siddhis. This is also the state of Liberation [aikya mukti] known as union
[sayujya].42
Thayumanavar and Bhagavan were in agreement that yogic practices alone will not
directly result in liberation. Bhagavan has pointed out in several places that its practices
can result in bliss, siddhis, and even nirvikalpa samadhi, but he also maintained that it is
not until the I dies in the Heart that jnana, true liberation occurs.43
Though Bhagavan and Thayumanavar both pointed out the limitations of yogic
practices, and though both were sharply critical of people who attempted to attain siddhis,
they had a generally tolerant attitude to different religions and their various practices.
They knew that they all ultimately resolved themselves into the state of mauna in which
all such distinctions and differences were rendered invalid. The next quotation on this
subject is from Bhagavan, and it is followed by a very similar statement from
Thayumanavar.
The doctrines of all religions contradict each other. They wage war,
collide with each other, and finally die.
On this battlefield all the religions retreat defeated when they stand before
mauna, which abides beneficently, sustaining them all.
The rare and wonderful power of mauna is that it remains without enmity
towards any of the religions.
The many different religions are appropriate to the maturity of each
individual, and all of them are acceptable to reality.
Abandoning vain disputation, which only deludes and torments the mind,
accept the doctrine of the mauna religion, which always remains
undisturbed.44
Shining Supreme!
If we scrutinise all the religions
that look so different,
we find no contradiction in their purpose.
They are all your sport.
Just as all rivers discharge into the sea,
they all end in the ocean of mauna.45
The two major competing systems of religious and philosophical thought in South
India have, for several centuries, been Vedanta and Saiva Siddhanta. The proponents of
42
Upadesa Manjari, section four, answer ten.
43
See Talks with Sri Ramana Maharshi talk nos. 398 and 474 where Bhagavan expresses his views on
these yogic practices in great detail.
44
Padamalai, Religions and Religious Knowledge chapter, verses 1-5.
45
Kallalin, verse 25. The verse appears in full in Day by Day with Bhagavan, 21st November, 1945, and
was briefly mentioned in Talks with Sri Ramana Maharshi, talk no. 547.
19
each school have been criticising the other in their writings for much of the last thousand
years. Bhagavan tended to use the language and philosophical structures of Vedanta
when he answered visitors questions whereas Thayumanavar, in his poems, showed a
strong Saiva Siddhanta influence. However, neither was dogmatic about his system since
they both knew, from direct experience, that in the experience of the Self all
philosophical divisions and distinctions are dissolved. As Thayumanavar wrote:
Question: What is the end of devotion [bhakti] and the path of Siddhanta [i.e.,
Saiva Siddhanta]?
Bhagavan: It is to learn the truth that all ones actions performed with
unselfish devotion, with the aid of the three purified instruments [body,
speech and mind], in the capacity of the servant of the Lord, become the
Lords actions, and to stand forth free from the sense of I and mine. This is
also the truth of what the Saiva Siddhantins call para-bhakti [supreme
devotion] or living in the service of God [irai pani nittral].
Question: What is the end of the path of knowledge [jnana] or Vedanta?
Bhagavan: It is to know the truth that the I does not exist separately from
the Lord [Iswara] and to be free from the feeling of being the doer [kartrtva,
ahamkara].47
46
Paripurananandam, verse 5. Day by Day with Bhagavan, 17th June, 1946.
47
Spiritual Instruction, part one, questions nine and ten.
48
Day by Day with Bhagavan, 9th March 1946.
20
Bhagavan then cited some lines from Thayumanavar to illustrate his theme:
Indra and all the devas, Brahma and all the gods,
sages learned in the Rig and other Vedas,
the countless leaders of the celestial hosts,
the nine principal siddhas,
the Sun, the Moon and the rest of the planets,
the gandharvas, kinnaras and all the rest,
Markandeya and Suka are deemed to be immortals, as are all the other sages who
have permanently transcended the mind. Some of the commentators on this verse say that
all the other beings who are listed after Markandeya and Suka are not immortal, and
therefore have to continue to pay obeisance to forms of the divine.
It is worth noting that Devaraja Mudaliar noted in his reminiscences50 that Bhagavan
once quoted him a portion of this same verse (This is not a thing to be taught to those of
little understanding. At the mere mention of it, numerous disputations will ensue.)
Mudaliar understood this to mean that Bhagavan was occasionally circumspect about
giving out some aspects of his teaching to people who were not ready for them because to
do so would merely provoke pointless arguments.
There was once a discussion in the hall about the true meaning of verse ten of Ulladu
Narpadu Anubandham which states:
49
Karunakarakkadavul, verse 7.
50
My Recollections of Bhagavan Sri Ramana, p. 91.
21
question thus, there shines forth as I, Himself, the Lord Siva of
Arunachala.51
Dr Srinivasa Rao asked whether [this stanza] does not teach us to affirm
soham [repeating I am He as a spiritual practice]. Bhagavan explained as
follows.
It is said that the whole Vedanta can be compressed into the four words,
deham [the body], naham [I am not the body], koham [Who am I?], soham [I
am He]. This stanza says the same. In the first two lines it is explained why
deham is naham, i.e., why the body is not I or na aham. The next two lines
say, if one enquires ko aham, i.e., Who am I?, i.e., if one enquires whence this
springs and realises it, then in the heart of such a one the omnipresent God
Arunachala will shine as I, as sa aham or soham: i.e., he will know That I
am, i.e., That is I.
In this connection Bhagavan also quoted two stanzas, one from
Thayumanavar and the other from Nammalvar, the gist of both of which is:
Though I have been thinking I was a separate entity and talking of I and
mine, when I began to enquire about this I, I found you alone exist.52
O Supreme of Supremes!
Searching without searching who this I was,
soon I found You alone
standing as the heaven of bliss,
You alone, blessed Lord.53
The following morning54 Bhagavan showed Devaraja Mudaliar the written texts of
both these verses, and he also added the following Thayumanavar verse which, in its
middle portion, expounds the same theme:
51
The Collected Works of Sri Ramana Maharshi, p. 124
52
Day by Day with Bhagavan, 23rd January, 1946.
53
Paraparakkanni, verse 225.
54
Day by Day with Bhagavan, 24th January, 1946.
22
will be it be easy to overcome the power of destiny?
Is there any means of awakening one,
who even before the day has ended,
remains, feigning sleep, his eyes tightly closed?
What, then, is the way that may be taught?
Yet, this vileness in unjust, so unjust.
Who is there to whom I might plead my cause?
Bhagavan: That which is the source of all, that in which all live, and that into
which all finally merge, is the heart referred to
Nanavati: How can we conceive such a heart?
Bhagavan: Why should you conceive of anything? You have only to see
wherefrom the I springs.
Nanavati: I suppose mere mauna in speech is no good; but we must have
mauna of the mind.
Bhagavan: Of course. If we have real mauna, that state in which the mind is
merged into its source and has no more separate existence, then all other kinds
of mauna will come of their own accord, i.e., mauna of words, of action and
of the mind or chitta.
O Supreme of Supremes!
If the pure silence [suddha mauna]
arises within me,
my mind will be silence,
my actions and words, all
will be silence.57
55
Anandananaparam, verse 7.
56
Day by Day with Bhagavan, 29th April 1946.
57
Paraparakkanni, verse 276.
23
The specific verse is not given, but in the Tamil edition of Talks, Viswanatha Swami
identifies it as Payappuli, verse14:
This verse, a clear expression of the state that Thayumanavar finally reached, closely
parallels the idea contained in Ulladu Narpadu, verse thirty, in which Bhagavan describes
how the individual I subsides into its source, the Heart, leaving only the perfection of
the Self:
When the mind turns inwards seeking Who am I? and merges in the Heart,
then the I hangs down his head in shame and the one I appears as itself.
Though it appears as I-I, it is not the ego. It is reality, perfection, the
substance of the Self.59
The similarities are so marked, it should come as no surprise that Bhagavan once
commented that this was his favourite Thayumanavar verse.60 It was included in the
Tamil parayana at Ramanasramam, along with the nine verses from Akarabuvanam-
Chidambara Rahasyam that have already been given.
The subject of silence and the thought-free state came up again after Bhagavan had
cited, with great approval, a passage by Gandhi in which the latter had given a
description of his own experience of this state:
58
Talks with Sri Ramana Maharshi, talk no. 122.
59
The Collected Works of Sri Ramana Maharshi, Ulladu Narpadu verse 30, tr. K. Swaminathan.
60
Talks with Sri Ramana Maharshi, talk no. 122.
24
Sri Bhagavan remarked how true the words were and emphasised each
statement in the extract. Then he cited Thayumanavar in support of the state
which is free from thoughts:61
Two days after Bhagavan had cited Thayumanavar to illustrate Gandhis thought-
free experiences, a visitor returned to the subject:
Devotee: Is not what Gandhi describes the state in which thoughts themselves
become foreign?
Bhagavan: Yes, it is only after the rise of the I-thought that all other
thoughts arise. The world is seen after you have felt I am. The I-thought
and all other thoughts had vanished for him.
Devotee: Then the body sense must be absent in that state.
Bhagavan: The body sense is also a thought whereas he describes the state in
which thoughts do not come.
Devotee: He also says, It takes no effort to stop thinking.
Bhagavan: Of course no effort is necessary to stop thoughts whereas one is
necessary for bringing about thoughts.
Devotee: We are trying to stop thoughts. Gandhiji also says that thought is an
obstacle to Gods guidance. So it is the natural state. Though natural, yet how
difficult to realise. They say that sadhanas are necessary and also that they are
obstacles. We get confused.
Bhagavan: Sadhanas are needed so long as one has not realised it. They are
for putting an end to obstacles. Finally there comes a stage when a person
feels helpless notwithstanding the sadhanas. He is unable to pursue the much-
cherished sadhana also. It is then that Gods power is realised. The Self
reveals itself.
Devotee: If the state is natural, why does it not overcome the unnatural phases
and assert itself over the rest?
61
Talks with Sri Ramana Maharshi, talk no. 646.
62
Udal Poyyuravu, verse 53. The last line may also be translated as You can have bliss. Come!
Bhagavan mentioned two other Thayumanavar verses on this occasion (Udal Poyyuravu, verse 52 and
Payappuli verse 36) but since they feature elsewhere in this article, they are not repeated here.
25
Bhagavan: Is there anything besides that? Does anyone see anything besides
the Self? One is always aware of the Self. So it is always itself.63
63
Talks with Sri Ramana Maharshi, talk no. 647.
26