Chaitanya and the Vaishnava Poets
34 pages
English

Chaitanya and the Vaishnava Poets

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The Project Gutenberg EBook of Chaitanya and the Vaishnava Poets of Bengal by John BeamesCopyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the copyright laws for your country before downloadingor redistributing this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook.This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do notchange or edit the header without written permission.Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of thisfile. Included is important information about your specific rights and restrictions in how the file may be used. You can alsofind out about how to make a donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved.**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts****eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971*******These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****Title: Chaitanya and the Vaishnava Poets of BengalAuthor: John BeamesRelease Date: November, 2004 [EBook #6817] [Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] [This file was firstposted on January 27, 2003]Edition: 10Language: EnglishCharacter set encoding: Unicode UTF-8*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAITANYA AND THE VAISHNAVA POETS ***Originally scanned at sacred-texts.com by John B. Hare. This eBook was produced at BharatLiterature by Chetan Jain.CHAITANYA AND THE VAISHNAVA POETS OFBENGALTHE ...

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Publié le 08 décembre 2010
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tThhee  VPariosjhencta vGa utPeonebtse rogf  EBBeonogka l obf y CJhoahitna nByeaa amnedssCuorpey triog chth leacwk st haer ec ocphyarniggihnt gl aawll so fvoerr  ytohuer  wcooruldn.t rByebefore downloading or redistributing this or anyother Project Gutenberg eBook.vTiheiws inhge atdhiesr  Psrhoojeulcdt  bGeu ttehne bfierrsgt  tfihlien. gP lseeaesne  wdho ennotremove it. Do not change or edit the headerwithout written permission.Please read the "legal small print," and otherinformation about the eBook and ProjectGutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included isimportant information about your specific rights andrestrictions in how the file may be used. You canalso find out about how to make a donation toProject Gutenberg, and how to get involved.**Welcome To The World of Free Plain VanillaElectronic Texts****eBooks Readable By Both Humans and ByComputers, Since 1971*******These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousandsof Volunteers!*****Title: Chaitanya and the Vaishnava Poets of Bengal
Author: John Beames[RYeelse,a swee  Darate e:m Noroev tehmabn eor,n 2e 0y0e4a r[ EaBhoeoakd  #o6f817]schedule] [This file was first posted on January 27,]3002Edition: 10Language: EnglishCharacter set encoding: Unicode UTF-8*E**B OSTOAK RCT HOAIFT TAHNEY AP RAONJD ETCHT E GVUATISEHNNBEAVRAGPOETS ***Originally scanned at sacred-texts.com by John B.Hare. This eBook was produced atBharatLiterature by Chetan Jain.CHAITANYA AND THE
VAISHNAVA POETS OFBENGALTHE INDIAN ANTIQUARY,A JOURNAL OF ORIENTAL RESEARCHNILAARNCGHUÆAOGLEOSG, YP, HIHLISOTSOORPYH, YL, ITREELRIAGTIUORN,E,FOLKLORE, &c., &c., &c.EDITED BYJAS. BURGESS, M.R.A.S., F.R.G.S.VOL. II.—1873{[BScoamnbnaeyd,  aEnddu ceadtiitoend  Sboy ciCehtryi'sst oPprehsers ]M. Weimer,May 2002}PCOHEAITTSA ONFY AB EANNGDA TL.HE VAISHNAVA
SFITFUTDEIEENS TIHN  ABNEDN GSIAXLTI EPEONETTHR CY EONFT UTRHIEES.BY JOHN BEAMES, J.C.S., M.R.A.S. &c.THE PADKALPATARU, or 'wish-granting tree ofsong,' may be considered as the scriptures of theVaish.nava sect in Bengal. In form it is a collectionof songs written by various poets in various ages,so arranged as to exhibit a complete series ofpoems on the topics and tenets which constitutethe religious views of the sect. The book has beenput together in recent times, and takes the readerthrough the preliminary consecration, invocationsand introductory ceremonies, the rise and progressof the mutual love of Râdhâ and K.rish.na, andwinds up with the usual closing and valedictoryhymns.Before beginning an analysis of this collection soremarkable from many points of view, it willprobably be of some assistance even to those whohave studied the history of Vaish.navism, if I statebriefly the leading points in the life of Chaitanya,and the principal features of the religion which hedeveloped, rather than actually founded.Bisambhar (Vishvambhara) Mišr was the youngestson of Jagannâth Mišr, a Brahman, native of thedistrict of Sylhet in Eastern Bengal, who hademigrated before the birth of his son to Nadiya(Nabadwîpa), the capital of Bengal. [Footnote: The
facts which here follow are taken from the"Chaitanyacharitâmrita," a metrical life ofChaitanya, the greater part of which was probablywritten by a contemporary of the teacher himself.The style has unfortunately been muchmodernized, but even so, the book is one of theoldest extant works in Bengali. My esteemed friendBabu Jagadishnath Ray has kindly gone throughthe book, a task for which I had not leisure, andmarked some of the salient points for me.] Hismother was Sachi Debi, daughter of NilámbarChakravarti. She bore to Jagannâth eightdaughters who all died young; her first-born child,however, was a son named Biswarúp, whoafterwards under the name of Nityânand becamethe chief disciple of his more famous brother.Bisambhar was born at Nadiya in the evening ofthe Purnima or day of the full moon of Phâlgun1407 Sakábda, corresponding to the latter part ofFebruary or beginning of March A.D. 1486. It isnoted that there was an eclipse of the moon onthat day. By the aid of these indications those whocare to do so can find out the exact day. [Footnote:There was an eclipse of the moon before midnightFeb. 18, O.S. 1486.] The passages in the original:era  Šrî K.rish.na the Visible became incarnate inNabadwip,  For forty-eight years visibly he sported;  The exact (date) of his birth (is) Šaka 1407,  In 1455 he returned to heaven.
And again—  On the full moon of Phâlgun at even was thelord's birth  At that time by divine provision there was aneclipse of the moon.    —Ch. I. xiii. 38.In accordance with the usual Bengali superstitionthat if a man's real name be known he may bebewitched or subject to the influence of the evileye, the real name given at birth is not madeknown at the time, but another name is given bywhich the individual is usually called. No one butthe father and mother and priest know the realname. Bisambhar's usual name in childhood wasNimâi, and by this he was generally known to hisneighbours.In person, if the description of him in theChaitanyacharitâmrita (Bk. I. iii.) is to beconsidered as historical, he was handsome, tall (sixfeet), with long arms, in colour a light brown, withexpressive eyes, a sonorous voice, and very sweetand winning manners. He is frequently called"Gaurang" or "Gaurchandra," i.e., the pale, or thepale moon, in contrast to the Krishna of theBhagvat who is represented as very black.The name Chaitanya literally means 'soul, intellect,'but in the special and technical sense in which theteacher himself adopted it, it appears to mean
perceptible, or appreciable by the senses. He tookthe name Šrî K.rish.na Chaitanya to intimate thathe was himself an incarnation of the god, in otherwords, K.rish.na made visible to the senses ofmankind.The Charitâmrita being composed by one of hisdisciples, is written throughout on this supposition.Chaitanya is always spoken of as an incarnation ofK.rish.na, and his brother Nityânand as a re-appearance of Balarâm. In order to keep up theresemblance to K.rish.na, the Charitâmrita treatsus to a long series of stories about Chaitanya'schildish sports among the young Hindu women ofthe village. They are not worth relating, and areprobably purely fictitious; the Bengalis of to-daymust be very different from what their ancestorswere, if such pranks as are related in theCharitâmrita were quietly permitted to go on.Chaitanya, however, seems to have been eccentriceven as a youth; wonderful stories are told of hispowers of intellect and memory, how, for instance,he defeated in argument the most learned Pandits.A great deal is said about his hallucinations andtrances throughout his life, and we may perhapsconclude that he was more or less insane at alltimes, or rather he was one of those strangeenthusiasts who wield such deep and irresistibleinfluence over the masses by virtue of that verycondition of mind which borders on madness.When he was about eighteen his father died, andhe soon afterwards married Lachhmi Debi,daughter of Balabhadra Achârjya, and entered on
the career of a grihastha or householder, taking inpupils whom he instructed in ordinary secularlearning. He does not appear, however, to havekept to this quiet life for long; he went off on awandering tour all over Eastern Bengal, beggingand singing, and is said to have collected a greatdeal of money and made a considerable name forhimself. On his return he found his first wife haddied in his absence, and he married again oneBishnupriyâ, concerning whom nothing further issaid. Soon after he went to Gayâ to offer the usualpi.n.da to the manes of his ancestors.It was on his return from Gayâ, when he was about23 years of age, that he began seriously to starthis new creed. "It was now," writes BabuJagadishnath, "that he openly condemned theHindu ritualistic system of ceremonies as being abody without a soul, disowned the institution ofcaste as being abhorrent to a loving god all whosecreatures were one in his eyes, preached theefficacy of adoration and love and extolled theexcellence and sanctity of the name, and theuttering and singing of the name of god as infinitelysuperior to barren system without faith." Chaitanya,however, as the Babu points out, was not theoriginator of this theory, but appears to haveborrowed it from his neighbour Adwaita Achârjya,whose custom it was, after performing his dailyritual, to go to the banks of the Ganges and callaloud for the coming of the god who shouldsubstitute love and faith for mere rites andceremonies. This custom is still adhered to byVaish.navas. The Charitâmrita veils the priority of
Adwaita adroitly by stating that it was he who byhis austerities hastened the coming of K.rish.na inthe avatar of Chaitanya.  I praise that revered teacher Adwaita of wonderfulactions,  By whose favour even the ignorant may perceivethe (divinity)    personified.    —Ch. I. vi.Thus in Sanskrit verses at the head of that chapterwhich sings the virtues of Adwaita: by in theBengali portion of the same chapter it is assertedthat Adwaita was himself an incarnation of a part ofthe divinity, e.g.—The teacher Adwaita is a special portion of god.And the author goes on to say that Adwaita wasfirst the teacher then the pupil of Chaitanya. Theprobability is that Adwaita, like the majority of hiscountrymen, was more addicted to meditation thanto action. The idea which in his mind gave rise tonothing more than indefinite longings whentransfused into the earnest fiery nature ofChaitanya, expanded into a faith which moved andled captive the souls of thousands.iHnics abrrnoattihoenr  oNfi tyBâalnaarnâdm ,w aans dn toowo ka shissu pmlaecd et oa sbe an
second-in-command in consequence. The practiceof meeting for worship and to celebrate"Sankîrtans" was now instituted; the meetings tookplace in the house of a disciple Sribâs, and werequite private. The new religionists met with someopposition, and a good deal of mockery. One nighton leaving their rendezvous, they found on thedoor-step red flowers and goats' blood, emblemsof the worship of Durgâ, and abominations in theeyes of a Vaish.nava. These were put there by aBrahman named Gopal. Chaitanya cursed him forhis practical joke, and we are told that he becamea leper in consequence. The opposition was to agreat extent, however, provoked by theVaish.navas, who seem to have been veryeccentric and extravagant in their conduct. Everything that K.rish.na had done Chaitanya must dotoo, thus we read of his dancing on the shouldersof Murari Gupta, one of his adherents; and hisfollowers, like himself, had fits, foamed at themouth, and went off into convulsions, much afterthe fashion of some revivalists of modern times.The young students at the Sanskrit schools inNadiya naturally found all this very amusing, andcracked jokes to their hearts' content on the crazyenthusiasts.In January 1510, Chaitanya suddenly took it intohis head to become a Sanyasi or ascetic, andreceived initiation at the hands of Keshab Bhâratiof Katwa. Some say he did this to gain respect andcredit as a religious preacher, others say it wasdone in consequence of a curse laid on him by aBrahman whom he had offended. Be this as it
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