Govinda

164 19 25
                                    


"God has so arranged life that the world is the soul's husband; Krishna its divine paramour. We owe a debt of service to the world and are bound to it by a law, a compelling opinion, and a common experience of pain and pleasure, but our heart's worship and our free and secret joy are for our Lover." 

[Sri Aurobindo - Bhakti - Thoughts and Aphorisms ]


MEWAR, CIRCA 1720- Inscribed in Nagari, ''Geet Govind ro patra 175

Oops! This image does not follow our content guidelines. To continue publishing, please remove it or upload a different image.

MEWAR, CIRCA 1720- Inscribed in Nagari, ''Geet Govind ro patra 175...", at the top and later inscribed, "Sakal bhuvan jamar tarun ne vahati na sareer jamatikarunen. Krishna awaits Radha in a bower, and sends a message through her sakhi or confidante, who is then shown conversing with the lovelorn Radha. Three metaphoric images represent the cycle of life - a figure in a celestial boat, representing the heavens, a couple conversing, representing the earth and image of the wife of Kaliyamardan, the snake demon, represents the netherworld.

🌺 

Jayadeva, the author of the Gita Govinda, stands to the left in this work, singing his long poem

Oops! This image does not follow our content guidelines. To continue publishing, please remove it or upload a different image.

Jayadeva, the author of the Gita Govinda, stands to the left in this work, singing his long poem. Dressed in the pure white dress of a Pahari singer, he holds a double-gourd stringed instrument called a vina. The verses on the back of the painting tell us:

His musical skill, his meditation on Vishnu,
His vision of reality in the erotic mood,
His graceful play in these poems,
All show that the master-poet Jayadeva's soul is in perfect
tune with Krishna

🌺


''To commit adultery with God is the perfect experience for which the world was created.''

[Sri Aurobindo - Bhakti - Thoughts and Aphorisms ]


Oops! This image does not follow our content guidelines. To continue publishing, please remove it or upload a different image.


🌺

481) The seeker after divine knowledge finds in the description of Krishna stealing the robes of the Gopis one of the deepest parables of God's ways with the soul, the devotee a perfect rendering in divine act of his heart's mystic experiences, the prurient & the Puritan (two faces of one temperament) only a lustful story. Men bring what they have in themselves and see it reflected in the Scripture.

482) My lover took away my robe of sin and I let it fall, rejoicing; then he plucked at my robe of virtue, but I was ashamed and alarmed and prevented him. It was not till he wrested it from me by force that I saw how my soul had been hidden from me.

[Sri Aurobindo - Bhakti - Thoughts and Aphorisms ]

[Sri Aurobindo - Bhakti - Thoughts and Aphorisms ]

Oops! This image does not follow our content guidelines. To continue publishing, please remove it or upload a different image.
✺𝓚rishna✺Where stories live. Discover now