Devanagari
जातहर्षोऽपतन्मूर्ध्ना क्षितौ लब्धमनोरथ: ।
गीर्भिस्त्वभ्यगृणात्प्रीतिस्वभावात्मा कृताञ्जलि: ॥ १२ ॥
Verse text
jāta-harṣo ’patan mūrdhnā
kṣitau labdha-manorathaḥ
gīrbhis tv abhyagṛṇāt prīti-
svabhāvātmā kṛtāṣjaliḥ
Synonyms
jāta
—
harṣaḥ — naturally jubilant
;
apatat
—
he fell down
;
mūrdhnā
—
with his head
;
kṣitau
—
on the ground
;
labdha
—
having been achieved
;
manaḥ
—
rathaḥ — his desire
;
gīrbhiḥ
—
with prayers
;
tu
—
and
;
abhyagṛṇāt
—
he satisfied
;
prīti
—
svabhāva — ātmā — whose heart is by nature always full of love
;
kṛta
—
aṣjaliḥ — with folded hands .
Translation
When Kardama Muni actually realized the Supreme Personality of Godhead in person, he was greatly satisfied because his transcendental desire was fulfilled. He fell on the ground with his head bowed to offer obeisances unto the lotus feet of the Lord. His heart naturally full of love of God, with folded hands he satisfied the Lord with prayers.
Translation (Visvanatha Cakravarti Thakura)
In the sky, Kardama saw the Lord shining like the pure sun, with a white lotus garland, lotus face surrounded by black locks of hair, wearing spotless cloth, a crown and earrings, holding a conch, cakra, club and white water lily for amusement, with pleasing smile and glance, with Laksmī on his chest and the Kaustubha jewel around his neck, his feet placed on the shoulders of Garuḍa. Joyful on having his desires fulfilled, Kardama, whose had natural love for the Lord, fell down, touching his head to the ground. With folded hands, he offered prayers.
Having described the conch, cakra and club in three hands, he describes the fourth hand holding a white water lily instead of a lotus from amusement. The Lord had a smile and glance pleasing to the beholder (manaḥ sparśa). Kardama had natural love of the Lord (prīti-svabhāvātmā).
Purport
The realization of the personal form of the Lord is the highest perfectional stage of
yoga.
In the Sixth Chapter of
Bhagavad-gītā,
where
yoga
practice is described, this realization of the personal form of the Lord is called the perfection of
yoga.
After practicing the sitting postures and other regulative principles of the system, one finally reaches the stage of
samādhi,
absorption in the Supreme. In the
samādhi
stage one can see the Supreme Personality of Godhead in His partial form as Paramātmā, or as He is.
Samādhi
is described in authoritative
yoga
scriptures, such as the
Pataṣjali-sūtras,
to be a transcendental pleasure. The
yoga
system described in the books of Pataṣjali is authoritative, and the modern so-called
yogīs
who have manufactured their own ways, not consulting the authorities, are simply ludicrous. The Pataṣjali
yoga
system is called
aṣṭāṅga-yoga.
Sometimes impersonalists pollute the Pataṣjali
yoga
system because they are monists. Pataṣjali describes that the soul is transcendentally pleased when he meets the Supersoul and sees Him. If the existence of the Supersoul and the individual is admitted, then the impersonalist theory of monism is nullified. Therefore some impersonalists and void philosophers twist the Pataṣjali system in their own way and pollute the whole
yoga
process.
According to Pataṣjali, when one becomes free from all material desires he attains his real, transcendental situation, and realization of that stage is called spiritual power. In material activities a person engages in the modes of material nature. The aspirations of such people are (1) to be religious, (2) to be economically enriched, (3) to be able to gratify the senses and, at last, (4) to become one with the Supreme. According to the monists, when a
yogī
becomes one with the Supreme and loses his individual existence, he attains the highest stage, called
kaivalya.
But actually, the stage of realization of the Personality of Godhead is
kaivalya.
The oneness of understanding that the Supreme Lord is fully spiritual and that in full spiritual realization one can understand what He is — the Supreme Personality of Godhead — is called
kaivalya,
or, in the language of Pataṣjali, realization of spiritual power. His proposal is that when one is freed from material desires and fixed in spiritual realization of the self and the Superself, that is called
cit-śakti.
In full spiritual realization there is a perception of spiritual happiness, and that happiness is described in
Bhagavad-gītā
as the supreme happiness, which is beyond the material senses. Trance is described to be of two kinds,
samprajṣāta
and
asamprajṣāta,
or mental speculation and self-realization. In
samādhi
or
asamprajṣāta
one can realize, by his spiritual senses, the spiritual form of the Lord. That is the ultimate goal of spiritual realization.
According to Pataṣjali, when one is fixed in constant realization of the supreme form of the Lord, one has attained the perfectional stage, as attained by Kardama Muni. Unless one attains this stage of perfection — beyond the perfection of the preliminaries of the
yoga
system — there is no ultimate realization. There are eight perfections in the
aṣṭāṅga-yoga
system. One who has attained them can become lighter than the lightest and greater than the greatest, and he can achieve whatever he likes. But even achieving such material success in
yoga
is not the perfection or the ultimate goal. The ultimate goal is described here: Kardama Muni saw the Supreme Personality of Godhead in His eternal form. Devotional service begins with the relationship of the individual soul and the Supreme Soul, or Kṛṣṇa and Kṛṣṇa’s devotees, and when one attains it there is no question of falling down. If, through the
yoga
system, one wants to attain the stage of seeing the Supreme Personality of Godhead face to face, but is attracted instead to attainment of some material power, then he is detoured from proceeding further. Material enjoyment, as encouraged by bogus
yogīs,
has nothing to do with the transcendental realization of spiritual happiness. Real devotees of
bhakti-yoga
accept only the material necessities of life absolutely needed to maintain the body and soul together; they refrain completely from all exaggerated material sense gratification. They are prepared to undergo all kinds of tribulation, provided they can make progress in the realization of the Personality of Godhead.