J.O MYa'l'iU EXJr'EKJLEMU.fc-a denial and of knowledge, has not attained such fulness of the Truth as thou hast. I am more than thy father, and thou art more than I, in the attenuation of sense-cravings.' ^Then was Shuka satisfied, and sat, all silent, firmly fixed in the Supreme. Free of sorrow, free of fear» free of laboured effort, free of wish and free of doubt, he went into the solitudes of M^ru later on, for practising" Samadhi, and, being" perfected therein, at the end of myriad years, he entered into the JStman, even as a tiny drop of water merges into the ocean." CHAPTER II The Disciple and the Teacher Turning to the gathered Eshis, Vishvamitra continued : "Thus hath Rama also found the Truth. The proof thereof is this—that he takes joy no more in things of sense. For while the mind revolves and revels in them is it bound. Soon as it turns away from them is it emancipate. And this comes not to pass, this turning back, till after manifold frustration of the search for pleasure. Even as the dawning of- the day is simultaneous with the passing of the night, so is the dawning" of true knowledge simultaneous with the passing of desire. And that which Rama feels within himself already is the Truth, and he requires but confirmation from the lips of some one who has gone before in the same path, to know it so, even as the Sun requires support from Time to rise into the perfect strength and glory of noonday. Let Vasishtha give the con- firmation needed. He is the ancient teacher of the Solar Race of Kings. He sees thelpast, the present, and the future, all as present. Dost thou recall to mind, 0 Sage Vasishtha !, the teaching that the Lotus-Born(1) Himself addressed to thee and (1) Brahma. The land snrfaoe of the earth is like an open lotus