become as voluntary Play to them, Tragedy and Comedy in equal measure, ever balanced, one against the other. "Holding fast this View, the Great Ones, who have gained the lucid mind and seen the Self, roam in the worlds at will. They grieve not, want not, ask not good or ill. Doing all their duties they do nothing. Pure are their •actions, pure their dwelling-places, pure their ways. All violence of struggle, all wrong views, all prejudices, all partialities, cease when the Supreme Self is seen ; and then 'the mind, free of desires, attains the silent, soft, and sweet sereneness of the cloudless midnight moon of autumn. ^But such high mood is not attained without beholding the Atma-'TaUva5, the Essential 'Nature^ (That-ness') of the Self, without understanding deeply, without perceiving, without realising, the Oneness and Non-separateness of all things, in the One-without-Another, without-a-Second, the 'Self which is Naught Else than Self al(l)-one\ "Then let men strive with all their might, through all their life, to see that Atman face to face. "Riches avail not in that search, nor friends, nor kinsfolk. Motion of hands or feet avails not, nor torture of the body, nor travellings, nor holy places. Only by conquering the unrest of the mind, by one-pointed Vichara, helped by Shama anda' Santosha and Sat-sanga, may cognition of the Self be gained, and then, by Yoga, gradually comes the iTiergence in it by attenuation of Upadhis.(1) The former may be gained sitting or standing, moving or resting still, by man or ^od, or Rakshasa or Daitya or Danava, whoever will make Vichara manfully and single-heartedly for it. Indra sought and gained it. Indra's great rivals, Prahlada and his grandson Ball, both mighty monarchs of the Daitya race, did also gain (1) Sheaths, envelopes, garments, tenements, vehiolas of the aonh