Krishna smiled and gave the excuse
that He had not brought His flute. But seeing Neeraja’s
yearning, He plucked a reed from the vamsi kunj and
broke it right, and in a trice converted it into a flute.
With Neeraja on his lap, Krishna played so melodiously on
the flute that the entire Gokula and even the whole world,
was bathed in ecstatic joy. When He stopped, Neeraja had attained
final beatitude and was no longer a limited individual Gopi
separate from Him.
Krishna laid aside His flute and said He
will not play on it again. That is the story of one Gopi;
the story of every Gopi will be interesting, each
in its own way, for they were all so transmuted by the Bhakti
they bore towards the Lord. The Gopis were declared
by Narada in the Bhakhi Sutras (aphorisms on devotion)
to be the greatest among the Bhaktas (devotees).
Radha is the most well known among the Gopis.
The Radha-thathwam (principle) is a deep, inscrutable
one. She was ever in the contemplation of the Lord and His
Glory. She saw the child Krishna as the Divine manifestation,
separate from the human form.
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