It is well known that R~mak.r.s.na, a nineteenth-century Bengali saint (1836-86), was enamored of his disciple Narendranath Datta (later Svfimi Vivek~nanda, 1863-1902, organizer of the international Vedanta movement, from the first that the saint of Dakshineshwar heard the young man sing devotional songs. R~rnak.r.s.na became upset when Vivek~nanda did not visit him for a period of time, and the Master would ask about his student's whereabouts and welfare. During this early period, Vivekfinanda was uncomfortable with the attention given to him by the saint, but he kept returning to visit the Master. Vivek~nanda told his brother-disciple and R~xnak.r.s.na's biographer Svfimi S~rad~nanda that after he had finished singing one evening the Master took him to a veranda covered by mat screens. After entering the veranda and closing the door, the two men were isolated and hidden from the view of others. Expecting some kind of private instruction, Vivek~nanda was surprised when Ramak.r.s.na took hold of his hand, began to cry profusely tears of joy, and told him how he had been waiting for the young man for such a long time. R~aakrs.n. a, continuing to weep and rave, stood before Vivek~nanda with folded hands in a respectful attitude, and he told the latter that he was an incarnation of the ancient r.si Nara, an aspect of Narayan. a (Vi.sn. u) himself, who had descended to earth in order to remove the misery and suffering of humankind. Vivek~nanda's response to the behavior and message of R~'nak.rs.n. a was utter perplexity, and he related that he thought that the Master was completely insane. This strange encounter for Vivek~nanda concluded with R~mak.r.s.na feeding him sweets, and the former promising to return alone to the madman soon (S~rad~nanda 1978-79, 2: 825). A month passed after this embarrassing incident for Narendra, and then he returned once more to visit R~mak.r.sn. a at Dakshineshwar on December 27 and 28, 1881. While sitting on R~mak.r.sn. a's small bed to which he had been asked to rest, the Master