The poem describes a yogi who states they have existed for ages and cannot be destroyed. The yogi sees only community and celebration everywhere. They say they are in all things and all things are in them, yet they are utterly alone. The yogi portrays themselves as both a mystic and speaker, taking on human, divine, and formless forms while being the only one frolicking within themselves. The poem ends with Kabir stating he dances freely within himself with no desires, stirred only by the winds of his own freedom.
The poem describes a yogi who states they have existed for ages and cannot be destroyed. The yogi sees only community and celebration everywhere. They say they are in all things and all things are in them, yet they are utterly alone. The yogi portrays themselves as both a mystic and speaker, taking on human, divine, and formless forms while being the only one frolicking within themselves. The poem ends with Kabir stating he dances freely within himself with no desires, stirred only by the winds of his own freedom.
The poem describes a yogi who states they have existed for ages and cannot be destroyed. The yogi sees only community and celebration everywhere. They say they are in all things and all things are in them, yet they are utterly alone. The yogi portrays themselves as both a mystic and speaker, taking on human, divine, and formless forms while being the only one frolicking within themselves. The poem ends with Kabir stating he dances freely within himself with no desires, stirred only by the winds of his own freedom.