THERE are sixty-four verses or Mantras in this Upanisad, divided into three chapters each comprising of two Sections or Khandas. The whole book as well as each chapter is called Mundaka, a word etymologically denoting a shaving razor and a person "with a shaven head, namely, a Sannyasin or a monk.
The true spiritual aspirant to cultivate knowledge, dispassion, austerity, concentration, faith and love of solitude, for the attainment of the Immortal and the Imperishable.
Purusa, the Supreme Being, is all the universe, karma, tapas and immortality by realizing whom in one's heart one'breaks the shackles of ignorance.
The Supreme- Being is here again described as the illuminator of the cosmic luminaries, and as the blissful, immortal, omnipresent, Brahman who encompasses all, above, below and around, and reigns with all splendour in the heart of man.
Chapter One: Section One
1.
Brahma, the creator and protector of this universe, arose first, before all the gods. To his eldest son, Atharvan, he imparted the science of the Spirit, the basis of all sciences.
2.
What Brahma imparted to Atharvan, even that science of the Spirit, Atharvan imparted to Angiras in olden days. And Angiras passed it on to Bharadvaja Satyavaha, and he in turn to Angiras. Thus the science descended from the greatest sages to lesser ones.
3.
S'aunaka, that famous householder, once approached Angiras in the manner laid down by the scriptures, and questioned, "Sir, what is that, knowing which everything in the world becomes known ?
4.
To him Angiras replied: There are two kinds of knowledge to be acquired, as indeed the knowers of the Vedas have said one a lower and the other a higher.
5.
Of these, the lower(1) consists of the study of Rig-veda, Yajur-veda, Sama-veda, Atharvaveda, phonetics, the code of rituals, grammar, etymology, metrics and astronomy. Now the higher Knowledge is that by which the Imperishable is attained.
[NOTES 1. The lower etc. This enumeration does not, of course, exhaust the field of lower knowledge. It includes everything that is not directly connected with the attainment of Self-realization.]
6.
What is invisible, ungraspable, unoriginated and attributeless; what has neither eyes, nor ears nor hands, nor feet; what is eternal, all-pervading, immeasurably subtle and limitless in manifestation; that Imperishable Being is what the wise perceive as the source of all creation.
7.
As the spider emits and withdraws the web, as herbs sprout on the earth, as hair grows on the head and body of man without any effort, so from the Imperishable Being the universe springs out.
[NOTES Here three similes are given to illustrate the spontaneity of creation from the imperishable substance, Brahman. As a spider spins the cobweb out of its own abdomen and again draws it into itself with perfect ease, so also this universe originates from Brahman and again dissolves into It, spontaneously. This illustration might suggest to some that Brahman has some purpose and some effort, the least though it be, in creating the universe, even as the spider has; so by the second illustration that doubt is removed. As plants grow on the earth quite naturally, without the least purpose or effort on the part of the earth, even so, does creation come out of Brahman, without any purpose or effort on Its part. Then, is Brahman an unconscious, inert substance like the earth? No, says the text. Just as in the case of man, a conscious being, hair grows on his body without any effort and without taxing his body in any way, so from Brahman, which is Intelligence itself, the inert universe emanates. The first simile suggests that Brahman is the ground of the origination and dissolution of the universe. The second asserts that even after creation the universe rests in Brahman alone, being totally dependent on It. The third simile states further that creation is a purposeless, effortless, extraneous projection of a certain Power of Brahman, which does not constitute Its real essence which is Intelligence. It should be noted here how the Upanisad by the three similes indirectly asserts that the creation is not a parinama or real transformation of Brahman in the pantheistic sense, but only a projection of Its inscrutable Power. In this sense Brahman is both the efficient and the material cause of the universe.]
8.
From brooding(1) thought Brahman swells (with the joy of creation). Thence Food(2) is born and from it Energy(3), mind, the True(4), the worlds, and endless(5) entanglement in works.
[NOTES 1. Brooding thought The word in the original is'tapas'. It is generally translated as austerity. It implies both heat and thought, and Max Miiller translates it therefore as'brooding'. This tapas of Brahman, as will be stated in the next verse, is Knowledge of the whole of creation in the ideal form before it oncretizes. 2. Food The original word 'annam' means 'that which is eaten or enjoyed'. Philosophically it means the object, which may be described as that which the Subject or the Spirit enjoys. Often it stands in the scheme of creation for Matter. Here we cannot take it as Matter in the gross sense, as prana or Energy is said to come out of it. So we must take it to mean 'the pure sense of objectivity', which must be regarded as the first step in the process of the non-dual Brahman manifesting as creation. The creative will is the stress on the 'I', the subject, and this stress is simultaneously accompanied with the sense of the'this', the source of objectivity. In the cosmological scheme, this pure sense of objectivity is sometimes described as the'avyakrta'or the Undifferentiated, and in other Upanisads as the prana. The gross Matter too is referred to by the terms 'annam' and 'rayi'. 3. Energy The original word is prana' which has a wide range of meaning in Vedantic literature, from vital breath to Hiranyagarbha or Brahma described as the first shoot of creation. Here the word is used in the sense of Hiranyagarbha, literally the Golden Egg, who is the intelligent power that diversifies creation. He is God the Creator of the Hindu Trinity. 4. The True Here the five Great Elements, of which the worlds are constituted. 5. Endless entanglement in works This refers to samsara, consisting of karmas (deeds) and the enjoyment of their fruits in an endless chain, until Knowledge, and through it emancipation, are gained. It should be remembered that the whole of the description here and elsewhere in the Upanisads, of the creative process, refers to Saguna-brahman, the Deity with attributes. It does not affect the vivarta or illusory transformation of the Supreme as the impersonal and attributeless. As soon as the question is raised as to the relation between the Supreme Brahman and creation, the doctrine of maya will explain the latter, with all its might and mystery, as only an apparent manifestation of the Supreme.]
9.
Brahma(1) the Creator, individual beings, and nourishment for creatures these spring from Him, the all-wise and omniscient, whose(2) creative thought is Knowledge itself.
[NOTES 1. Brahma The same Hiranyagarbha referred to as prana (energy) in the previous verse. 2. Whose creative thought is knowledge itself The idea is that the creative will of the Absolute is unlike the creative will of limited beings. Limited beings are affected or modified by creative will, whether it be in the sense of procreation or of making anything new. But with regard to Brahman this transformation of the self does not take place. For in Its case every assertion of the 'this', the object, is illuminated with Knowledge, i.e. the awareness of Its own unaffectedness, as a desert is not affected by the appearance of mirage in it. The idea is the same as the 'prati-bodhaviditammatam' who knows Him in and through every modification of thought) of the Kenopanisad. Hence Knowledge accompanying creative thought signifies unaffectedness.]
Chapter One: Section Two
1.
Whatever ritualistic works the sages have found in the sacred hymns (Mantras), they are true(1). These are treated elaborately in the three Vedas. Ye lovers(2) of the true, perform them constantly; for they are to you the path to the worlds of meritorious deeds.
[NOTES The object of praising ritualistic works here is this: It is only by their performance to some extent that men will gain experience of the ephemerality of worldly as well as of heavenly enjoyments, as will be described in the next chapter. And without a sense of their ephemerality, the higher doctrines of renunciation and knowledge cannot have any hold upon men. 1. True In the sense that the results promised are true. 2. Lovers of the true 'The true' here also refers to the fruits of sacrifices. Hence, those who love the fruits of ritualistic works.]
2.
When the sacrificial fire has been wellkindled and the flames begin to move, let oblations be offered with faith, between(1) the two portions of the fire (where melted butter is to be poured).
[NOTES Flame is considered to be the tongue of fire,.and hence all oblations are considered to be offered into the very mouth of Agni (god of fire) as it were. No oblation should be poured when the fire is smouldering. Here reference is made to the agnihotra which is the first of all sacrifices. 1. Between the two etc. In the dars'a and paurnamasa sacrifices connected with the agnihotra, two oblations are offered in the ahavaniya fire in the northern and southern portions of it, with the invocations 'agnaye svaha' and 'somaya svaha'. These portions are called ajyabhaga, while the middle portion where the whole remaining oblations are offered is called avapasthana.]
3.
If one's agnihotra sacrifice is not accompanied by the rites to be performed at the new moon, the full moon, the four months of autumn, and the harvest time; if it is without guests, without offerings consisting of oblations to Vis'vedevas and the feeding of animals and birds; if it is contrary to injunction, then it ruins(1) one's future in the seven worlds.
[NOTES 1. Ruins one's future etc. By such irregular performance of the agnihotra, he cannot attain any of the seven worlds, viz., Bhur, Bhuvar, Svar, Mahar, Jana, Tapas and Satya.]
4.
The Black, the Fierce, the Mind-swift, the Deep-red, the Smoke-coloured, the Scintillating, the bright All-shining, these are the seven moving tongues of fire.
5.
He who offers oblations in proper time into these shining flames, him the oblations, as sun rays, lead to the place where the one lord of the gods (Indra) resides.
6.
"Welcome! Welcome!" say these bright offerings, and carry the sacrificer along the sun's rays, addressing to him the pleasant words of praise, This is the world of Brahma gained by your good works!"
7.
Verily, they are frail rafts these sacrifices with their eighteen members, on which such inferior work (devoid of knowledge) rests. The fools who acclaim this as the highest good, certainly fall again and again into the domain of old age and death.
[NOTES In the beginning, the Upanisad praised ritualistic works in so far as they are useful for securing heavenly enjoyments, and also in so far as they are useful for the dawn of disgust for themselves. Now it points out their utter futility in the attainment of liberation. 1. Eighteen members The sixteen priets, and the sacrificer and his wife, all of whom are necessary for the performance of a sacrifice.]
8.
Steeped in ignorance, yet thinking themselves wise and learned, fools wander about suffering again and again, like the blind led by the blind.
9.
Engrossed in the ways of the ignorant, these people childishly think that they have gained the end of life. But being subject to passions and attachment, they never attain Knowledge, and therefore they sink(1) down wretched, when the fruits of their good deeds are exhausted.
[NOTES 1. Sink down The idea is that Knowledge or spiritual enlightenment alone can give the imperishable state of freedom, and this Knowledge does not arise until man is rid of attachments and passions which are born of desires. The heavenly regions last only as long as one is entitled to them by the merits of one's deeds, and when these are exhausted, one is reborn on earth.]
10
These deluded men fancy sacrifices and charitable(1) works to be the highest, and know naught better. Having reaped the fruits of their virtuous deeds in the highest heavensr the seats of sensual enjoyments, they fall into their old human life or into what is lower still.
[NOTES 1. Charitable works Istapurta in the text is a combination of two words, ista and purta. According to the traditional code ista includes agnihotra (the firekindling ceremony) incumbent upon a Brahmin householder, austerity, truthfulness, learning and teaching of the Vedas, hospitality, and the ceremony called vais'vadeva which consists among its items the feeding of animals and birds. Purta consists of sinking of wells, constructing of water tanks and temples, laying out of gardens, supply of food to the needy and other similar items of unselfish work.]
11.
Verily, those(1) who live in forest (solitude), leading a life of austerity and devout worship peaceful, wise and keeping the mendicant's(2) rule these stainless men go by the solar(3) gate to where(4) that immortal Being dwells.
[NOTES 1. Those etc. These include men of all the four orders of life who devote themselves exclusively to the practice of austerity and devotion. 2. Mendicant's rule Externally it consists in having no possessions and hence living on alms; its essence, however, consists in being truly poor in spirit. 3. Solar gate The path leading to gradual liberation (krama-mukti), described as deva-yana or'the path of the gods'. 4. Where that immortal Being dwells This is in contradistinction to the highest heavens attainable by charity and sacrifices. The region referred to is satyaloka or the world of Brahma. It is the world attained by those who are on the path of krama-mukti, after they pass away from the earth. Krama-mukti or gradual emancipation is attained by those who are devoted to the Personal God and pass away without gaining Knowledge. In satyaloka they attain Knowledge in course of time and are finally liberated at the end of the cycle. In contrast to this is jlvan-mukti or liberation in this very life, attained by those who gain Knowledge in the embodied state itself. There is no going to this place or that for them; for they have become the All.]
12.
Having scrutinised the worlds gained by deeds, a man of spiritual inclination should become indifferent to them; for deeds, which are originated, cannot win the Supreme, who is unoriginated. Therefore to know That, let him become a pupil under a preceptor who is both learned in the scripture and established in the Spirit.
13.
To such a seeker, whose mind(1) is tranquil and senses are controlled, and who approaches him in proper form, let the wise teacher impart the science of Brahman in its very essence the science by which one knows the true, imperishable Being.
[NOTES 1. Mind is tranquil etc. Tranquillity ot mind and control of senses are the qualifications of a true seeker after God. Without these the study or hearing of the truths of Vedanta will have no effect on one's mind.]
Chapter Two: Section One
1.
This is the truth: As from a blazing fire thousands of sparks, similar to it in nature, issue forth, so, O my young friend, manifold beings are produced from the Imperishable, and they verily go back to It again.
2.
Self-resplendent, formless, unoriginated and pure, that all-pervading Being is both within and without. Anterior both to life and mind, He transcends even the unmanifested causal state of the universe.
3.
From Him are born life, mind, senses, ether, air, fire, water, and earth that supports all.
4.
Verily, He is the indwelling Spirit within all. Fire is His head; the sun and moon, His eyes; the quarters, His ears; the revelation (the Vedas), His voice; the wind, His breath; the universe, His heart. And from His feet the earth has originated.
5.
From Him comes the heaven world, which is the first Fire, having the sun for its fuel; from the moon in the heaven world, the rainclo-uds (the second Fire); from the clouds, the herbs on earth (the third Fire). (And from the herbs eaten), man (the fourth Fire) casts the seed in woman (the fifth Fire). In this manner many beings are born of Purusa,the all-pervading Being.
[NOTES. Here is described the gradual process of the origin of all beings from the one Purusa. The argument is simple: From the Purusa has originated the dyuloka or heaven, and from the moon in the dyuloka, clouds; rains falling on earth from the clouds, produce plants and herbs; men live on these plants and herbs, and secrete semen; the semen, again, having fallen into the womb of a female, produces living beings. Thus Purusa is the final cause of the origin of beings. This subject is called pancagnividya, or science of five Fires, and is elaborately treated in the Chandogya, V, 3-1.]
6.
From Him are the Vedic verses, the sacred chants, the sacrificial formulas, preliminary rites, sacrifices, ceremonies, sacrificial gifts, the time of the sacrifice, the sacrificer, and the worlds purified by the sun and the moon, (which come to one as the fruits of sacrifice).
7.
From Him, the gods of various orders, the celestials, men, beasts, birds, in-breath, outbreath, paddy, barley, austerity, faith, truth, continence and the Law.
8.
From Him, too, the seven(1) senses in the head, their powers of cognition, their objects and their knowledge, as also the seven seats(2) of sense life traversed by the life-forces centred in the hearts of all creatures.
[NOTES 1. Seven senses The senses meant are the two eyes, the two ears, the two nostrils and the mouth. 2. Seats of sense life These are the nerve centres or the inner principles of the senses, without which the external senses cannot in themselves function.]
9.
From Him, all the oceans and mountains; from Him, the rivers of every description; from Him, too, all herbs and saps by which the subtle(1) body exists encircled by the gross elements of matter.
[NOTES 1. Subtle body exists etc. The idea seems to be that the physical body which ensheathes the subtle body is originated and sustained by food derived from herbs and saps.]
10.
Verily, that Omnipresent Being is all this sacrificial works, Knowledge and all the rest. O handsome youth, he who knows this supreme, Immortal Being as seated in the cavity of the heart, rends asunder the knot of ignorance even here in this life.
Chapter Two: Section Two
1.
This Brahman is the great support manifesting through all experiences, existing(1) very close, and moving in the cavity of the heart. All that move and breathe and wink are established in It. Know It the cause of both the gross and the subtle, the adorable of all, the highest of beings, the one above(2) the understanding of creatures.
[NoTES 1. Existing very close Being our innermost Self, there is nothing closer to us than Brahman. 2. Above the understanding of creatures This expression may appear to contradict the first part of "the sentence 'Know It'. The contradiction is solved when it is understood that the Knowledge of Brahman is not an intellectual knowledge, nor the knowledge of an object, but the intuition of the Seer above all seeing. It is not knowing a thing, but being and becoming That.]
2.
Luminous, subtler than even atoms, that imperishable Brahman is the abode of the world and all its inhabitants. He is life, speech, mind, reality, immortality. That is the mark which should be penetrated by the mind. Penetrate It, O my friend.
3.
Taking as bow the mighty weapon furnished by the Upanisads, fix on it the arrow rendered sharp by onstant meditation. And having(1) drawn it with the mind absorbed in His thought, penetrate that mark the imperishable Brahman.
[NOTES What the bow, arrow, etc., of the analogy are, is explained in the next verse. 1. Having drawn it This refers to the withdrawing of the senses from external contact.]
4.
Om the mystic syllable is(1) the bow; the self(2) within, the arrow; and Brahman, the target(3). One should hit that mark with an undistracted(4) mind, and like the arrow, become one with It.
[NOTES 1. Is the bow 'Om' is said to be the bow because as the bow helps the arrow to dart at the target, the repetition of 'Om' helps the Atman to get fixed in Brahman.2. Self within The Jivatman or individual self who is in essence identical with Brahman, but appears to be limited by the physical and mental adjuncts. 3. Target Brahman being non-different from the Atman, the target for the individual self becomes its own essence. For those who are worshippers of Personal God, the difference between the self and the object of worship, however, holds good. Even then in the higher stages of meditation, the mind gets so absorbed in the object of meditation that it loses its identity in it. 4. Undistracted By worldly thoughts and attachments.]
5.
He in whom the heaven, the earth and the interspace are centred, together with the mind and all life-breaths (pranas), know Him alone as the one Self of all, and desist from all other talk. This is man's bridge to the shore of Immortality (across the ocean of life).
6.
Where all the arteries meet like the spokes of a chariot-wheel in the hub, there within(1) the heart He moves, becoming(2) manifold. Meditate(3) on that Self as Om. Godspeed to you in crossing to the farther shore beyond darkness.
[NOTES Within the heart The ancient Indian thinkers believed that the vital, mental, intellectual and spiritual faculties of man are all in a special sense centred in the heart, the most important of all physical organs. Here the heart is described as the centre where one should meditate on this Atman, that being the special centre of Its manifestation. For a fuller account of the concept of 'heart' in the Upanisads, see Notes on S'vetas'vataropanisad, IV, 17 in this Series. 2. Becoming manifold This refers to the apparent modifications that the Atman undergoes in the ignorant state, when swayed by anger, joy, etc. 3. Meditate etc. Om is the sound symbol of Brahman in the Upanisads. Its significance is specially discussed in the Mandukyopanisad. The mention here of the locus and symbol of the Atman is to facilitate meditation for the beginner.]
7.
He is all-wise and all-knowing, and His is verily this glory(1) (manifest on earth). In the sky of the heart the luminous(2) city of Brahman He is established, clothed(3) in mind and guiding life and body. With his seat in the heart, He lives in the whole(4) body of man. By perfect knowledge of Him the wise realize the state of blissful Immortality.
[NOTES 1. Glory (manifest on earth) Glory in the form of Law, Beauty, and Power or Energy. In fact this universe itself is the expression of His glory or power. 2. Luminous city of Brahman The 'lotus' of the heart is usually called 'brahmapuram' or the city of Brahman. It is called luminous, because there Brahman is meditated upon by the devotees as a smokeless brilliant light. 3. Clothed in mind etc. 'Manomaya', the word in the original, literally means 'of the form of mind'. The Atman is called so because in the embodied state It is conditioned by the mind. By this conditioning alone It is spoken of as guiding body and life. Mind is the medium through which It works on these. 4. Whole body of man The word in the original for body is 'anna' or 'food'; for body is derived from food. Though the Atman is seated in the heart, It may be described as living in the whole body, as Its presence is felt all over the body in the form of life and perception.]
8.
When a person realizes Him in both the(1) high and the low, the knots(2) of his heart are loosened, his doubts(3) dispelled, and his karmas(4) exhausted.
[NOTES 1. The high and the low It may mean either 'in both cause and effect', or 'in what is ordinarily considered from the worldly point of view as good and bad, superior and inferior'. 2. Knots of the heart The group of desires and tendencies that clings to one's buddhi (intelligence or higher mind) due to ignorance. They are called knots, probably because it is they that attach the encumbrance of body and mind, the resultant of animal evolution, to the Atman. It is these knots that constitute the basis of ignorance, and when they are cut, ignorance is dispelled and the Atman freed from its encumbrance. 3. Doubts dispelled Every man is in doubt regarding the ultimate nature of things. This is due to ignorance, and hence doubt is dispelled only with the disappearance of ignorance, which takes place on the 'knots of the heart being cut'. 4. The effects of karma There are three kinds of karma, or effects of action, viz., prarabdha, sancita and agamin: prarabdha is the name for the effects, of one's previous works, which have already begun to germinate and bear fruit in this life. Sancita is what is stored up for the next life. And all that are to come to fruition in future lives are classed under Agamin. When the Atman is realized, only the sancita and agamin are destroyed. But prarabdha still remains. It exhausts itself only by actual enjoyments and sufferings in the present life of the realized man. By virtue of this prarabdha, his body continues to exist even after the attainment of jnana, and falls only when the prarabdha is worked out. So here, by karma (i.e. effects of karma), the Upanisad means only the second two kinds of karma.]
9.
In the luminous sheath (of intelligence), the deepest core of man, dwells Brahman stainless, indivisible, pure. He is the light of all that shines. That is what the knowers of the Self realize.
10.
There the sun does not shine, nor the moon and the stars; these lightnings too do not shine much less this earthly fire ! Verily,. everything shines, reflecting His glory. This whole world is illumined with His light.
[NOTES This need not be taken as applying only to objects luminous in a physical sense. It is applicable to the whole process of knowing. Anything becomes an object of our knowledge, because the light of the Atman reveals it. Without the Atman there can be no process of knowing in any sense.]
11.
Verily, all this is the immortal Brahman ! He is everywhere above, below, in front, at the back, upon the right, upon the left ! All this world is indeed the supreme Brahman !
Chapter Three: Section One
1.
Two(1) birds, bound(2) one to another in close friendship, perch on(3) the self-same tree. One(4) of them eats the fruits of the tree with relish, while the other looks on without eating.
[NOTES 1. Two birds These are the Jlvatman (individual soul) and the Paramatman (God). The Jlvatman, according to Advaita philosophy, is Pure Consciousness limited by 'ignorance', and therefore bound by body, mind, attachment and action. God on the other hand is Pure Consciousness conditioned by maya or Cosmic Power, but being devoid of ignorance, is free, intelligent, eternal and omniscient. Some take the one bird to mean mind, as it is the real factor in action and enjoyment in every being. The other bird is, of course, that Pure Consciousness Itself which is absolutely untainted by the passing phases of life in the forms of enjoyment etc. 2. Bound one to another in close friendship The Jlvatman is nothing but the image of the Paramatman seen through the medium of the mind. Hence both are described as inseparable, even as is the sun's image from the sun. 3. On the self-same tree i.e. the body. 4. One of them etc. The Jlva, owing to its identification with the body and the mind, feels itself to be the agent of all work, and enjoys the fruits thereof, although it is the mind that really works and enjoys. Even if the Jlva be taken as a separate entity as the Dvaitins and the Vis'istadvaitins believe it to be, still it can never be considered as the real agent or enjoyer of actions or fruits thereof. Because agentship and enjoyment mean modification and change, and it is accepted on all hands that change is only possible with matter and not with Spirit or Pure Consciousness. The Jiva, being Spirit, cannot undergo any change.Hence the truth is that the enjoyment and the agentship of Atman as Jlva, are super-imposed on it by the mind, through false mutual superimposition (anyonya'dhyasa). The real Self, Atman, remains always untainted by such modifications of the mind and simply witnesses them. See also the Notes on S'vet., IV, 6, in this Series.]
2.
Seated on the self-same tree, one of them the personal self sunken in ignorance and deluded, grieves for his impotence. But when he sees(1) the Other the Lord, the Worshipful as also His glory, he becomes free from dejection.
[NOTES 1. Sees the Other etc. When the individual comes to realize the transcendental reality of his own Self, which is the Lord of all beings untouched by the passing phenomenon of life, even as the sun is not really tarnished by the dust and dirt of the materials on which it reflects, then his dream of suffering and enjoyment disappears, and he attains to the unbroken, eternal bliss of his own Self. See also the Notes on SVet,, IV, 7, in this Series.]
3.
When the seer realizes the self-effulgent Being ruler, maker and source of the creator even then that wise one, shaking(1) off merits and demerits, becomes stainless, and attains(2) supreme Unity.
[NOTES 1. Shaking off etc. When the Knowledge of the real Self is attained, one comes to realize that sin, virtue, etc. are things of the mind and the body, and that they do not belong to the Spirit. 2. Attains supreme Unity The vision of all duality melts away for the seer, and he comes to realize his very Self as the Supreme Soul, whom he was hitherto worshipping as the Universal Lord.]
4.
Verily, He who is prana(1), pervades all this. Knowing(2) this, one becomes truly wise, never a vain babbler. Sporting in the Self, delighting in the Self, performing pious works, he takes the first rank among the knowers of Brahman.
[NOTES 1. Prana Here it is used as an equivalent of Is'vara or Supreme Being. 2. Knowing this etc. The idea is that the realization of Brahman as the one life of all beings, is alone true wisdom. Compared to this wisdom, what we consider wise discourses on worldly topics, is only vain babbling.]
5.
The Self is attained through veracity, concentration,(1) wisdom (2) and continence, all constantly cultivated. When impurities dwindle (thus), the ascetics behold Him stainless, resplendent within the very body.
[NOTES 1. Concentration'Tapas'is the word in the original, and it is usually translated as austerity, The most difficult form of austerity is to withdraw the senses and the mind from their natural objects and concentrate them on the Self. This is the real austerity involved in spiritual life, and hence the word is here translated as concentration. 2. Wisdom The insight and discrimination needed for keeping unswervingly to the spiritual path.]
6.
Only the truthful win, not the untruthful. By truth is laid out the'divine path',(1) along which the sages, free from desires, ascend to the supreme abode of the True.
[NOTES 1. 'Divine path' The original word for this, 'deva-yana', may be given the general sense of a'life of spiritual striving', of which truth is the most important discipline. Technically, however, deva-yana or the 'path of the gods' is the special path by which those who are entitled to gradual liberation or krama-mukti go after death, and it stands in contrast to pitr-yana or'the path of the manes'by which those meritorious souls who will again be re-born on earth, go after death. For details regarding the paths and the two forms of Mukti, see Notes on Is'avasya, verse 18, in this Series.]
7.
Vast, divine, beyond(1) all imagination, shines the truth of Brahman. It is subtler than the subtlest, farther than the farthest. It is here within(2) the body, and the sages realize It verily in this life as fixed in the heart.
[NOTES 1. Beyond all imagination The concept of truth always stands distinguished from mere imaginations. 2. Within the body etc. This shows the contrast between Brahman when It is searched for within, and when It is looked for as something outside. When one looks for Him outside, one looks upon Him as the cause of the world, and naturally one thinks of Him in terms of vastness, inaccessibility, etc. But He is also very close to every embodied being as the life of his life, and he is the sage who finds this out, looking within, in place of indulging in any vain external quest.]
8.
The Self cannot be described by words, nor perceived by the eyes and the senses, nor revealed by rituals and penances. When the understanding(1) becomes calm and refined, one's whole being is purified, and then, engaged in meditation, one realizes Him, the Absolute.
[NOTES 1. Understanding becomes calm and refined The original word for it is jnana-prasada. By jnana is here meant the buddhi, the understanding or higher mind, which is at once the light of the Atman and the faculty that reveals the Atman. This understanding is in everyone, but being directed towards the objects of the world, it is at present revealing only these objects to us, and has besides been contaminated by their contact. This contamination consists in its sensuality and restlessness. The removal of these acquired traits of the understanding is what is called jnana-prasada here,]
9.
By(1) means of thought one should know the subtle truth of the Atman within the body, which is permeated by life-force in a fivefold way. Man's thought is interwoven with the
senses. When that(2) (thought) is purified, the Self shines forth.
[NOTES 1. By means of thought The word in the original is'cetasa'. It is identical in import with jnana of the previous verse, and means the buddhi the higher mind or purified understanding by which the Atman is intuited. In this and the previous verse we get some suggestions on the nature of the intuitive faculty by which the Atman is realized. 2. That (thought) is purified Purification consists in withdrawing the buddhi from the senses with which it is interwoven in the natural man.]
10.
Whatever sphere the man of purified nature desires, whatever object he fixes his heart upon, he obtains those worlds and those objects. Therefore he who is desirous of' prosperity should pay honour to the man of Self-realization.
Chapter Three: Section Two
1.
The man of Self-realization knows the Supreme Brahman on whom this world is based, and who shines radiantly. And those wise men who are devoted to such a person, without(1) any worldly desire, go beyond all chances of rebirth.
[NOTES 1. Without any worldly desire This is in contrast to the type referred to in the previous verse, who adore the man of realization for attaining worldly prosperity. The worship of these great ones without any worldly desire leads to emancipation.]
2.
Whoever longs for objects of desire, brooding over them, they are born here and there for the satisfaction of those desires. But in the case of a sage whose longings have found consummation in the Atman and whose soul has been perfected, desires(1) vanish away even here in this life.
[NOTES 1. Desires vanish etc. That is, he has no further birth.]
3.
The Self is not attained through discourses, nor through intellectuality, nor through much learning. It is gained only by him who longs for It with the whole heart. For to such a one the Self(1) reveals Its own nature.
[NOTES 1. Self reveals Its own nature The Self is always the true nature of one's innermost being; it has not to be brought from anywhere else. Ignorance only veils it. True longing of the heart dispels that ignorance, and then the Self, which was always there, reveals Itself. The passage, interpreted from the purely religious point of view, has been made a sanction for the doctrine of grace. In this sense it may be translated thus: " The Deity is not attained through discourses, nor through intellectuality, nor through much learning. He is attained only by one whom He chooses: to such a one He reveals His own person." See also Katha, II, 23, in this Series.]
4.
The Self is not gained by men(1) of weak spirit, nor by the careless, nor by those practising improper(2) austerities. But wise men who strive with vigour, attention and propriety, attain union with Brahman.
[NOTES 1. Men of weak spirit The original word 'balahlna'may indicate also a physically weak man. While a fair degree of physical strength is absolutely necessary for success in spiritual life, what is still more needed is an abundance of faith, self-confidence and inner toughness that keeps one uncowed by failure and obstacles.2. Improper austerities The literal meaning of the expression in the original is'by tapas devoid of proper insignia (linga)'. According to S'ankara, tapas here means not mere austerity, but the disciplines of inner cogitation and concentration leading to the Knowledge of Atman. He also holds that the linga or insignia referred to is due entry into sannyasa or the fourth order of life. Spiritual discipline without the proper external garb does not lead to the highest result so he thinks. In justification of this view it may be said that the association of hoary sacred traditions with the life of sannyasa, and the checks that the garb imposes on conduct, both consciously and unconsciously, are all factors that safeguard an aspirant from going off the track. The expression may also mean 'false notions of austerity' or 'flesh-torturing ascetic practices' which are condemned in the Bhagavad-gita.]
5.
The sages who have attained the Self find satisfaction in wisdom (and long for nothing else); they are perfected in soul, non-attached and tranquil. Having realized the all-pervading Spirit everywhere, those wise and devout ones enter into the All.
6.
Those aspirants whose natures have been purified by a life of striving and renunciation, and who are well-established in the Self that forms the sole quest of all Vedantic tudies, they attain immortality in Brahman at(1) the time of illumination; they are absolved(2) on all sides.
[NoTES 1. At the time of illumination This is the -meaning of the word 'paranta-kale', according to S'ankara. Its literal meaning is'at the time of death'or'at the end of time'. S'ankara justifies his interpretation on the ground that just as death is the end of the body for the ignorant man, so is the moment of illumination for the knowing one; for he understands thenceforth that he is not the body, and he is therefore dead to the body. This interpretation gives us the extreme Advaitic view which denies even prarabdha-karma in a jivan-mukta. If we substitute 'at the time of death', we get the idea of prarabdha-karma which ends only with the death of the body. If we have 'at the end of time', we get the conception of krama-mukti; for one who is entitled to krama-mukti attains complete union with Brahman only at the end of the Cycle. This last meaning is not appropriate here, as it is a clear reference to a knowing one. 2. Absolved on all sides Has no more bondage here or hereafter: he is not re-born also.]
7.
Their fifteen!(1) phases resolve into their sources; their senses, into the corresponding deities; and their deeds and personality, into the supreme, imperishable Being.
[NOTES 1. Fifteen phases Prana etc.]
8.
As rivers, flowing, disappear in the ocean losing name and form, so the wise man, free from name and form, goes unto the highest of the high the Supreme Divinity.
9.
Whoever knows the supreme Brahman, becomes very Brahman. In his family none ignorant of Brahman is born. The knots(1) of his heart being unloosed, he goes beyond sorrow and sin, and attains immortality.
[NOTES 1. Knots of his heart being unloosed Knots of the heart'is a phrase that occurs frequently in the Upanisads, and stand for ignorance, desire, passion, etc., which frustrate the dawn of Knowledge.]
10.
This very doctrine has been declared in the following Vedic verse: Communicate this knowledge of Brahman only to such as perform the rites, are well-versed in the Vedas, have devotion to the Deity, possess faith, and make oblations to the fire called Ekarsi; they must again have observed s'irovrata(1) according to injunctions.
[NOTES 1. Sirovrata S'ankara says that this is an observance mentioned in the Atharva-veda, the chief feature of which is the carrying of fire on the head. A modern translator makes an intelligent guess that it may refer to the Sannyasa ceremony which requires the shaving of the head; for the expression literally means 'observance regarding the head '. He supports this interpretation on the ground that this Upanisad called Mundaka or'of the shaven -headed'has special reference to Sannyasins whose distinguishing feature is shaven head.]
11.
This is the very truth. Rsi Angiras communicated it to his disciples in ancient times. No one who has not observed any(1) vow should study it. We bow down to you, great sages ! Bow down to you, great sages !
[NOTES 1. Any vow The idea is that the study of the Upanisads should be undertaken only by men of spiritual inclination. Spiritual inclination is always accompanied by some kind of tendency towards renunciation of the world. A vrata or vow is always an act of renunciation. Hence it is mentioned as a test of man's fitness to study the Upanisads.]
The true spiritual aspirant to cultivate knowledge, dispassion, austerity, concentration, faith and love of solitude, for the attainment of the Immortal and the Imperishable.
Purusa, the Supreme Being, is all the universe, karma, tapas and immortality by realizing whom in one's heart one'breaks the shackles of ignorance.
The Supreme- Being is here again described as the illuminator of the cosmic luminaries, and as the blissful, immortal, omnipresent, Brahman who encompasses all, above, below and around, and reigns with all splendour in the heart of man.
Chapter One: Section One
1.
Brahma, the creator and protector of this universe, arose first, before all the gods. To his eldest son, Atharvan, he imparted the science of the Spirit, the basis of all sciences.
2.
What Brahma imparted to Atharvan, even that science of the Spirit, Atharvan imparted to Angiras in olden days. And Angiras passed it on to Bharadvaja Satyavaha, and he in turn to Angiras. Thus the science descended from the greatest sages to lesser ones.
3.
S'aunaka, that famous householder, once approached Angiras in the manner laid down by the scriptures, and questioned, "Sir, what is that, knowing which everything in the world becomes known ?
4.
To him Angiras replied: There are two kinds of knowledge to be acquired, as indeed the knowers of the Vedas have said one a lower and the other a higher.
5.
Of these, the lower(1) consists of the study of Rig-veda, Yajur-veda, Sama-veda, Atharvaveda, phonetics, the code of rituals, grammar, etymology, metrics and astronomy. Now the higher Knowledge is that by which the Imperishable is attained.
[NOTES 1. The lower etc. This enumeration does not, of course, exhaust the field of lower knowledge. It includes everything that is not directly connected with the attainment of Self-realization.]
6.
What is invisible, ungraspable, unoriginated and attributeless; what has neither eyes, nor ears nor hands, nor feet; what is eternal, all-pervading, immeasurably subtle and limitless in manifestation; that Imperishable Being is what the wise perceive as the source of all creation.
7.
As the spider emits and withdraws the web, as herbs sprout on the earth, as hair grows on the head and body of man without any effort, so from the Imperishable Being the universe springs out.
[NOTES Here three similes are given to illustrate the spontaneity of creation from the imperishable substance, Brahman. As a spider spins the cobweb out of its own abdomen and again draws it into itself with perfect ease, so also this universe originates from Brahman and again dissolves into It, spontaneously. This illustration might suggest to some that Brahman has some purpose and some effort, the least though it be, in creating the universe, even as the spider has; so by the second illustration that doubt is removed. As plants grow on the earth quite naturally, without the least purpose or effort on the part of the earth, even so, does creation come out of Brahman, without any purpose or effort on Its part. Then, is Brahman an unconscious, inert substance like the earth? No, says the text. Just as in the case of man, a conscious being, hair grows on his body without any effort and without taxing his body in any way, so from Brahman, which is Intelligence itself, the inert universe emanates. The first simile suggests that Brahman is the ground of the origination and dissolution of the universe. The second asserts that even after creation the universe rests in Brahman alone, being totally dependent on It. The third simile states further that creation is a purposeless, effortless, extraneous projection of a certain Power of Brahman, which does not constitute Its real essence which is Intelligence. It should be noted here how the Upanisad by the three similes indirectly asserts that the creation is not a parinama or real transformation of Brahman in the pantheistic sense, but only a projection of Its inscrutable Power. In this sense Brahman is both the efficient and the material cause of the universe.]
8.
From brooding(1) thought Brahman swells (with the joy of creation). Thence Food(2) is born and from it Energy(3), mind, the True(4), the worlds, and endless(5) entanglement in works.
[NOTES 1. Brooding thought The word in the original is'tapas'. It is generally translated as austerity. It implies both heat and thought, and Max Miiller translates it therefore as'brooding'. This tapas of Brahman, as will be stated in the next verse, is Knowledge of the whole of creation in the ideal form before it oncretizes. 2. Food The original word 'annam' means 'that which is eaten or enjoyed'. Philosophically it means the object, which may be described as that which the Subject or the Spirit enjoys. Often it stands in the scheme of creation for Matter. Here we cannot take it as Matter in the gross sense, as prana or Energy is said to come out of it. So we must take it to mean 'the pure sense of objectivity', which must be regarded as the first step in the process of the non-dual Brahman manifesting as creation. The creative will is the stress on the 'I', the subject, and this stress is simultaneously accompanied with the sense of the'this', the source of objectivity. In the cosmological scheme, this pure sense of objectivity is sometimes described as the'avyakrta'or the Undifferentiated, and in other Upanisads as the prana. The gross Matter too is referred to by the terms 'annam' and 'rayi'. 3. Energy The original word is prana' which has a wide range of meaning in Vedantic literature, from vital breath to Hiranyagarbha or Brahma described as the first shoot of creation. Here the word is used in the sense of Hiranyagarbha, literally the Golden Egg, who is the intelligent power that diversifies creation. He is God the Creator of the Hindu Trinity. 4. The True Here the five Great Elements, of which the worlds are constituted. 5. Endless entanglement in works This refers to samsara, consisting of karmas (deeds) and the enjoyment of their fruits in an endless chain, until Knowledge, and through it emancipation, are gained. It should be remembered that the whole of the description here and elsewhere in the Upanisads, of the creative process, refers to Saguna-brahman, the Deity with attributes. It does not affect the vivarta or illusory transformation of the Supreme as the impersonal and attributeless. As soon as the question is raised as to the relation between the Supreme Brahman and creation, the doctrine of maya will explain the latter, with all its might and mystery, as only an apparent manifestation of the Supreme.]
9.
Brahma(1) the Creator, individual beings, and nourishment for creatures these spring from Him, the all-wise and omniscient, whose(2) creative thought is Knowledge itself.
[NOTES 1. Brahma The same Hiranyagarbha referred to as prana (energy) in the previous verse. 2. Whose creative thought is knowledge itself The idea is that the creative will of the Absolute is unlike the creative will of limited beings. Limited beings are affected or modified by creative will, whether it be in the sense of procreation or of making anything new. But with regard to Brahman this transformation of the self does not take place. For in Its case every assertion of the 'this', the object, is illuminated with Knowledge, i.e. the awareness of Its own unaffectedness, as a desert is not affected by the appearance of mirage in it. The idea is the same as the 'prati-bodhaviditammatam' who knows Him in and through every modification of thought) of the Kenopanisad. Hence Knowledge accompanying creative thought signifies unaffectedness.]
Chapter One: Section Two
1.
Whatever ritualistic works the sages have found in the sacred hymns (Mantras), they are true(1). These are treated elaborately in the three Vedas. Ye lovers(2) of the true, perform them constantly; for they are to you the path to the worlds of meritorious deeds.
[NOTES The object of praising ritualistic works here is this: It is only by their performance to some extent that men will gain experience of the ephemerality of worldly as well as of heavenly enjoyments, as will be described in the next chapter. And without a sense of their ephemerality, the higher doctrines of renunciation and knowledge cannot have any hold upon men. 1. True In the sense that the results promised are true. 2. Lovers of the true 'The true' here also refers to the fruits of sacrifices. Hence, those who love the fruits of ritualistic works.]
2.
When the sacrificial fire has been wellkindled and the flames begin to move, let oblations be offered with faith, between(1) the two portions of the fire (where melted butter is to be poured).
[NOTES Flame is considered to be the tongue of fire,.and hence all oblations are considered to be offered into the very mouth of Agni (god of fire) as it were. No oblation should be poured when the fire is smouldering. Here reference is made to the agnihotra which is the first of all sacrifices. 1. Between the two etc. In the dars'a and paurnamasa sacrifices connected with the agnihotra, two oblations are offered in the ahavaniya fire in the northern and southern portions of it, with the invocations 'agnaye svaha' and 'somaya svaha'. These portions are called ajyabhaga, while the middle portion where the whole remaining oblations are offered is called avapasthana.]
3.
If one's agnihotra sacrifice is not accompanied by the rites to be performed at the new moon, the full moon, the four months of autumn, and the harvest time; if it is without guests, without offerings consisting of oblations to Vis'vedevas and the feeding of animals and birds; if it is contrary to injunction, then it ruins(1) one's future in the seven worlds.
[NOTES 1. Ruins one's future etc. By such irregular performance of the agnihotra, he cannot attain any of the seven worlds, viz., Bhur, Bhuvar, Svar, Mahar, Jana, Tapas and Satya.]
4.
The Black, the Fierce, the Mind-swift, the Deep-red, the Smoke-coloured, the Scintillating, the bright All-shining, these are the seven moving tongues of fire.
5.
He who offers oblations in proper time into these shining flames, him the oblations, as sun rays, lead to the place where the one lord of the gods (Indra) resides.
6.
"Welcome! Welcome!" say these bright offerings, and carry the sacrificer along the sun's rays, addressing to him the pleasant words of praise, This is the world of Brahma gained by your good works!"
7.
Verily, they are frail rafts these sacrifices with their eighteen members, on which such inferior work (devoid of knowledge) rests. The fools who acclaim this as the highest good, certainly fall again and again into the domain of old age and death.
[NOTES In the beginning, the Upanisad praised ritualistic works in so far as they are useful for securing heavenly enjoyments, and also in so far as they are useful for the dawn of disgust for themselves. Now it points out their utter futility in the attainment of liberation. 1. Eighteen members The sixteen priets, and the sacrificer and his wife, all of whom are necessary for the performance of a sacrifice.]
8.
Steeped in ignorance, yet thinking themselves wise and learned, fools wander about suffering again and again, like the blind led by the blind.
9.
Engrossed in the ways of the ignorant, these people childishly think that they have gained the end of life. But being subject to passions and attachment, they never attain Knowledge, and therefore they sink(1) down wretched, when the fruits of their good deeds are exhausted.
[NOTES 1. Sink down The idea is that Knowledge or spiritual enlightenment alone can give the imperishable state of freedom, and this Knowledge does not arise until man is rid of attachments and passions which are born of desires. The heavenly regions last only as long as one is entitled to them by the merits of one's deeds, and when these are exhausted, one is reborn on earth.]
10
These deluded men fancy sacrifices and charitable(1) works to be the highest, and know naught better. Having reaped the fruits of their virtuous deeds in the highest heavensr the seats of sensual enjoyments, they fall into their old human life or into what is lower still.
[NOTES 1. Charitable works Istapurta in the text is a combination of two words, ista and purta. According to the traditional code ista includes agnihotra (the firekindling ceremony) incumbent upon a Brahmin householder, austerity, truthfulness, learning and teaching of the Vedas, hospitality, and the ceremony called vais'vadeva which consists among its items the feeding of animals and birds. Purta consists of sinking of wells, constructing of water tanks and temples, laying out of gardens, supply of food to the needy and other similar items of unselfish work.]
11.
Verily, those(1) who live in forest (solitude), leading a life of austerity and devout worship peaceful, wise and keeping the mendicant's(2) rule these stainless men go by the solar(3) gate to where(4) that immortal Being dwells.
[NOTES 1. Those etc. These include men of all the four orders of life who devote themselves exclusively to the practice of austerity and devotion. 2. Mendicant's rule Externally it consists in having no possessions and hence living on alms; its essence, however, consists in being truly poor in spirit. 3. Solar gate The path leading to gradual liberation (krama-mukti), described as deva-yana or'the path of the gods'. 4. Where that immortal Being dwells This is in contradistinction to the highest heavens attainable by charity and sacrifices. The region referred to is satyaloka or the world of Brahma. It is the world attained by those who are on the path of krama-mukti, after they pass away from the earth. Krama-mukti or gradual emancipation is attained by those who are devoted to the Personal God and pass away without gaining Knowledge. In satyaloka they attain Knowledge in course of time and are finally liberated at the end of the cycle. In contrast to this is jlvan-mukti or liberation in this very life, attained by those who gain Knowledge in the embodied state itself. There is no going to this place or that for them; for they have become the All.]
12.
Having scrutinised the worlds gained by deeds, a man of spiritual inclination should become indifferent to them; for deeds, which are originated, cannot win the Supreme, who is unoriginated. Therefore to know That, let him become a pupil under a preceptor who is both learned in the scripture and established in the Spirit.
13.
To such a seeker, whose mind(1) is tranquil and senses are controlled, and who approaches him in proper form, let the wise teacher impart the science of Brahman in its very essence the science by which one knows the true, imperishable Being.
[NOTES 1. Mind is tranquil etc. Tranquillity ot mind and control of senses are the qualifications of a true seeker after God. Without these the study or hearing of the truths of Vedanta will have no effect on one's mind.]
Chapter Two: Section One
1.
This is the truth: As from a blazing fire thousands of sparks, similar to it in nature, issue forth, so, O my young friend, manifold beings are produced from the Imperishable, and they verily go back to It again.
2.
Self-resplendent, formless, unoriginated and pure, that all-pervading Being is both within and without. Anterior both to life and mind, He transcends even the unmanifested causal state of the universe.
3.
From Him are born life, mind, senses, ether, air, fire, water, and earth that supports all.
4.
Verily, He is the indwelling Spirit within all. Fire is His head; the sun and moon, His eyes; the quarters, His ears; the revelation (the Vedas), His voice; the wind, His breath; the universe, His heart. And from His feet the earth has originated.
5.
From Him comes the heaven world, which is the first Fire, having the sun for its fuel; from the moon in the heaven world, the rainclo-uds (the second Fire); from the clouds, the herbs on earth (the third Fire). (And from the herbs eaten), man (the fourth Fire) casts the seed in woman (the fifth Fire). In this manner many beings are born of Purusa,the all-pervading Being.
[NOTES. Here is described the gradual process of the origin of all beings from the one Purusa. The argument is simple: From the Purusa has originated the dyuloka or heaven, and from the moon in the dyuloka, clouds; rains falling on earth from the clouds, produce plants and herbs; men live on these plants and herbs, and secrete semen; the semen, again, having fallen into the womb of a female, produces living beings. Thus Purusa is the final cause of the origin of beings. This subject is called pancagnividya, or science of five Fires, and is elaborately treated in the Chandogya, V, 3-1.]
6.
From Him are the Vedic verses, the sacred chants, the sacrificial formulas, preliminary rites, sacrifices, ceremonies, sacrificial gifts, the time of the sacrifice, the sacrificer, and the worlds purified by the sun and the moon, (which come to one as the fruits of sacrifice).
7.
From Him, the gods of various orders, the celestials, men, beasts, birds, in-breath, outbreath, paddy, barley, austerity, faith, truth, continence and the Law.
8.
From Him, too, the seven(1) senses in the head, their powers of cognition, their objects and their knowledge, as also the seven seats(2) of sense life traversed by the life-forces centred in the hearts of all creatures.
[NOTES 1. Seven senses The senses meant are the two eyes, the two ears, the two nostrils and the mouth. 2. Seats of sense life These are the nerve centres or the inner principles of the senses, without which the external senses cannot in themselves function.]
9.
From Him, all the oceans and mountains; from Him, the rivers of every description; from Him, too, all herbs and saps by which the subtle(1) body exists encircled by the gross elements of matter.
[NOTES 1. Subtle body exists etc. The idea seems to be that the physical body which ensheathes the subtle body is originated and sustained by food derived from herbs and saps.]
10.
Verily, that Omnipresent Being is all this sacrificial works, Knowledge and all the rest. O handsome youth, he who knows this supreme, Immortal Being as seated in the cavity of the heart, rends asunder the knot of ignorance even here in this life.
Chapter Two: Section Two
1.
This Brahman is the great support manifesting through all experiences, existing(1) very close, and moving in the cavity of the heart. All that move and breathe and wink are established in It. Know It the cause of both the gross and the subtle, the adorable of all, the highest of beings, the one above(2) the understanding of creatures.
[NoTES 1. Existing very close Being our innermost Self, there is nothing closer to us than Brahman. 2. Above the understanding of creatures This expression may appear to contradict the first part of "the sentence 'Know It'. The contradiction is solved when it is understood that the Knowledge of Brahman is not an intellectual knowledge, nor the knowledge of an object, but the intuition of the Seer above all seeing. It is not knowing a thing, but being and becoming That.]
2.
Luminous, subtler than even atoms, that imperishable Brahman is the abode of the world and all its inhabitants. He is life, speech, mind, reality, immortality. That is the mark which should be penetrated by the mind. Penetrate It, O my friend.
3.
Taking as bow the mighty weapon furnished by the Upanisads, fix on it the arrow rendered sharp by onstant meditation. And having(1) drawn it with the mind absorbed in His thought, penetrate that mark the imperishable Brahman.
[NOTES What the bow, arrow, etc., of the analogy are, is explained in the next verse. 1. Having drawn it This refers to the withdrawing of the senses from external contact.]
4.
Om the mystic syllable is(1) the bow; the self(2) within, the arrow; and Brahman, the target(3). One should hit that mark with an undistracted(4) mind, and like the arrow, become one with It.
[NOTES 1. Is the bow 'Om' is said to be the bow because as the bow helps the arrow to dart at the target, the repetition of 'Om' helps the Atman to get fixed in Brahman.2. Self within The Jivatman or individual self who is in essence identical with Brahman, but appears to be limited by the physical and mental adjuncts. 3. Target Brahman being non-different from the Atman, the target for the individual self becomes its own essence. For those who are worshippers of Personal God, the difference between the self and the object of worship, however, holds good. Even then in the higher stages of meditation, the mind gets so absorbed in the object of meditation that it loses its identity in it. 4. Undistracted By worldly thoughts and attachments.]
5.
He in whom the heaven, the earth and the interspace are centred, together with the mind and all life-breaths (pranas), know Him alone as the one Self of all, and desist from all other talk. This is man's bridge to the shore of Immortality (across the ocean of life).
6.
Where all the arteries meet like the spokes of a chariot-wheel in the hub, there within(1) the heart He moves, becoming(2) manifold. Meditate(3) on that Self as Om. Godspeed to you in crossing to the farther shore beyond darkness.
[NOTES Within the heart The ancient Indian thinkers believed that the vital, mental, intellectual and spiritual faculties of man are all in a special sense centred in the heart, the most important of all physical organs. Here the heart is described as the centre where one should meditate on this Atman, that being the special centre of Its manifestation. For a fuller account of the concept of 'heart' in the Upanisads, see Notes on S'vetas'vataropanisad, IV, 17 in this Series. 2. Becoming manifold This refers to the apparent modifications that the Atman undergoes in the ignorant state, when swayed by anger, joy, etc. 3. Meditate etc. Om is the sound symbol of Brahman in the Upanisads. Its significance is specially discussed in the Mandukyopanisad. The mention here of the locus and symbol of the Atman is to facilitate meditation for the beginner.]
7.
He is all-wise and all-knowing, and His is verily this glory(1) (manifest on earth). In the sky of the heart the luminous(2) city of Brahman He is established, clothed(3) in mind and guiding life and body. With his seat in the heart, He lives in the whole(4) body of man. By perfect knowledge of Him the wise realize the state of blissful Immortality.
[NOTES 1. Glory (manifest on earth) Glory in the form of Law, Beauty, and Power or Energy. In fact this universe itself is the expression of His glory or power. 2. Luminous city of Brahman The 'lotus' of the heart is usually called 'brahmapuram' or the city of Brahman. It is called luminous, because there Brahman is meditated upon by the devotees as a smokeless brilliant light. 3. Clothed in mind etc. 'Manomaya', the word in the original, literally means 'of the form of mind'. The Atman is called so because in the embodied state It is conditioned by the mind. By this conditioning alone It is spoken of as guiding body and life. Mind is the medium through which It works on these. 4. Whole body of man The word in the original for body is 'anna' or 'food'; for body is derived from food. Though the Atman is seated in the heart, It may be described as living in the whole body, as Its presence is felt all over the body in the form of life and perception.]
8.
When a person realizes Him in both the(1) high and the low, the knots(2) of his heart are loosened, his doubts(3) dispelled, and his karmas(4) exhausted.
[NOTES 1. The high and the low It may mean either 'in both cause and effect', or 'in what is ordinarily considered from the worldly point of view as good and bad, superior and inferior'. 2. Knots of the heart The group of desires and tendencies that clings to one's buddhi (intelligence or higher mind) due to ignorance. They are called knots, probably because it is they that attach the encumbrance of body and mind, the resultant of animal evolution, to the Atman. It is these knots that constitute the basis of ignorance, and when they are cut, ignorance is dispelled and the Atman freed from its encumbrance. 3. Doubts dispelled Every man is in doubt regarding the ultimate nature of things. This is due to ignorance, and hence doubt is dispelled only with the disappearance of ignorance, which takes place on the 'knots of the heart being cut'. 4. The effects of karma There are three kinds of karma, or effects of action, viz., prarabdha, sancita and agamin: prarabdha is the name for the effects, of one's previous works, which have already begun to germinate and bear fruit in this life. Sancita is what is stored up for the next life. And all that are to come to fruition in future lives are classed under Agamin. When the Atman is realized, only the sancita and agamin are destroyed. But prarabdha still remains. It exhausts itself only by actual enjoyments and sufferings in the present life of the realized man. By virtue of this prarabdha, his body continues to exist even after the attainment of jnana, and falls only when the prarabdha is worked out. So here, by karma (i.e. effects of karma), the Upanisad means only the second two kinds of karma.]
9.
In the luminous sheath (of intelligence), the deepest core of man, dwells Brahman stainless, indivisible, pure. He is the light of all that shines. That is what the knowers of the Self realize.
10.
There the sun does not shine, nor the moon and the stars; these lightnings too do not shine much less this earthly fire ! Verily,. everything shines, reflecting His glory. This whole world is illumined with His light.
[NOTES This need not be taken as applying only to objects luminous in a physical sense. It is applicable to the whole process of knowing. Anything becomes an object of our knowledge, because the light of the Atman reveals it. Without the Atman there can be no process of knowing in any sense.]
11.
Verily, all this is the immortal Brahman ! He is everywhere above, below, in front, at the back, upon the right, upon the left ! All this world is indeed the supreme Brahman !
Chapter Three: Section One
1.
Two(1) birds, bound(2) one to another in close friendship, perch on(3) the self-same tree. One(4) of them eats the fruits of the tree with relish, while the other looks on without eating.
[NOTES 1. Two birds These are the Jlvatman (individual soul) and the Paramatman (God). The Jlvatman, according to Advaita philosophy, is Pure Consciousness limited by 'ignorance', and therefore bound by body, mind, attachment and action. God on the other hand is Pure Consciousness conditioned by maya or Cosmic Power, but being devoid of ignorance, is free, intelligent, eternal and omniscient. Some take the one bird to mean mind, as it is the real factor in action and enjoyment in every being. The other bird is, of course, that Pure Consciousness Itself which is absolutely untainted by the passing phases of life in the forms of enjoyment etc. 2. Bound one to another in close friendship The Jlvatman is nothing but the image of the Paramatman seen through the medium of the mind. Hence both are described as inseparable, even as is the sun's image from the sun. 3. On the self-same tree i.e. the body. 4. One of them etc. The Jlva, owing to its identification with the body and the mind, feels itself to be the agent of all work, and enjoys the fruits thereof, although it is the mind that really works and enjoys. Even if the Jlva be taken as a separate entity as the Dvaitins and the Vis'istadvaitins believe it to be, still it can never be considered as the real agent or enjoyer of actions or fruits thereof. Because agentship and enjoyment mean modification and change, and it is accepted on all hands that change is only possible with matter and not with Spirit or Pure Consciousness. The Jiva, being Spirit, cannot undergo any change.Hence the truth is that the enjoyment and the agentship of Atman as Jlva, are super-imposed on it by the mind, through false mutual superimposition (anyonya'dhyasa). The real Self, Atman, remains always untainted by such modifications of the mind and simply witnesses them. See also the Notes on S'vet., IV, 6, in this Series.]
2.
Seated on the self-same tree, one of them the personal self sunken in ignorance and deluded, grieves for his impotence. But when he sees(1) the Other the Lord, the Worshipful as also His glory, he becomes free from dejection.
[NOTES 1. Sees the Other etc. When the individual comes to realize the transcendental reality of his own Self, which is the Lord of all beings untouched by the passing phenomenon of life, even as the sun is not really tarnished by the dust and dirt of the materials on which it reflects, then his dream of suffering and enjoyment disappears, and he attains to the unbroken, eternal bliss of his own Self. See also the Notes on SVet,, IV, 7, in this Series.]
3.
When the seer realizes the self-effulgent Being ruler, maker and source of the creator even then that wise one, shaking(1) off merits and demerits, becomes stainless, and attains(2) supreme Unity.
[NOTES 1. Shaking off etc. When the Knowledge of the real Self is attained, one comes to realize that sin, virtue, etc. are things of the mind and the body, and that they do not belong to the Spirit. 2. Attains supreme Unity The vision of all duality melts away for the seer, and he comes to realize his very Self as the Supreme Soul, whom he was hitherto worshipping as the Universal Lord.]
4.
Verily, He who is prana(1), pervades all this. Knowing(2) this, one becomes truly wise, never a vain babbler. Sporting in the Self, delighting in the Self, performing pious works, he takes the first rank among the knowers of Brahman.
[NOTES 1. Prana Here it is used as an equivalent of Is'vara or Supreme Being. 2. Knowing this etc. The idea is that the realization of Brahman as the one life of all beings, is alone true wisdom. Compared to this wisdom, what we consider wise discourses on worldly topics, is only vain babbling.]
5.
The Self is attained through veracity, concentration,(1) wisdom (2) and continence, all constantly cultivated. When impurities dwindle (thus), the ascetics behold Him stainless, resplendent within the very body.
[NOTES 1. Concentration'Tapas'is the word in the original, and it is usually translated as austerity, The most difficult form of austerity is to withdraw the senses and the mind from their natural objects and concentrate them on the Self. This is the real austerity involved in spiritual life, and hence the word is here translated as concentration. 2. Wisdom The insight and discrimination needed for keeping unswervingly to the spiritual path.]
6.
Only the truthful win, not the untruthful. By truth is laid out the'divine path',(1) along which the sages, free from desires, ascend to the supreme abode of the True.
[NOTES 1. 'Divine path' The original word for this, 'deva-yana', may be given the general sense of a'life of spiritual striving', of which truth is the most important discipline. Technically, however, deva-yana or the 'path of the gods' is the special path by which those who are entitled to gradual liberation or krama-mukti go after death, and it stands in contrast to pitr-yana or'the path of the manes'by which those meritorious souls who will again be re-born on earth, go after death. For details regarding the paths and the two forms of Mukti, see Notes on Is'avasya, verse 18, in this Series.]
7.
Vast, divine, beyond(1) all imagination, shines the truth of Brahman. It is subtler than the subtlest, farther than the farthest. It is here within(2) the body, and the sages realize It verily in this life as fixed in the heart.
[NOTES 1. Beyond all imagination The concept of truth always stands distinguished from mere imaginations. 2. Within the body etc. This shows the contrast between Brahman when It is searched for within, and when It is looked for as something outside. When one looks for Him outside, one looks upon Him as the cause of the world, and naturally one thinks of Him in terms of vastness, inaccessibility, etc. But He is also very close to every embodied being as the life of his life, and he is the sage who finds this out, looking within, in place of indulging in any vain external quest.]
8.
The Self cannot be described by words, nor perceived by the eyes and the senses, nor revealed by rituals and penances. When the understanding(1) becomes calm and refined, one's whole being is purified, and then, engaged in meditation, one realizes Him, the Absolute.
[NOTES 1. Understanding becomes calm and refined The original word for it is jnana-prasada. By jnana is here meant the buddhi, the understanding or higher mind, which is at once the light of the Atman and the faculty that reveals the Atman. This understanding is in everyone, but being directed towards the objects of the world, it is at present revealing only these objects to us, and has besides been contaminated by their contact. This contamination consists in its sensuality and restlessness. The removal of these acquired traits of the understanding is what is called jnana-prasada here,]
9.
By(1) means of thought one should know the subtle truth of the Atman within the body, which is permeated by life-force in a fivefold way. Man's thought is interwoven with the
senses. When that(2) (thought) is purified, the Self shines forth.
[NOTES 1. By means of thought The word in the original is'cetasa'. It is identical in import with jnana of the previous verse, and means the buddhi the higher mind or purified understanding by which the Atman is intuited. In this and the previous verse we get some suggestions on the nature of the intuitive faculty by which the Atman is realized. 2. That (thought) is purified Purification consists in withdrawing the buddhi from the senses with which it is interwoven in the natural man.]
10.
Whatever sphere the man of purified nature desires, whatever object he fixes his heart upon, he obtains those worlds and those objects. Therefore he who is desirous of' prosperity should pay honour to the man of Self-realization.
Chapter Three: Section Two
1.
The man of Self-realization knows the Supreme Brahman on whom this world is based, and who shines radiantly. And those wise men who are devoted to such a person, without(1) any worldly desire, go beyond all chances of rebirth.
[NOTES 1. Without any worldly desire This is in contrast to the type referred to in the previous verse, who adore the man of realization for attaining worldly prosperity. The worship of these great ones without any worldly desire leads to emancipation.]
2.
Whoever longs for objects of desire, brooding over them, they are born here and there for the satisfaction of those desires. But in the case of a sage whose longings have found consummation in the Atman and whose soul has been perfected, desires(1) vanish away even here in this life.
[NOTES 1. Desires vanish etc. That is, he has no further birth.]
3.
The Self is not attained through discourses, nor through intellectuality, nor through much learning. It is gained only by him who longs for It with the whole heart. For to such a one the Self(1) reveals Its own nature.
[NOTES 1. Self reveals Its own nature The Self is always the true nature of one's innermost being; it has not to be brought from anywhere else. Ignorance only veils it. True longing of the heart dispels that ignorance, and then the Self, which was always there, reveals Itself. The passage, interpreted from the purely religious point of view, has been made a sanction for the doctrine of grace. In this sense it may be translated thus: " The Deity is not attained through discourses, nor through intellectuality, nor through much learning. He is attained only by one whom He chooses: to such a one He reveals His own person." See also Katha, II, 23, in this Series.]
4.
The Self is not gained by men(1) of weak spirit, nor by the careless, nor by those practising improper(2) austerities. But wise men who strive with vigour, attention and propriety, attain union with Brahman.
[NOTES 1. Men of weak spirit The original word 'balahlna'may indicate also a physically weak man. While a fair degree of physical strength is absolutely necessary for success in spiritual life, what is still more needed is an abundance of faith, self-confidence and inner toughness that keeps one uncowed by failure and obstacles.2. Improper austerities The literal meaning of the expression in the original is'by tapas devoid of proper insignia (linga)'. According to S'ankara, tapas here means not mere austerity, but the disciplines of inner cogitation and concentration leading to the Knowledge of Atman. He also holds that the linga or insignia referred to is due entry into sannyasa or the fourth order of life. Spiritual discipline without the proper external garb does not lead to the highest result so he thinks. In justification of this view it may be said that the association of hoary sacred traditions with the life of sannyasa, and the checks that the garb imposes on conduct, both consciously and unconsciously, are all factors that safeguard an aspirant from going off the track. The expression may also mean 'false notions of austerity' or 'flesh-torturing ascetic practices' which are condemned in the Bhagavad-gita.]
5.
The sages who have attained the Self find satisfaction in wisdom (and long for nothing else); they are perfected in soul, non-attached and tranquil. Having realized the all-pervading Spirit everywhere, those wise and devout ones enter into the All.
6.
Those aspirants whose natures have been purified by a life of striving and renunciation, and who are well-established in the Self that forms the sole quest of all Vedantic tudies, they attain immortality in Brahman at(1) the time of illumination; they are absolved(2) on all sides.
[NoTES 1. At the time of illumination This is the -meaning of the word 'paranta-kale', according to S'ankara. Its literal meaning is'at the time of death'or'at the end of time'. S'ankara justifies his interpretation on the ground that just as death is the end of the body for the ignorant man, so is the moment of illumination for the knowing one; for he understands thenceforth that he is not the body, and he is therefore dead to the body. This interpretation gives us the extreme Advaitic view which denies even prarabdha-karma in a jivan-mukta. If we substitute 'at the time of death', we get the idea of prarabdha-karma which ends only with the death of the body. If we have 'at the end of time', we get the conception of krama-mukti; for one who is entitled to krama-mukti attains complete union with Brahman only at the end of the Cycle. This last meaning is not appropriate here, as it is a clear reference to a knowing one. 2. Absolved on all sides Has no more bondage here or hereafter: he is not re-born also.]
7.
Their fifteen!(1) phases resolve into their sources; their senses, into the corresponding deities; and their deeds and personality, into the supreme, imperishable Being.
[NOTES 1. Fifteen phases Prana etc.]
8.
As rivers, flowing, disappear in the ocean losing name and form, so the wise man, free from name and form, goes unto the highest of the high the Supreme Divinity.
9.
Whoever knows the supreme Brahman, becomes very Brahman. In his family none ignorant of Brahman is born. The knots(1) of his heart being unloosed, he goes beyond sorrow and sin, and attains immortality.
[NOTES 1. Knots of his heart being unloosed Knots of the heart'is a phrase that occurs frequently in the Upanisads, and stand for ignorance, desire, passion, etc., which frustrate the dawn of Knowledge.]
10.
This very doctrine has been declared in the following Vedic verse: Communicate this knowledge of Brahman only to such as perform the rites, are well-versed in the Vedas, have devotion to the Deity, possess faith, and make oblations to the fire called Ekarsi; they must again have observed s'irovrata(1) according to injunctions.
[NOTES 1. Sirovrata S'ankara says that this is an observance mentioned in the Atharva-veda, the chief feature of which is the carrying of fire on the head. A modern translator makes an intelligent guess that it may refer to the Sannyasa ceremony which requires the shaving of the head; for the expression literally means 'observance regarding the head '. He supports this interpretation on the ground that this Upanisad called Mundaka or'of the shaven -headed'has special reference to Sannyasins whose distinguishing feature is shaven head.]
11.
This is the very truth. Rsi Angiras communicated it to his disciples in ancient times. No one who has not observed any(1) vow should study it. We bow down to you, great sages ! Bow down to you, great sages !
[NOTES 1. Any vow The idea is that the study of the Upanisads should be undertaken only by men of spiritual inclination. Spiritual inclination is always accompanied by some kind of tendency towards renunciation of the world. A vrata or vow is always an act of renunciation. Hence it is mentioned as a test of man's fitness to study the Upanisads.]
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