The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Yoga-Vasishtha Maharamayana of Valmiki, Vol. 3 (of 4), Part 2 (of 2)
Title: The Yoga-Vasishtha Maharamayana of Valmiki, Vol. 3 (of 4), Part 2 (of 2)
Author: Valmiki
Translator: Viharilala Mitra
Release date: August 8, 2014 [eBook #46531]
Most recently updated: October 24, 2024
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Mark C. Orton, Juliet Sutherland, windproof,
Les Galloway and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
at http://www.pgdp.net
THE
YOGA-VASISHTHA
MAHARAMAYANA
OF
VALMIKI
in 4 vols. in 7 pts.
(Bound in 4.)
Vol. 3 (In 2 pts.)
Bound in one.
Containing
Upasama Khanda and Nirvána Khanda
Translated from the original Sanskrit
By
VIHARI-LALA MITRA
CONTENTS
OF
NIRVÁNA-PRAKARANA.
BOOK VI.
(ON ULTIMATE EXTINCTION.)
| PAGE. | |
| CHAPTER I. | |
| Description of the Evening and Breaking of the assembly | 1 |
| CHAPTER II. | |
| On the perfect calm and composure of the mind | 7 |
| CHAPTER III. | |
| On the unity and Universality of Brahma | 15 |
| CHAPTER IV. | |
| Want of anxiety in the way of Salvation | 18 |
| CHAPTER V. | |
| The narration of Ráma's perfect rest | 20 |
| CHAPTER VI. | |
| The narration of Delirium (moha) | 22 |
| CHAPTER VII. | |
| Magnitude or preponderance of ignorance | 29 |
| CHAPTER VIII. | |
| Allegory of the spreading arbour of Ignorance | 39 |
| CHAPTER IX. | |
| Ascertainment of True knowledge | 44 |
| CHAPTER X. | |
| Removal of Ignorance | 50 |
| CHAPTER XI. | |
| Ascertainment of Living Liberation | 58 |
| CHAPTER XII. | |
| Reasoning on the doubts of the living liberation | 69 |
| CHAPTER XIII. | |
| The Two Yogas of Knowledge and Reasoning | 73 |
| CHAPTER XIV. | |
| Narration of Bhusunda and description of Mount Meru | 75 |
| CHAPTER XV. | |
| Vasishtha's visit to Bhusunda | 79 |
| CHAPTER XVI. | |
| Conversation of Vasishtha and Bhusunda | 84 |
| CHAPTER XVII. | |
| Description of Bhusunda's Person | 87 |
| CHAPTER XVIII. | |
| Manners of the Mátrika Goddesses | 88 |
| CHAPTER XIX. | |
| Bhusunda's nativity and habitation | 93 |
| CHAPTER XX. | |
| Explication of the mysterious character of Bhusunda | 99 |
| CHAPTER XXI. | |
| Explanation of the cause of the crow's longevity | 105 |
| CHAPTER XXII. | |
| Account of past ages | 112 |
| CHAPTER XXIII. | |
| Desire of Tranquillity and Quiescence of the Mindn | 119 |
| CHAPTER XXIV. | |
| Investigation of the Living Principle | 124 |
| CHAPTER XXV. | |
| On Samádhi | 129 |
| CHAPTER XXVI. | |
| Relation of the cause of Longevity | 69 |
| CHAPTER XXVII. | |
| Conclusion of the narrative of Bhusunda | 143 |
| CHAPTER XXVIII. | |
| Lecture on Theopathy or spiritual meditation | 146 |
| CHAPTER XXIX. | |
| Pantheism or Description of the world as full with the Supreme Soul | 158 |
| CHAPTER XXX. | |
| Inquiry into the nature of the Intellect | 176 |
| CHAPTER XXXI | |
| Identity of the mind and living soul | 189 |
| CHAPTER XXXII | |
| On the sustentation and dissolution of the body | 197 |
| CHAPTER XXXIII. | |
| Resolution of duality into unity | 204 |
| CHAPTER XXXIV. | |
| Sermon of Siva on the same subject | 211 |
| CHAPTER XXXV. | |
| Adoration of the great god Mahádeva | 216 |
| CHAPTER XXXVI. | |
| Description of the supreme Deity Parameswara | 220 |
| CHAPTER XXXVII. | |
| The stage play and dance of destiny | 223 |
| CHAPTER XXXVIII. | |
| On the external worship of the Deity | 227 |
| CHAPTER XXXIX. | |
| Mode of the Internal worship of the Deity | 231 |
| CHAPTER XXXX. | |
| Inquiry into the nature of the Deity | 238 |
| CHAPTER XXXXI. | |
| Vanity of world and worldly things | 240 |
| CHAPTER XXXXII. | |
| The supreme soul and its phases and names | 247 |
| CHAPTER XXXXIII. | |
| On rest and Tranquillity | 251 |
| CHAPTER XXXXIV. | |
| Inquiry into the essence of the mind | 256 |
| CHAPTER XXXXV. | |
| Story of the vilva or Belfruit | 261 |
| CHAPTER XXXXVI. | |
| Parable of the stony sheath of the soul | 266 |
| CHAPTER XXXXVII. | |
| Lecture on the density of the Intellect | 272 |
| CHAPTER XXXXVIII. | |
| On the Unity and Identity of Brahmá and the world | 277 |
| CHAPTER XXXXIX. | |
| Contemplation of the course of the world | 280 |
| CHAPTER L. | |
| On sensation and the objects of senses | 285 |
| CHAPTER LI. | |
| On the perception of the sensible objects | 291 |
| CHAPTER LII. | |
| Story of Arjuna, as the Incarnation of Nara-Naráyana | 299 |
| CHAPTER LIII. | |
| Admonition of Arjuna | 304 |
| CHAPTER LIV. | |
| Admonition of Arjuna in the spiritual knowledge | 313 |
| CHAPTER LV. | |
| Lecture on the Living soul or Jívatatwa | 316 |
| CHAPTER LVI. | |
| Description of the mind | 324 |
| CHAPTER LVII. | |
| On Abandonment of desire and its result of Tranquillity | 329 |
| CHAPTER LVIII. | |
| Arjuna's satisfaction at the sermon | 331 |
| CHAPTER LIX. | |
| Knowledge of the latent and inscrutable soul | 334 |
| CHAPTER LX. | |
| Knowledge of the majesty and grandeur of God | 340 |
| CHAPTER LXI. | |
| Description of the world as a passing dream | 343 |
| CHAPTER LXII. | |
| In the narration of Jívata an example of domestic and mendicant life | 344 |
| CHAPTER LXIII. | |
| Dream of Jívata | 349 |
| CHAPTER LXIV. | |
| On the attainment of attendantship on the God Rudra | 359 |
| CHAPTER LXV. | |
| Ráma's wonder at the error of men | 364 |
| CHAPTER LXVI. | |
| The wonderings of the mendicant | 367 |
| CHAPTER LXVII. | |
| Unity of God | 371 |
| CHAPTER LXVIII. | |
| On the virtue of Taciturnity | 376 |
| CHAPTER LXIX. | |
| Union of the mind with the breath of life | 380 |
| CHAPTER LXX. | |
| Interrogatories of Vitála | 388 |
| CHAPTER LXXI. | |
| The prince's reply to the first question of the Vitála | 391 |
| CHAPTER LXXII. | |
| Answers to the remaining questions | 394 |
| CHAPTER LXXIII. | |
| End of the story of the Vitála Demon | 396 |
| CHAPTER LXXIV. | |
| Account and admonition of Bhagíratha | 398 |
| CHAPTER LXXV. | |
| Supineness of Bhagíratha | 403 |
| CHAPTER LXXVI | |
| The Descent of Gangá on earth | 406 |
| CHAPTER LXXVII. | |
| Narrative of Chúdálá and Sikhidhwaja | 409 |
| CHAPTER LXXVIII. | |
| Beautification of Chúdálá | 416 |
| CHAPTER LXXIX. | |
| Princess coming to the sight of the supreme soul | 423 |
| CHAPTER LXXX. | |
| Display of the quintuple Elements | 427 |
| CHAPTER LXXXI. | |
| Inquiry into Agni, Soma or fire and moon | 438 |
| CHAPTER LXXXII. | |
| Yoga instructions for acquirement of the supernatural powers of Animá-minuteness &c. | 454 |
| CHAPTER LXXXIII. | |
| Story of the miserly Kiráta | 455 |
| CHAPTER LXXXIV. | |
| Pilgrimage of prince Sikhidhwaja | 463 |
| CHAPTER LXXXV | |
| Investigation into true happiness | 471 |
| CHAPTER LXXXVI. | |
| The production of the Pot (or the embryonic cell) | 488 |
| CHAPTER LXXXVII. | |
| Continuation of the same and enlightenment of Sikhidhwaja | 492 |
| CHAPTER LXXXVIII. | |
| The tale of the Crystal gem | 498 |
| CHAPTER LXXXIX. | |
| The Parable of an Elephant | 502 |
| CHAPTER LXXXX. | |
| Way to obtain the Philosopher's stone | 506 |
| CHAPTER LXXXXI. | |
| Interpretation of the parable of the Elephant | 510 |
| CHAPTER LXXXXII. | |
| The Prince's Abjuration of his Asceticism | 513 |
| CHAPTER LXXXXIII. | |
| Admonition of Sikhidhwaja | 518 |
| CHAPTER LXXXXIV. | |
| Enlightenment of Sikhidhwaja | 526 |
| CHAPTER LXXXXV. | |
| The anaesthetic Platonism of Sikhidhwaja | 534 |
| CHAPTER LXXXXVI. | |
| Enlightenment of Sikhidhwaja | 537 |
| CHAPTER LXXXXVII. | |
| Enlightenment of the prince in Theosophy | 544 |
| CHAPTER LXXXXVIII. | |
| Admonition of Sikhidhwaja continued | 547 |
| CHAPTER LXXXXIX. | |
| Remonstration of Sikhidhwaja | 551 |
| CHAPTER C. | |
| Continuation of the same subject | 555 |
| CHAPTER CI. | |
| Admonition of Chúdálá | 559 |
| CHAPTER CII. | |
| Repose of Sikhidhwaja in the divine spirit | 566 |
| CHAPTER CIII. | |
| Return of Kumbha to the Hermitage of Sikhidhwaja | 568 |
| CHAPTER CIV. | |
| On the conduct of living-liberated men | 575 |
| CHAPTER CV. | |
| Metamorphoses of Kumbha to a female form | 580 |
| CHAPTER CVI. | |
| Marriage of Chúdálá with Sikhidhwaja | 586 |
| CHAPTER CVII. | |
| The advent of false Indra in the cottage of the happy pair | 593 |
| CHAPTER CVIII. | |
| Manifestation of Chúdálá in her own form | 597 |
| CHAPTER CIX. | |
| Appearance of Chúdálá in her presence of her Lord | 601 |
| CHAPTER CX. | |
| Final extinction of Sikhidhwaja | 610 |
| CHAPTER CXI. | |
| Story of Kacha and his enlightment by the Brihaspati | 614 |
| CHAPTER CXII. | |
| A fanciful Being and his occupation of air drawn and air-built abodes | 619 |
| CHAPTER CXIII. | |
| The parable of the vain man continued | 623 |
| CHAPTER CXIV. | |
| Sermon on Divine and Holy knowledge | 626 |
| CHAPTER CXV. | |
| Description of the triple conduct of men | 630 |
| CHAPTER CXVI. | |
| Melting down of the mind | 636 |
| CHAPTER CXVII. | |
| Dialogue between Manu and Ikshaku | 638 |
| CHAPTER CXVIII. | |
| Continuation of the same | 640 |
| CHAPTER CXIX. | |
| The same subject continued | 643 |
| CHAPTER CXX. | |
| Continuation of the same. On the seven stages of Edification | 645 |
| CHAPTER CXXI. | |
| Continuation of the same | 649 |
| CHAPTER CXXII. | |
| The same. Manu's admonition to Ikshaku | 652 |
| CHAPTER CXXIII. | |
| On the difference between the knowing and unknowing | 655 |
| CHAPTER CXXIV. | |
| The story of the stag and the huntsman | 656 |
| CHAPTER CXXV. | |
| The means of attaining the steadiness of the Turya state | 661 |
| CHAPTER CXXVI. | |
| Description of the spiritual state | 663 |
| CHAPTER CXXVII. | |
| Admonition to Bharadwája | 676 |
| CHAPTER CXXVIII. | |
| Resuscitation of Ráma | 683 |
YOGA VASISHTHA
BOOK VI.
NIRVÁNA-PRAKARANA.
ON ULTIMATE EXTINCTION.
PÚRVÁRDHA.
OR THE FORMER OR FIRST HALF.
PART I.
CHAPTER I.
Description of the evening and Breaking of the Assembly.
Argument.—The close of the day, its announcement, the court breaks for Evening service, and the effect of the Sage's sermon on the Audience.
VÁLMIKI says:—You have heard the relation of the subject of Stoicism or composure of the soul; attend now to that of Nirvána, which will teach you how to attain the final liberation of yourselves[1].
2. As the chief of Sages was saying his magniloquent speech in this manner, and the princes remained mute with their intense attention to the ravishing oration of the Sage:
3. The assembled chiefs remained there as silent and motionless portraits, and forgot their devotions and duties, by being impressed in their minds with the sense and words of the Sage's speech.
4. The assemblage of Saints, was reverently pondering upon the deep sense of the words of the Sage, with their curled brows and signs of their index fingers (indicating their wonder).
5. The ladies in the Seraglio were lost in wonder, and turned upward their wondering eyes, resembling a cluster of black bees, sucking intently the nectarious honey of the new blown flowers (of the Sage's speech).
6. The glorious sun sank down in the sky, at the fourth or last watch of the day; and was shorn of his radiant beams as he was setting in the west (as a man becomes mild with his knowledge, of truth at the end of his journey through life).
7. The winds blew softly at the eve of the day, as if to listen to the sermon of the Sage, and wafted about the sweets of his moving speech, like the fragrance of the gently shaking mandara flowers.
8. All other sounds were drowned in the deep meditation of the audience, as when the humming of the bumble bees, is pushed in their repose, amidst the cell of blooming flowers at night.
9. The bubbling waters of the pearly lakes, sparkled unmoved amidst their embordered beds; as if they were intently attentive to listen to the words of the Sage, which dropped as strings of pearls from his flippant lips. (So the verse of Hafiz affixed to the title page of Sir William Jones' Persian grammar: "Thou hast spoken thy verse, and strung a string of pearls").
10. The pencil of the declining ray penetrating the windows of the palace, bespoke the halting of the departing sun, under the cooling shade of the royal canopy, after his weary journey all along the livelong day.
11. The pearly rays (or bright beams) of the parting day, being covered by the dust and mist of the dusk, it seemed to be besmeared as the body of a dervish with dust and ashes; and had gained its coolness after its journey under the burning sun (The cool and dusky eve of the day is compared with the dust-sprinkled body of the ascetic approaching to his cell).
12. The chiefs of men with their heads and hands decorated with flowers, were so regaled with the sweet speech of the Sage, that they altogether remained enrapt in their senses and minds.
13. The ladies listening to the sage, were now roused by the cries of their infants and the birds in their cages, to get up from the place and to give them their suck and food. (It means that the birds and boys, were alone insensible of the Sage's discourse).
14. Now the dust flung by the pinions of fluttering bees, covered the petals of the night blooming kumuda flowers; and the flapping chouries were now at rest, with the tremulous eyelids of the princes.
15. The rays of the sun, fearing to be waylaid by the dark night shade, which had now got loose from the dark mountain caves, fled through the windows to the inner apartment of the palace (which was already lighted with lamps).
16. The time watches of the royal palace, knowing it to be passed the fourth watch of the day, sounded aloud their drums and trumpets, mingled with the sound of conch-shells, loudly resounding on all sides.
17. The high-sounding speech of the sage, was drowned under the loud peal of the jarring instruments; as the sonorous sound of the peacock, is hushed under the uproar of roaring clouds.
18. The birds in the cages, began to quake and shake their wings with fear; and the leaves and branches of the lofty palm trees, shook in the gardens, as by a tremendous earthquake.
19. The babes sleeping on the breasts of their nurses, trembled with fear at the loud uproar; and they cried as the smoking clouds of the rainy season, resounding between the two mountain craigs resembling the breasts. (It is common in Indian poetry to compare the swelling breasts to rising hills, and say Kucha giri).
20. This noise made the helmets of the chieftains, shed the dust of their decorating flowers all about the hall; as the moving waves of the lake, sprinkle the drops of water upon the land.[2]
21. Thus the palace of Dasharatha being full of trepidation at the close of the day, regained its quiet at the gradual fall of the fanfare of sounding conch shells, and the hubbub of drum beatings at the advance of night.
22. The Sage put a stop to his present discourse, and addressed Ráma then sitting in the midst of the assembly, in a sweet voice and graceful language. (Mudhura-Vritti is the middle or graceful style between the high and low).
23. Vasishtha said:—O Rághava! I have already spread before you the long net of my verbosity; do you entrap your flying mind in the same way, and bring it to your bosom and under your subjection.
24. Take the purport of my discourse in such manner, as to leave out what is unintelligible, and lay hold on its substance; as the swan separates and sucks the milk which is mixed with water.
25. Ponder upon it repeatedly, and consider it well in thy mind, and go on in this way to conduct yourself in life (viz by suppression of your desires, weakening the mind, restraining the breathing, and acquiring of knowledge).
26. By going on in this manner, you are sure to evade all dangers; or else you must fall ere long like the heavy elephant, in some pitfall of the Vindhya mountain. (Pitfalls are the only means of catching elephants).
27. If you do not receive my words with attention, and act accordingly, you are sure to fall into the pit like a blind man left to go alone in the dark; and to be blown away like a lighted lamp, exposed in the open air.
28. In order to derive the benefit of my lectures, you must continue in the discharge of your usual duties with indifference, and knowing insouciance to be the right dictum of the sástras, be you regardless of everything besides.
29. Now I bid you, O mighty monarch, and ye, princes and chiefs, and all ye present in this place, to get up and attend to the evening services of your daily ritual. (Abnika).
30. Let all attend to this much at present, as the day is drawing to its close; and we shall consider the rest, on our meeting in the next morning.
31. Válmíki related:—After the Sage had said so far, the assembly broke, off; and the assembled chiefs and princes rose up, with their faces blooming as the full blown lotuses at the end of the day.
32. The Chiefs having paid their obeisance to the monarch, and made their salutation to Ráma, they did their reverence to the sage, and departed to their respective abodes.
33. Vasishtha rose up from his seat with the royal sage Viswámitra, and they were saluted on their departure by the aerial spirits, who had attended the audience all along.
34. The Sages were followed closely, by the king and chieftains a long way, and they parted after accosting them, according to their rank and dignity on the way;
35. The celestials took their leave of the sage, and betook to their heavenward journey; and the munis repaired to their hermitages in the woods, when some of the saints turned about the palace, like bees flying in about the lotus bush (different directions).
36. The king having offered handfuls of fresh flowers at the feet of Vasishtha, entered the royal seraglio with his royal consorts.
37. But Ráma and his brother princes, kept company with the sage to his hermitage; and having prostrated themselves at his feet, they returned to their princely mansions.
38. The hearers of the sage having arrived at their houses made their ablutions; then worshipped the gods, and offered their offerings to the manes of their ancestors. They then treated their guests and gave alms to beggars.
39. Then they took their meals with their Brahman guests, and members of the family; and their dependants and servants were fed one after the other, according to the rules and customs of their order and caste.
40. After the sun had set down, with the diurnal duties of men, there rose the bright moon on high, with impositions of many nocturnal duties on mankind.
41. At last the great king and the princes, and chiefs of men and the munis, together with the sages and saints, and all other terrestrial beings, betook themselves to their several beds, with silken coverlets and bed cloths of various kinds.
42. They lay thinking intensely in themselves, on the admonitions of the sage Vasishtha; on the mode of their passing over the boisterous gulf of this world, by means of this spiritual knowledge.
43. Then they slept and lay with their closed eyelids, for one watch of the night only; and then opened their eyes, like the opening buds of lotuses, to see the light of the day.
44. Ráma and his brother princes, passed full three watches of the night in waking; and pondering over the deep sense of the lectures, of their spiritual guide—Vasishtha. (The present ritual allots three watches of the night to sleep, while formerly they gave but one watch to it).
45. They slept only one and a half watch of the night, with their closed eye lids; and then they shook off the dullness of their sleep, after driving the lassitude of their bodies by a short nap.
46. Now the minds of these, being full of good will, raised by the rising reason in their souls, and knowledge of truth; they felt the crescent of spiritual light lightening their dark bosoms, as the sextant of the moon, illumes the gloom of night; which afterwards disappeared at the approach of daylight, and the gathering broils of daytime.
CHAPTER II.
On the Perfect Calm and Composure of the Mind.
Argument.—The sages joining the assembly the next morning, and preaching of Divine knowledge to it.
VÁLMIKI related: Then the shade of night, with her face as dark as that of the darkened moon, began to waste and wane away; as the darkness of ignorance and the mists of human wishes, vanish before the light of reason.
2. Now the rising sun showed his crown of golden rays, on the top of the eastern mountain, by leaving his rival darkness to take its rest, beyond the western or his setting mount of astáchala (the two mountains mean the eastern and western horizons).
3. Now the morning breeze began to blow, being moistened by the moon-beams, and bearing the particles of ice, as if to wash the face and eyes of the rising sun.
4. Now rose Ráma and Lakshmana, with their attendants also, from their beds and couches; and after discharging their morning services, they repaired to the holy hermitage of Vasishtha.
5. There they saw the Sage coming out of his closet, after discharge of his morning devotion; and worshipped his feet with offerings of arghya (or flowers and presents worthy of him).
6. In a moment afterwards, the hermitage of the Sage was thronged by munis and Bráhmans, and the other princes and chiefs, whose vehicles and cars and horses and elephants, blocked the pathways altogether.
7. Then the Sage being accompanied by these, and attended by their suite and armies; and followed by Ráma and his brothers, was escorted to the palace of the Sovereign King Dasaratha.
8. The king who had discharged his morning service, hastened to receive the Sage before hand; and walked a great way to welcome him, and do him honour and pay his homage.
9. They entered the court hall, which was adorned with flowers and strings of gems and pearls; and there they seated themselves on the rich sofas and seats, which were set in rows for their reception.
10. In a short time the whole audience of the last day, composed both of the terrestrial men and celestial spirits, were all assembled at the spot, and seated in their respective seats of honor.
11. All these entered that graceful hall, and saluted one another with respect; and then the royal court shone as brilliant as a bed of blooming lotuses, gently moved by the fanning breeze.
12. The mixed assemblage of the munis and rishis or the saints and Sages, and the Vipras and Rájas or the Bráhmans and Kshatriyas, sat in proper order, on seats appropriated for all of them.
13. The soft sounds of their mutual greetings and welcomes, gradually faded away; and the sweet voice of the panegyrists and encomiasts, sitting in a corner of the hall, was all hushed and lulled to silence.
14. The sun-beams appearing through the chinks in the windows, seemed to be waiting in order to join the audience, and to listen to the lectures of the Sage. (Another translation has it thus:—The audience crept in the hall, no sooner the sun-beams peeped through the windows).
15. The jingling sound of bracelets, caused by the shaking of hands of the visitors in the hall; was likely to lull to sleep the hearers of the sage. (It was a custom in olden times, to make a tinkling sound to ear, in order to lull one to sleep, as by a kind of mesmerism).
16. Then as Kumára looked reverently on the countenance of his sire Siva, and as Kacha looked with veneration upon the face of the preceptor of the God or Brihaspati; and as Prahlada gazed upon the face of Shukra—the preceptor of demons, and as Suparna viewed the visage of Krishna.
17. So did Ráma gloat upon the countenance of Vasishtha, and his eye-balls rolled upon it, like the black bees fluttering about a full blown lotus.
18. The sage resumed the link of his last lecture, and delivered his eloquent speech to Ráma, who was well versed in eloquence also.
19. Vasishtha said:—Do you remember Ráma! the lecture that I gave yesterday, which was fraught with deep sense and knowledge of transcendental truth?
20. I will now tell you of some other things for your instruction, and you shall have to hear it with attention, for consummation of your spiritual wisdom.
21. Whereas it is the habit of dispassionateness, and the knowledge of truth; whereby we are enabled to ford over the boisterous ocean of the world, you must learn therefore, O Ráma! to practice and gain these betimes.
22. Your full knowledge of all truth, will drive away your bias in untruth; and your riddance from all desire, will save you from all sorrow. (Desire is a burning fire, but want of yearning is want of pain and sorrowing).
23. There exists but one Brahma, unbounded by space and time; He is never limited by either of them; and is the world himself, though it appears to be a distinct duality beside Him.
24. Brahma abides in all infinity and eternity, and is not limited in any thing; He is tranquil and shines with equal effulgence on all bodies; He cannot be any particular thing, beside his nature of universality.
25. Knowing the nature of Brahma as such, be you freed from the knowledge of your egoism (personality); and knowing yourself as the same with him, think yourself as bodiless and as great as he; and thus enjoy the tranquillity and felicity of your soul.
26. There is neither the mind nor the avidyá (or ignorance), nor the living principle, as distinct things in reality; they are all fictitious terms (for the one and same nameless Brahma himself).
27. It is the self-same Brahma, that exhibits himself in the forms of our enjoyments, in the faculties of enjoying them, in our desires and appetites for the same, and in the mind also for their perception. The great Brahma that is without beginning and end, underlies them all, as the great ocean surrounds the earth (and supplies its moisture to every thing upon it).
28. The same Brahma is seen in the form of his intellect (or wisdom) in heavens, on earth and in the infernal regions, as also in the vegetable and animal creations; and there is nothing else beside him.
29. The same Brahma, who has no beginning nor end, spreads himself like the boundless and unfathomable ocean, under all bodies and things; and in whatever we deem as favourable and unfavourable to us, as our friends and our enemies.
30. The fiction of the mind, like that of a dragon, continues so long, as we are subject to the error and ignorance of taking these words for real things; and are unacquainted with the knowledge of Brahma (as pervading all existence).
31. The error of the mind and its perceptibles, continues as long as one believes his personality to consist in his body; and understands the phenomenal world as a reality; and has the selfishness to think such and such things to be his (since there is nothing which actually belongs to any body, besides its temporary use).
32. So long as you do not raise yourself, by the counsel and in the society of the wise and good; and as long as you do not get rid of your ignorance; you cannot escape from the meanness of your belief in the mind.
33. So long as you do not get loose of your worldly thoughts, and have the light of the universal spirit before your view; you cannot get rid of the contracted thoughts of your mind, yourself and the world.
34. As long as there is the blindness of ignorance, and one's subjection to worldly desires; so long there is the delusion of falsehood also, and the fictions of the fallacious mind.
35. As long as the exhalation of yearnings infest the forest of the heart, the chakora or parrot of reason will never resort to it; but fly far away from the infected air.
36. The errors of thought disappear from that mind, which is unattached to sensual enjoyments; which is cool with its pure inappetency, and which has broken loose from its net of avarice.
37. He who has got rid of his thirst and delusion of wealth, and who is conscious of the inward coolness of his soul, and who possesses the tranquillity of his mind; such a person is said to have fled from the province of his anxious thought.
38. He who looks upon unsubstantial things, as unworthy of his regard and reliance; and who looks upon his body as extraneous to himself; is never misled by the thoughts of his mind.
39. He who meditates on the infinite mind, and sees all forms of things as ectypes of the universal soul; and who views the world absorbed in himself; is never misled by the erroneous conception of the living principle.
40. The partial view of a distinct mind and a living principle, serves but to mislead a man (to the knowledge of erroneous particulars); all which vanish away, at the sight of the rising sun of the one universal soul.
41. Want of the partial view of the mind, gives the full view of one undivided soul; which consumes the particulars, as the vivid fire burns away the dry leaves of trees, and as the sacrificial fire consumes the oblations of ghee or clarified butter.
42. Those men of great souls, who have known the supreme one, and are self-liberated in their lifetime; have their minds without their essences, and which are therefore called asatwas or nonentities. (These minds, says the gloss, are as the watermarks on the sand, after a channel is dried up (or its waters have receded); meaning that the mind remains in its print but not in its substance).
43. The body of the living liberated man, has a mind employed in its duties, but freed from its desires; such minds are not chittas or active agents, but mere sattwas or passive objects. They are no more self-volitive free agents, but are acted upon by their paramount duties. (Free will is responsible for its acts, but compulsion has no responsibility).
44. They that know the truth, are mindless and unmindful of everything save their duty; they rove about at pleasure and discharge their duties by rote and practice, in order any object to gain.
45. They are calm and cold with all their actions and in all their dealings; they have the members of their bodies and their senses under full control, and know no desire nor duality.
46. The saint having his sight fixed upon his inner soul, sees the world burnt down as straws by the fire of his intellect; and finds his erroneous conceptions of the mind, to fly far away from it, like flitting flies from a conflagration.
47. The mind which is purified by reason, is called the sattwa as said above, and does not give rise to error; as the fried paddy seed, is not productive of the plant (The sattwa mind is spiritless and dead in itself).
48. The word Sattwa means the contrary of Chitta, which latter is used in lexicons to mean the mind, that has the quality of being reborn on account of its actions and desires. (The chitta is defined as the living seed of the mind, and productive of acts and future regenerations, which the Sattwa or deadened mind cannot do).
49. You have to attain the attainable Sattwa or torpid state of your mind, and to have the seed of your active mind or chitta, singed by the blaze of your spiritual mind or sattwa.
50. The minds of the learned, which are lighted by reason, are melted down at once to liquidity; but those of the ignorant which are hardened by their worldly desires, will not yield to the force of fire and steel; but continue still to sprout up as the grass, the more they are mowed and put on fire. (The over-growing grass in the fields, though set on fire, will grow again from their unburnt roots, and became as rank as before).
51. Brahma is vast expanse, and such being the vastness of the universe too there is no difference between them; and the intellect of Brahma is as full as the fulness of his essence.
52. The Divine Intellect contains the three worlds, as the pepper has its pungency within itself. Therefore the triple world is not a distinct thing from Brahma, and its existence and inexistence (i.e., its creation and dissolution), are mere fictions of human mind. (It is ever existent in the eternal mind).
53. It is the use of popular language, to speak of existence and non-existence as different things; but they are never so in reality to the right understanding. Since whatever is or is not in being, is ever present in the Divine Mind.
53a. This being a vacuity, contains all things in their vacuous state (which is neither the state of sensible existence, nor that of intellectual inexistence either). God as the Absolute, Eternal, and Spiritual substance, is as void as Thought. (The universe is a thought in the mind of God, and existence is thought and activity in the Divine Mind. Aristotle).
54. If you disbelieve in the intellectual, you can have no belief in your spirituality also; then why fear to die for fear of future retribution, when you leave your body behind to turn to dust. Tell me Ráma! how can you imagine the existence of the world in absence of the intellectual principle. (There can be no material world, without the immaterial mind; nor can you think of it, if you have no mind in you).
55. But if you find by the reasoning of your mind, all things to be mere intellections of the intellect at all times; then say why do you rely on the substantiality of your body.
56. Remember Ráma, your pellucid intellectual and spiritual form, which has no limit nor part of it, but is an unlimited and undivided whole; and mistake not yourself for a limited being by forgetting your true nature.
57. Thinking yourself as such, take all the discreet parts of the universe as forming one concrete whole; and this is the substantial intellect of Brahma.
58. Thou abidest in the womb of thy intellect, and art neither this nor that nor any of the many discrete things interspersed in the universe. Thou art as thou art and last as the End and Nil in thy obvious and yet thy hidden appearances.
59. Thou art contained under no particular category, nor is there any predicable which may be predicated of thee. Yet thou art the substance of every predicament in thy form of the solid, ponderous and calm intellect; and I salute thee in that form of thine.
60. Thou art without beginning and end, and abidest with thy body of solid intellect, amidst the crystal sphere of thy creation, and shining as the pure and transparent sky. Thou art calm and quiet, and yet displayest the wondrous world, as the seed vessel shows the wooden of vegetation.
CHAPTER III.
On the Unity and Universality of Brahma.
Argument.—Showing the identity of Brahma with the Mind, Living Soul, the body and the world and all things and extirpation of all dualisms, by the establishment of one universality.
VASISHTHA continued:—As the countless waves, which are continually rising and falling in the Sea, are no other than its water assuming temporary forms to view; so the intellect exhibits the forms of endless worlds heaving in itself; and know, O sinless Ráma! this intellect to be thy very self or soul. (All personal souls are selfsame with the impersonal Self; because it is in the power of both the finite and infinite souls to produce and reduce the appearance of the worlds in them, which proves them beyond any doubt as the Chidátmá or the Intellectual soul).
2. Say thou that hast the intellectual soul, what relation doth thy immaterial soul bear to the material world, and being freed from thy earthly cares, how canst thou entertain any earthly desire or affection in it. (The spiritual soul has no concern with the material world).
3. It is the Intellect which manifests itself in the forms of living soul or jíva, mind and its desires, and the world and all things; say then what else can it be, to which all these properties are to be attributed (if not to the eternal intellect).
4. The intellect of the Supreme Spirit, is as a profound sea with its huge surges; and yet, O Ráma! it is as calm and cool as thy soul, and as bright and clear, as the transparent firmament.
5. As the heat is not separate from fire, and the fragrance not apart from the flower; and as blackness is inseparable from collyrium, and whiteness from the ice; and as sweet is inborn in the sugarcane, so is intellection inherent in, and unseparated from the intellect.
6. As the light is nothing distinct from the sun-beams, so is intellection no other than the intellect itself; and as the waves are no way distinct from the water; so the universe is in no ways different or disjoined from the nature of the intellect, which contains the universe. (The noumenon contains the phenomenon, and become manifest as the world).
7. The ideas are not apart from the intellect, nor is the ego distinct from the idea of it; the mind is not different from the ego, nor is the living soul any other than the mind.
8. The senses are not separate from the mind, and the body is not unconnected with the senses; the world is the same as the body, and there is nothing apart from the world. (The body is the microcosm of the cosmos [Sanskrit: shuddhabrahmánanda]).
9. Thus the great sphere of universe, is no other than the unbounded sphere of intellect; and they are nothing now done or made, or ever created before (for whatever there is or comes to pass, continues forever in the presence of the intellect).
10. Our knowledge of every thing, is but our reminiscence of the same; and this is to continue for evermore, in the manner of all partial spaces, being contained in infinity, without distinction of their particular localities. (All spaces of place occupied by bodies, are contained in the infinite and unoccupied vacuity of Mind).
11. As all spaces are contained in the endless vacuity, so the vastness of Brahma is contained in the immensity of Brahma; and as truth resides in verity, so in this plenum contained, is the plenitude of Divine mind. (Here Brahma the great means by figure of metonymy, the Brahmánda or vastness of his creation).
12. Seeing the forms of outward things, the intelligent man never takes them to his mind; it is the ignorant only, that set their minds to the worthless things of this world.
13. They are glad to long after what they approve of, for their trouble only in this world; but he who takes these things as nothing, remains free from the pleasure and pain of having or not having them. (So said the wise Socrates:—How many things are here, which I do not want).
14. The apparent difference of the world and the soul of the world, is as false in reality, as the meaning of the words sky and skies, which though taken in their singular and plural senses, still denote the same uniform vacuity. (So the one soul is viewed as many in appearance only).
15. He who remains with the internal purity of his vacant mind, although he observes the customary differences of external things, remains yet as unaffected by the feelings of pain and pleasure, as the insensible block of wood and stone (with his stoical indifference in joy and grief).
16. He who sees his blood-thirsty enemy in the light of a true friend, is the person that sees rightly into the nature of things. (Because the killers of our lives, are the givers of our immortality).
17. As the river uproots the big trees on both its sides, by its rapid currents and deluge; so doth the dispassionate man destroys the feelings of his joy and grief to their very roots.
18. The sage that knows not the nature of the passions and affections, and does not guard himself from their impulse and emotions, is unworthy of the veneration, which awaits upon the character of saints and sages.
19. He who has not the sense of his egoism, and whose mind is not attached to this world; saves his soul from death and confinement, after his departure from this world. (There is a similar text in the Bhagavadgítá, and it is hard to say which is the original one and which is the copy).
20. The belief in one's personality, is as false as one's faith in an unreality, which does not exist; and this wrong notion of its existence, is removed only by one's knowledge of the error, and his riddance from it.
21. He who has extinguished the ardent desire of his mind, like the flame of an oilless lamp; and who remains unshaken under all circumstances, stands as the image of a mighty conqueror of his enemies in painting or statue.
22. O Ráma! that man is said to be truly liberated, who is unmoved under all circumstances, and has nothing to gain or lose in his prosperity or adversity, nor any thing to elate or depress him in either state.