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VAGASANEYI-SAMHITA-UPANISHAD
sometimes called
ISAVASYA or ISA-UPANISHAD
1. ALL this, whatsoever moves on
earth, is to be hidden in the Lord (the Self). When
thou hast surrendered all this, then thou mayest
enjoy. Do not covet the wealth of any man!
2. Though a man may wish to live a
hundred years, performing works, it will be thus
with him; but not in any other way: work will thus
not cling to a man.
3. There are the worlds of the
Asuras covered with blind darkness. Those who have
destroyed their self (who perform works, without
having arrived at a knowledge of the true Self), go
after death to those worlds.
4. That one (the Self), though never
stirring, is swifter than thought. The Devas
(senses) never reached it, it walked before them.
Though standing still, it overtakes the others who
are running. Matarisvan (the wind, the moving
spirit) bestows powers on it.
5. It stirs and it stirs not; it is
far, and likewise near. It is inside of all this,
and it is outside of all this.
6. And he who beholds all beings in
the Self, and the Self in all beings, he never
turns away from it.
7. When to a man who understands,
the Self has become all things, what sorrow, what
trouble can there be to him who once beheld that
unity?
8. He (the Self) encircled all,
bright, incorporeal, scatheless, without muscles,
pure, untouched by evil ; a seer, wise,
omnipresent, self-existent, he disposed all things
rightly for eternal years.
9. All who worship what is not real
knowledge (good works), enter into blind darkness :
those who delight in real knowledge, enter, as it
were, into greater darkness.
10. One thing, they say, is obtained
from real knowledge; another, they say, from what
is not knowledge. Thus we have heard from the wise
who taught us this.
11. He who knows at the same time
both knowledge and not-knowledge, overcomes death
through not-knowledge, and obtains immortality
through knowledge.
12. All who worship what is not the
true cause, enter into blind darkness: those who
delight in the true cause, enter, as it were, into
greater darkness.
13. One thing, they say, is obtained
from (knowledge of) the cause; another, they say,
from (knowledge of) what is not the cause. Thus we
have heard from the wise who taught us this.
14. He who knows at the same time
both the cause and the destruction (the perishable
body), overcomes death by destruction (the
perishable body), and obtains immortality through
(knowledge of ) the true cause.
15. The door of the True is covered
with a golden disk. Open that, O Pushan, that we
may see the nature of the True.
16. O Pushan, only seer, Yama
(judge), Surya (sun), son of Pragapati, spread thy
rays and gather them! The light which is thy
fairest form, I see it. I am what He is (viz. the
person in the sun).
17. Breath to air, and to the
immortal! Then this my body ends in ashes. Om!
Mind, remember! Remember thy deeds! Mind, remember!
Remember thy deeds!
18. Agni, lead us on to wealth
(beatitude) by a good path, thou, O God, who
knowest all things! Keep far from us crooked evil,
and we shall offer thee the fullest praise! (Rv. 1,
189, I.) |