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			Kena  
		- 
		
			Katha  
		- 
		
			Prasna  
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			Taittiriya  
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			Mundaka  
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			Aitareya  
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			Isavasya  
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			Maitrayani  
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			Mandukya  
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			Chandogya  
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			Svetasvatara  
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			Brihadaranyaka    
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			Kaushitaki-Brahmana 
   
 
Minor Upanishads
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			Sita  
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			Atma  
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			Maha  
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			Akshi  
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			Aruni  
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			Surya  
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			Jabala  
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			Savitri  
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			Subala  
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			Varaha  
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			Garbha  
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			Skanda 
   
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			Tripura  
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			Brahma  
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			Kundika  
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			Muktika  
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			Nirvana  
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			Mudgala  
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Kaivalya  
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			Paingala  
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			Sariraka  
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			Mantrika  
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			Maitreya  
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			Sannyasa 
   
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			Avadhuta  
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			Bahvricha  
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			Niralamba  
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			Bhikshuka  
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			Adhyatma  
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			Tejo-Bindu  
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			Annapurna  
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			Katharudra  
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			Sarva-Sara  
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			Nada-Bindu  
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			Yajnavalkya 
   
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			Atma-Bodha  
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			Satyayaniya  
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			Vajrasuchika  
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			Yoga-Tattva  
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			Amrita-Bindu  
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			Para-Brahma  
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			Paramahamsa  
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			Kali-Santarana  
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			Maha-Narayana  
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Narada-Parivrajaka  
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			Turiyatita-Avadhuta  
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			Paramahamsa-Parivrajaka  
 
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		 Brihadaranyaka Upanishad part 4 
		I-vi-1: This (universe) indeed consists of three 
		things: name, form and action. Of those names, speech (sound in general) 
		is the Uktha (source), for all names spring from it. It is their Saman 
		(common feature), for it is common to all names. It is their Brahman 
		(self), for it sustains all names. 
		 
		   I-vi-2: Now of forms the eye (anything visible) is the Uktha 
		(source), for all forms spring from it. It is their Saman (common 
		feature), for it is common to all forms. It is their Brahman (self), for 
		it sustains all forms. 
		 
		   I-vi-3: And of actions the body (activity) is the Uktha (source), for 
		all actions spring from it. It is their Saman (common feature), for it 
		is common to all actions. It is their Brahman (self), for it sustains 
		all actions. These three together are one – this body, and the body, 
		although one, is these three. This immortal entity is covered by truth 
		(the five elements): The vital force is the immortal entity, and name 
		and form and truth; (so) this vital force is covered by them. 
  
		   II-i-1: Om. There was a man of the Garga family 
		called Proud Balaki, who was a speaker. He said to Ajatasatru, the king 
		of Benares, ‘I will tell you about Brahman’. Ajatasatru said, ‘For this 
		proposal I give you a thousand (cows). People indeed rush saying 
		"Janaka, Janaka". (I too have some of his qualities.)’ 
		 
		   II-i-2: Gargya said, ‘That being who is in the sun, I meditate upon 
		as Brahman’. Ajatasatru said, ‘Please don’t talk about him. I meditate 
		upon him as all-surpassing, as the head of all beings and as 
		resplendent. He who meditates upon him as such becomes all-surpassing, 
		the head of all beings and resplendent. 
		 
		   II-i-3: Gargya said, ‘that being who is in the moon, I meditate upon 
		as Brahman’. Ajatasatru said, "Please don’t talk about him. I meditate 
		upon him as the great, white-robed, radiant Soma.’ He who meditates upon 
		him as such has abundant Soma pressed in his principal and auxiliary 
		sacrifices every day, and his food never gets short. 
		 
		   II-i-4: Gargya said, ‘That being who is in lightning, I meditate upon 
		as Brahman’. Ajatasatru said, "Please don’t talk about him. I meditate 
		upon him as powerful’. He who meditates upon him as such becomes 
		powerful, and his progeny too becomes powerful. 
		 
		   II-i-5: Gargya said, ‘This being who is in the ether, I meditate upon 
		as Brahman’. Ajatasatru said, "Please don’t talk about him. I meditate 
		upon him as full and unmoving’. He who meditates upon him as such is 
		filled with progeny and cattle, and his progeny is never extinct from 
		this world. 
		 
		   II-i-6: Gargya said, ‘This being who is in air, I meditate upon as 
		Brahman’. Ajatasatru said, "Please don’t talk about him. I meditate upon 
		him as the Lord, as irresistible, and as the unvanquished army.’ He who 
		meditates upon him as such ever becomes victorious and invincible, and 
		conquers his enemies. 
		 
		   II-i-7: Gargya said, ‘This being who is in fire, I meditate upon as 
		Brahman’. Ajatasatru said, "Please don’t talk about him. I meditate upon 
		him as forbearing’. He who meditates upon him as such becomes 
		forbearing, and his progeny too becomes forbearing. 
		 
		   II-i-8: Gargya said, ‘This being who is in water, I meditate upon as 
		Brahman’. Ajatasatru said, "Please don’t talk about him. I meditate upon 
		him as agreeable’. He who meditates upon him as such has only agreeable 
		things coming to him, and not contrary ones; also from him are born 
		children who are agreeable. 
		 
		   II-i-9: Gargya said, ‘This being who is in a looking-glass, I 
		meditate upon as Brahman’. Ajatasatru said, "Please don’t talk about 
		him. I meditate upon him as shining’. He who meditates upon him as such 
		becomes shining, and his progeny too becomes shining. He also outshines 
		all those with whom he comes in contact. 
		 
		   II-i-10: Gargya said, ‘This sound that issues behind a man as he 
		walks, I meditate upon as Brahman’. Ajatasatru said, "Please don’t talk 
		about him. I meditate upon him as life’. He who meditates upon him as 
		such attains his full term of life in this world, and life does not 
		depart from him before the completion of that term. 
		 
		   II-i-11: Gargya said, ‘This being who is in the quarters, I meditate 
		upon as Brahman’. Ajatasatru said, "Please don’t talk about him. I 
		meditate upon him as second and as non-separating’. He who meditates 
		upon him as such gets companions, and his followers never depart from 
		him. 
		 
		   II-i-12: Gargya said, ‘This being who identifies himself with the 
		shadow, I meditate upon as Brahman’. Ajatasatru said, "Please don’t talk 
		about him. I meditate upon him as death’. He who meditates upon him as 
		such attains his full term of life in this world, and death does not 
		overtake him before the completion of that term. 
		 
		   II-i-13: Gargya said, ‘This being who is in the self, I meditate upon 
		as Brahman’. Ajatasatru said, "Please don’t talk about him. I meditate 
		upon him as self-possessed.’ He who meditates upon him as such becomes 
		self-possessed, and his progeny too becomes self-possessed. Gargya 
		remained silent. 
		 
		   II-i-14: Ajatasatru said, ‘is this all ?’ ‘This is all’. ‘By knowing 
		this much one cannot know (Brahman)’. Gargya said, ‘I approach you as a 
		student’. 
		 
		   II-i-15: Ajatasatru said, ‘It is contrary to usage that a Brahmana 
		should approach a Kshatriya thinking, "he will teach me about Brahman". 
		However I will instruct you’. Taking Gargya by the hand he rose. They 
		came to a sleeping man. (Ajatasatru) addressed him by these names, 
		Great, White-robed, radiant, Soma’. The man did not get up. (The King) 
		pushed him with the hand till he awoke. Then he got up. 
		 
		   II-i-16: Ajatasatru said, ‘When this being full of consciousness 
		(identified with the mind) was thus asleep, where was it, and whence did 
		it thus come ?’ Gargya did not know that.  
		 
		   II-i-17: Ajatasatru said, ‘When this being full of consciousness is 
		thus asleep, it absorbs at the time the functions of the organs through 
		its own consciousness, and lies in the Akasa (Supreme Self) that is in 
		the heart. When this being absorbs them, it is called Svapiti. Then the 
		nose is absorbed, the organ of speech is absorbed, the eye is absorbed, 
		the ear is absorbed, and the mind is absorbed’. 
		 
		   II-i-18: When it thus remains in the dream state, these are its 
		achievements: It then becomes an emperor, as it were, or a noble 
		Brahmana, as it were, or attains states high or low, as it were. As an 
		emperor, taking his citizens, moves about as he pleases in his own 
		territory, so does it, thus taking the organs, move about as it pleases 
		in its own body. 
		 
		   II-i-19: Again when it becomes fast asleep – when it does not know 
		anything – it comes back along the seventy-two thousand nerves called 
		Hita, which extend from the heart to the pericardium (the whole body), 
		and remains in the body. As a baby, or an emperor, or a noble Brahmana 
		lives, having attained the acme of bliss, so does it remain. 
		 
		   II-i-20: As a spider moves along the thread (it produces), and as 
		from a fire tiny sparks fly in all directions, so from this Self emanate 
		all organs, all worlds, all gods and all beings. Its secret name 
		(Upanishad) is ‘the Truth of Truth’. The vital force is truth, and It is 
		the Truth of that. 
  
		   II-ii-1: He who knows the calf with its abode, its 
		special resort, its post and its tether kills his seven envions kinsmen: 
		the vital force in the body is indeed the calf; this body is its abode, 
		the head its special resort, strength its post, and food its tether. 
		 
		   II-ii-2: These seven gods that prevent decay worship it: Through 
		these pink lines in the eye Rudra attends on it; through the water that 
		is in the eye, Parjanya; through the pupil, the sun; through the dark 
		portion, fire; through the white portion, Indra; through the lower 
		eye-lid the earth attends on it; and through the upper eye-lid, heaven. 
		He who knows it as such never has any decrease of food. 
		 
		   II-ii-3: Regarding this there is the following pithy verse: ‘there is 
		a bowl that has its opening below and bulges at the top; various kinds 
		of knowledge have been put in it; seven sages sit by its side, and the 
		organ of speech, which has communication with the Vedas, is the eighth’. 
		The ‘bowl that has its opening below and bulges at the top’ is the head 
		of ours, for it is the bowl that has its opening below and bulges at the 
		top. ‘various kinds of knowledge have been put in it’, refers to the 
		organs; these indeed represent various kinds of knowledge. ‘Seven sages 
		sit by its side’, refers to the organs; they indeed are the sages. ‘The 
		organ of speech, which has communication with the Vedas, is the eighth’, 
		because the organ of speech is the eighth and communicates with the 
		Vedas. 
		 
		   II-ii-4: These two (ears) are Gotama and Bharadvaja: this one is 
		Gotama, and this one is Bharadvaja: These two (eyes) are Visvamitra and 
		Jamadagni: this one is Visvamitra, and this one Jamadagni. These two 
		(nostrils) are Vasistha, and Kashyapa: this one is Vasistha, and this 
		one Kashyapa: the tongue is Atri, for through the tongue food is eaten. 
		‘Atri’ is but this name ‘Atti’. He who knows it as such becomes the 
		eater of all, and everything becomes his food. 
  
		   II-iii-1: Brahman has but two forms – gross and 
		subtle, mortal and immortal, limited and unlimited, defined and 
		undefined. 
		 
		   II-iii-2: The gross (form) is that which is other than air and the 
		ether. It is mortal, it is limited, and it is defined. The essence of 
		that which is gross, mortal, limited and defined is the sun that shines, 
		for it is the essence of the defined. 
		 
		   II-iii-3: Now the subtle – it is air and the ether. It is immortal, 
		it is unlimited, and it is undefined. The essence of that which is 
		subtle, immortal, unlimited and undefined is the being that is in the 
		sun, for that is the essence of the undefined. This is with reference to 
		the gods. 
		 
		   II-iii-4: Now with reference to the body: the gross form is but this 
		– what is other than (the corporeal) air and the ether that is in the 
		body. It is mortal, it is limited and it is defined. The essence of that 
		which is gross, mortal, limited and defined is the eye, for it is the 
		essence of the defined. 
		 
		   II-iii-5: Now the subtle – it is (the corporeal) air and the ether 
		that is in the body. It is immortal, it is unlimited, and it is 
		undefined. The essence of that which is subtle, immortal, unlimited and 
		undefined is this being that is in the right eye, for this is the 
		essence of the undefined. 
		 
		   II-iii-6: The form of that ‘being’ is as follows: like a cloth dyed 
		with turmeric, or like grey sheep’s wool, or like the (scarlet) insect 
		called Indragopa, or like a tongue of fire, or like a white lotus, or 
		like a flash of lightning. He who knows it as such attains splendour 
		like a flash of lightning. Now therefore the description (of Brahman): 
		‘Not this, not this’. Because there is no other and more appropriate 
		description than this ‘Not this’. Now Its name: ‘The Truth of truth’. 
		The vital force is truth, and It is the Truth of that. 
  
		Brihadaranyaka Upanishad -
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