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Kena
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Katha
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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 9
IV-i-1: Om. Janaka, Emperor of Videha, took his seat,
when there came Yajnavalkya. Janaka said to him, ‘Yajnavalkya, what has
brought you here ? To have some animals, or to hear some subtle
questions asked ?’ ‘Both, O Emperor’, said Yajnavalkya.
IV-i-2: ‘Let me hear what any one of your teachers may have told
you’. ‘Jitvan, the son of Silina, has told me that the organ of speech
(fire) is Brahman’. ‘As one who has a mother, a father and a teacher
should say, so has the son of Silina said this – that the organ of
speech is Brahman, for what can a person have who cannot speak? But did
he tell you about its abode (body) and support?’ ‘No, he did not’. ‘This
Brahman is only one-footed, O Emperor’. ‘Then you tell us, Yajnavalkya’.
‘The organ of speech is its abode, and the ether (the Undifferentiated)
its support. It should be meditated upon as intelligence’. ‘What is
intelligence, Yajnavalkya ?’ ‘The organ of speech itself, O Emperor’,
said Yajnavalkya, ‘through the organ of speech, O Emperor, friend is
known; The Rig-Veda, Yajur-Veda, Sama-Veda, Atharvangirasa, (Vedic)
history, mythology, arts, Upanishads, verses, aphorisms, elucidations
and explanations, (the effects of) sacrifices, (of) offering oblations
in the fire and (of) giving food and drink, this world and the next, and
all beings are known through the organ of speech alone, O Emperor. The
organ of speech, O Emperor, is the supreme Brahman. The organ of speech
never leaves him who, knowing thus, meditates upon it, all beings
eagerly come to him, and being a god, he attains the gods.’ ‘I give you
a thousand cows with a bull like an elephant’, said Emperor Janaka.
Yajnavalkya replied, ‘My father was of opinion that one should not
accept (wealth) from a disciple without fully instructing him’.
IV-i-3: ‘Let me hear whatever any one may have told you’. ‘Udanka,
the son of Sulba, has told me that the vital force (Vayu) is Brahman’.
‘As one who has a mother, a father and a teacher should say, so has the
son of Sulba said this – that the vital force is Brahman, for what can a
person have who does not live ? But did he tell you about its abode
(body) and support ?’ ‘No, he did not’. ‘This Brahman is only
one-footed, O Emperor’. ‘Then you tell us, Yajnavalkya’. ‘The vital
force is its abode, and the ether (the Undifferentiated) its support. It
should be meditated upon as dear’. ‘What is dearness, Yajnavalkya ?’ The
vital force itself, O Emperor’, said Yajnavalkya; ‘for the sake of the
vital force, O Emperor, a man performs sacrifices for one for whom they
should not be performed, and accepts gifts one from whom they should not
be accepted, and it is for the sake of the vital force, O Emperor, that
one runs the risk of one’s life in any quarter one may go to. The vital
force, O Emperor, is the Supreme Brahman. The vital force never leaves
him who, knowing thus, meditates upon it, all beings eagerly come to
him, and being a god, he attains the gods’. ‘I give you a thousand cows
with a bull like an elephant’, said Emperor Janaka. Yajnavalkya replied,
‘My father was of opinion that one should not accept (wealth) from a
disciple without fully instructing him’.
IV-i-4: ‘Let me hear whatever any one may have told
you’. ‘Barku, the son of Vrsna, has told me that the eye (sun) is
Brahman’. ‘As one who has a mother, a father and a teacher should say,
so has the son of Vrsna said this – that the eye is Brahman. For what
can a person have who cannot see ? But did he tell you about its abode
(body) and support ?’ ‘No, he did not’. ‘This Brahman is only
one-footed, O Emperor’. ‘Then you tell us, Yajnavalkya’. ‘The eye is its
abode, and the ether (the Undifferentiated) its support. It should be
meditated upon as truth’. ‘What is truth, Yajnavalkya?’ ‘’The eye
itself, O Emperor’, said Yajnavalkya; if a person, O Emperor, says to
one who has seen with his eyes, "Have you seen ?" and the latter
answers, "Yes, I have", then it is true. The eye, O Emperor, is the
Supreme Brahman. The eye never leaves him who, knowing thus, meditates
upon it; all beings eagerly come to him; and being a god, he attains the
gods’. ‘I give you a thousand cows with a bull like an elephant’, said
Emperor Janaka. Yajnavalkya replied, ‘My father was of opinion that one
should not accept (wealth) from a disciple without fully instructing
him’.
IV-i-5: ‘Let me hear whatever any one may have told you’.
‘Gardabhivipita, of the line of Bharadvaja, has told me that the ear
(the quarters) is Brahman’. ‘As one who has a mother, a father and a
teacher should say, so has the descendant of Bharadvaja said this – that
the ear is Brahman. For what can a person have who cannot hear ? But did
he tell you about its abode (body) and support ?’ ‘No, he did not’.
‘This Brahman is only one-footed, O Emperor’. ‘Then you tell us,
Yajnavalkya’. ‘The ear is its abode, and the ether (the
Undifferentiated) its support. It should be meditated upon as infinite’.
‘What is infinity, Yajnavalkya ?’ ‘The quarters themselves, O Emperor’,
said Yajnavalkya; ‘therefore, O Emperor, to whatever direction one may
go, one never reaches its end. (Hence) the quarters are infinite. The
quarters, O Emperor, are the ear, and the ear, O Emperor, is the Supreme
Brahman. The ear never leaves him who, knowing thus, meditates upon it;
all beings eagerly come to him; and being a god, he attains the gods’.
‘I give you a thousand cows with a bull like an elephant’, said Emperor
Janaka. Yajnavalkya replied, ‘My father was of opinion that one should
not accept (wealth) from a disciple without fully instructing him’.
IV-i-6: ‘Let me hear whatever any one may have told you’. ‘Satyakama,
the son of Jabala, has told me that the Manas (here, the moon) is
Brahman’. ‘As one who has a mother, a father and a teacher should say,
so has the son of Jabala said this – that the Manas is Brahman. For what
can a person have without the Manas ? But did he tell you about its
abode (body) and support ?’ ‘No, he did not’. ‘This Brahman is only
one-footed, O Emperor’. ‘Then you tell us, Yajnavalkya’. ‘The Manas is
its abode, and the ether (the Undifferentiated) its support. It should
be meditated upon as bliss’. ‘What is bliss, Yajnavalkya ?’ ‘The manas
itself, O Emperor’, said Yajnavalkya; ‘with the Manas, O Emperor, a man
(fancies and) woos a woman. A son resembling him is born of her, and he
is the cause of bliss. The Manas, O Emperor, is the Supreme Brahman. The
Manas never leaves him who, knowing thus, meditates upon it; all beings
eagerly come to him; and being a god, he attains the gods’. ‘I give you
a thousand cows with a bull like an elephant’, said Emperor Janaka.
Yajnavalkya replied, ‘My father was of opinion that one should not
accept (wealth) from a disciple without fully instructing him’.
IV-i-7: ‘Let me hear whatever any one may have told you’. ‘Vidagdha,
the son of Sakala, has told me that the heart (mind, here, Prajapati )
is Brahman’. ‘As one who has a mother, a father and a teacher should
say, so has the son of Sakala said this – that the heart is Brahman. For
what can a person have without the heart ? But did he tell you about its
abode (body) and support ?’ ‘No, he did not’. ‘This Brahman is only
one-footed, O Emperor’. ‘Then you tell us, Yajnavalkya’. ‘The heart is
its abode, and the ether (the Undifferentiated) its support. It should
be meditated upon as stability’. ‘What is stability, Yajnavalkya ?’ ‘The
heart itself, O Emperor’, said Yajnavalkya; ‘the heart, O Emperor, is
the abode of all beings, and the heart, O Emperor, is the support of all
beings; on the heart, O Emperor, all beings rest; the heart, O Emperor,
is the Supreme Brahman. The heart never leaves him who, knowing thus,
meditates upon it; all beings eagerly come to him; and being a god, he
attains the gods’. ‘I give you a thousand cows with a bull like an
elephant’, said Emperor Janaka. Yajnavalkya replied, ‘My father was of
opinion that one should not accept (wealth) from a disciple without
fully instructing him’.
IV-ii-1: Janaka, Emperor of Videha, rose from his
lounge and approaching Yajnavalkya said, ‘Salutations to you,
Yajnavalkya, please instruct me’. Yajnavalkya replied, ‘As one wishing
to go a long distance, O Emperor, should secure a chariot or a boat, so
have you fully equipped your mind with so many secret names (of
Brahman). You are likewise respected and wealthy, and you have studied
the Vedas and heard the Upanishads; (but) where will you go when you are
separated from this body ?’ ‘I do not know, sir, where I shall go’.
‘Then I will tell you where you will go’. ‘Tell me, sir’.
IV-ii-2: This being who is in the right eye is named Indha. Though he
is Indha, he is indirectly called Indra, for the gods have a fondness,
as it were, for indirect names, and hate to be called directly.
IV-ii-3: The human form that is in the left eye is his wife, Viraj
(matter). The space that is within the heart is their place of union.
Their food is the lump of blood (the finest essence of what we eat) in
the heart. Their wrap is the net-like structure in the heart. Their road
for moving is the nerve that goes upward from the heart; it is like a
hair split into a thousand parts. In this body there are nerves called
Hita, which are placed in the heart. Through these the essence of our
food passes as it moves on. Therefore the subtle body has finer food
than the gross body.
IV-ii-4: Of the sage (who is identified with the vital force), the
east is the eastern vital force, the south the southern vital force, the
west the western vital force, the north the northern vital force, the
direction above the upper vital force, the direction below the nether
vital force, and all the quarters the different vital forces. This self
is That which has been described as ‘Not this, Not this’, ‘It is
imperceptible, for It is never perceived; undecaying, for It never
decays; unattached, for It is never attached; unfettered – It never
feels pain, and never suffers injury. You have attained That which is
free from fear, O Janaka’, said Yajnavalkya. ‘Revered Yajnavalkya’, said
Emperor Janaka, ‘may That which is free from fear be yours, for you have
made That which is free from fear known to us. Salutations to you ! Here
is this (empire of) Videha, as well as myself at your service !’
Brihadaranyaka Upanishad -
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