Foreword
Preface
About Author
Chapter Index
- Despondency of
Arjuna.
- Sankhya and
Yoga
- Karmayoga
- Sankhyayoga
- Renunciation
- Dhyanayoga
- Wisdom and
Knowledge
- The Imperishable
Brahman
- The Esoteric
Knowledge
- Divine
Manifestations
- The Universal
Form
- Bhaktiyoga
- The Field andKnower of
the Field
- The Three
Qualities
- The Supreme
Person
- The Divine and
Demoniacal Natures
- Three Kinds of
Faith
- Release
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Chapter Fourteenth
O Master, glory to you. You are the
greatest among all gods, the morning sun that gives light in the form of
intelligence and the dawn of happiness. You are the resting place of all,
the one who brings about the experience of the idea; "I am myself the
Supreme Brahman" and the ocean in which the waves rock all the worlds.
Glory to you. O friend of the poor, you are the eternal sea of compassion
and the Lord of the bride in the form of Brahmic lore. To' those from whom
you hide yourself, you show this world appearance and to those to whom you
disclose yourself, you make it appear that you are all. The magician
performs magic by deluding the vision of others. But your sport is so
wonderful that you make them forget themselves (1-5). You impart
self-knowledge to some, but bring others under the sway of Maya; such is
your skill, I bow to you. It is you who have given sweetness to the water
and forgiveness to the earth. It is because of your power of splendour
that the sun and the moon, which are mere shells, illumine the three
worlds. It is because of your divine power that the wind blows and the sky
plays the game of hide and seek. All this is your limitless Maya, and
knowledge too secures its vision from you. Enough of this because even the
Vedas suffer fatigue while describing you (6-10). The Vedas proceed with
their description so long as they do not get a glimpse of you, but on
realising you, both the Vedas and we come on the common plane of muteness.
When the world is in deluge, drops of water do not count and even the big
rivers cannot be spotted out. When the sun rises on the horizon, even the
moon looks Lustreless like the glow-worm. In the same way, both the Vedas
and we are reduced to the same level, when we are pitted against you. How
can I describe you, before whom the notion of duality disappears and both
the most inarticulate (para) and the articulate speech
(vaikhary) become mute. It is, therefore, meet that I should stop
praising you and prostrate myself at your feet (11-15).
Therefore, I bow to you. O Master, in whatever form you
may be. Please be my financier to make this my business of composition
fruitful and release the capital in the form of your grace. Then pour this
capital into the bag of my intellect and bestow upon me the gift of
versification of knowledge. Then I shall labour with love and adorn the
ears of the saints with beautiful ear-rings in the from of discriminating
knowledge. O my Master, I wish to discover the hidden treasure in the form
of the import of the Gita and so I beg you to put in my eyes collyrium in
the form of your affection (so that I can see the treasure). Kindly shed
on me your pure light from the solar disc in the form of your compassion
(16-20). O merciful Master, please act like the spring and make the
beautiful creeper in the form of my intellect fruitful with poetry. Kindly
pour on me your generous and kind glance, so that the Ganges in the form
of my intellect will become overfull with the import of the Gita. Oh
refuge of the universe, just as the moon makes the full moon night lovely,
so let your grace be the source of inspiration to me. At the sight of this
moon, the sea of my knowledge will swell into full tide and make the
channels of my poetic genius overflow with the nine sentiments.
Hearing these words, the Master was thoroughly pleased
and said, "By way of praising me, you are unnecessarily promoting the
sense of duality (21-25). Leave this praise alone and take up seriously
the subject of knowledge. Explain it well and do not allow the interest of
the hearers to flag." (On this Shri Jnanadeva said:) O Lord, I was only
waiting for you to say, 'proceed 'with your discourse.' The Doob grass is
naturally ever green and now it has received the ambrosial shower. Since I
have received the grace of my Guru, I shall now give a detailed and
eloquent exposition of the meaning of each and every word in the Gita.
This exposition will remove all the lingering doubts in the minds of the
hearers and whet their appetite to hear more and more (26-30). I seek the
favour of my preceptor so that sweet and sound words will come out of my
mouth.
In the last chapter, Lord Krishna had told Arjuna that
the universe takes birth from the union of the Self and the prakriti and
the Self becomes involved in worldly life because of his association with
her qualities (gunas). As the Self comes under the sway of prakriti, he
has to experience pleasure and pain, and when he goes beyond the
qualities, he attains salvation. How the unattached Self becomes attached
to the prakriti, how and in what manner the Self is united with the
prakriti, how he comes to experience pleasure and pain (31-35), how many
are the qualities and of what nature, how the qualities lead to bondage
and what are the characteristics of a person who transcends the qualities
- all these matters are described in the fourteenth chapter. Now hear the
opinion held by the Lord of the universe who resides in Vaikuntha. The
Lord said, O Arjuna, gather all your hearing faculties together and
comprehend this knowledge. I had earlier explained this knowledge to you
in many ways, but I find that you have not been able to grasp it yet
{36-40).
The blessed Lord said,
- I shall again proclaim the wisdom, the highest of all knowledges,
knowing which all the sages have attained liberation from here.
Now, I shall tell you again the meaning of the word
highest (para), which is applied to the spiritual knowledge by
the scriptures. The other knowledge's do not take us beyond worldly
existence and heaven and so the word 'highest' has been used to indicate
that the knowledge of the Self is 'beyond' them. I call this knowledge
of the Self as highest, because this knowledge is like Are and the other
knowledge's mere straw before it. That knowledge's which esteem only
worldly life and heaven, which value only works such as sacrificial
rites. Which entertain the notion of duality, appear like dreams before
this knowledge of the Self. Just as the whirlwind gets dissolved in the
sky (41-45) or the moon and other stars lose their splendour with the
rising of the sun, or deluge obliterates all distinction between small
and great rivers, so all other knowledge's are dissolved with the dawn
of Self-knowledge. It is for this reason, O Arjuna; we call the latter
the 'highest' knowledge. O son of Pandu, that pristine state which is
within us from time immemorial, known as complete deliverance, is
attained only through this knowledge. With the realisation of this
knowledge, the thoughtful persons do not allow worldly existence to
raise its head. By withdrawing the mind from the sense-objects, they
become tranquil and do not come under the sway of the body, even though
possessed of the body (46-50). Then they cross over the hedge of the
body and come up to the same level as myself with an equable mind.
- Having token refuge in this wisdom, they have reached My likeness;
so they are not reborn at the time of creation nor do they suffer at the
time of dissolution.
For, O Arjuna, they have become eternal like me and
have attained perfection. They too become like me limitless, blissful
and established in Truth. Then there remains no distinction between them
and me. They become like me, of the same magnitude and nature. Just as
with the destruction of the jar the space within the jar merges with the
akasha, or the wick flames lit up from a lamp, when mingled, give the
same light as the original lamp (51-55), with the elimination of the
notion of duality, such distinctions as 'I' and 'you' vanish and they
all enjoy company of one another. Therefore, when the time for the
creation of the world arrives, they do not have rebirth. So when they
are not bound by the body while alive, how can they meet with death at
the time of dissolution? O winner of wealth, those, who pursuing this
knowledge have become one with me, have transcended the cycle of births
and deaths. In this manner, the Lord praised this knowledge of the Self
in order to create a liking for it in the mind of Partha (56-60). At
that time, Arjuna had reached such a state that he was all ears and
attentive to what the Lord was telling. He was trying to understand with
rapt attention the Lord's discourse, which could not be encompassed by
the sky. Then the Lord said, "I have in you, O Arjuna, a listener equal
for my discourse. So my eloquence has found a suitable mate in your
knowledge. Now I shall tell you how though single, I am bound in the
fetters of the body by the hunter in the form of the three qualities and
how I create this world in association with the prakriti (61-65).
Because of my union with prakriti, beings are produced from my seed and
so the prakriti is known as the Field.
- Prakriti is My womb wherein I place the seed. From that, O Bharata,
ensues the birth of all beings.
Since this prakriti is the resting place of the Great
Principle (mahat) and others, she is known as mahad-brahman. O Arjuna,
since all modifications take place because of her, she is called the
mahad-brahman. The advocates of the doctrine of the unmanifest call it
Unmanifest, the Sankhyas call it prakriti and. O the best among the
wise, the Vedantists name it Maya. But why say more? What is known as
ignorance is this (66-70). O winner of wealth, ignorance is that by
reason of which we forget our essential nature. A special feature of
this ignorance is that it is not discernible when we think of our
essential nature, just as when we take up the lamp darkness vanishes, or
just as cream is dissolved in the milk when it is heated and stirred up,
but appears when it is only heated. Ignorance is like deep sleep, which
is not the wakeful state nor dream nor samadhi, just as the sky becomes
quiet when the wind stops (71-75). As one cannot determine whether what
one sees yonder is a pillar or a person, so one cannot say anything
definite what - the Self is or whether it is something different. When
there is neither day nor night but a period of twilight known as the
evening, so ignorance is neither knowledge nor its opposite, but some
state which is intermediate between the two. When the Self is covered by
ignorance, it is called the embodied Self give or the knower of the
field (kshetrajna). That it does not know its essential nature and
promotes ignorance is the special feature of the knower of the field
(76-80). You should grasp firmly this union between the Self and the
Maya, because this union is the natural trait of the Self. It is because
of his union with prakriti that the Self forgets his pristine nature and
assumes a different form. This is in the same way as the pauper becomes
deluded and raves, 'behold the king is coming' referring to himself or a
person who has just recovered from a swoon says, 'I had been to the
heaven.' Thus when a person's vision strays away from the essential
nature of the Self, whatever he perceives is the world, which is created
from myself. A person, although single, becomes deluded by a dream and
sees himself in diverse forms. This is what happens to the embodied
self. when he forgets his essential nature (81-85).
I shall elucidate this proposition to you in another
way, by which you would experience it. This avidya (ignorance) is my
consort, and she is ever young, beginningless and of ' indescribable
qualities. She has no definite form, her sphere of activity is immense
and she remains close to the ignorant and away from the wise. She is
wide awake while I am asleep and she conceives by virtue of her union
with the Supreme Self. And in the womb of this elemental nature, grows
the foetus of eightfold modification (86-90). From her union with the
Self is born the Great Principle and from the latter the mind. From the
tender feeling (mamata) arises egoism and from egoism the Ave gross
elements. As the sense organs and their objects are intimately
associated with the gross elements, they are also generated along with
them. When the passions flare up with the backing of the three
qualities. they immediately give rise to inchoate cravings. Just as the
seed, coming into contact with water, sprouts (91-95), so when the Maya
is united with me, she bears diverse shoots in the form of the universe.
O prince among the wise, hear now how this embryo takes different forms.
From this embryo arise four different orders, according as they born
from the egg (andaja) from the sweat (svedaja), from sprouts (udbhija)
and the womb (jaraja) That which is formed chiefly from the combination
of the sky and wind is known as andaja. That which contains chiefly a
combination of water and fire with rajas and tamas qualities is called
svedaja (96-100). That which consists predominantly of water and earth
combined with the inferior quality tamas is called the udbhija And that
order which consists of the five senses of knowledge and five senses of
action, combined with mind and intellect is known as jaraja. Thus the
Maya has given birth to a queer child, of which these four orders form
its hands and feet, the eight-fold prakriti its head, activity is its
protruding belly, renunciation its straight back, the eight orders of
deities the body above the waist, the blissful heaven its neck, the
mortal world its trunk and the nether world the body below the waist
(101-105). The expansion of the three worlds is the buxom health of the
child and the eighty-four lakhs of species are the joints of its bodily
frame. When this child began to grow, the Maya adorned its different
limbs in the form of many bodies with ever new ornaments and suckled it
with her milk in the form of infatuation. She has decked its Angers in
the form of the different worlds with rings.
After giving birth to this single child consisting of
the animate and inanimate universe, this beautiful and captivating Maya
felt very proud of herself (106-110). God Brahma, God Vishnu and God
Shiva are respectively the morning, the noon and the evening to this
child. After laying out this play of the universe, the child (feeling
fatigued) goes to sleep on the bed of the world-dissolution and wakes up
at the dawn of the epoch through false knowledge. In this way the child
grows and takes strides in the form of the recurring succession of
epochs in the house of ignorance. This child, with volition as its
friend and egoism as its playmate, meets its death only through real
knowledge. Now I shall stop this elaborate discussion and tell you
simply that this Maya gave birth to this universe, only with the aid of
my power (111-115).
- Whatever forms are born in all wombs, O son of Kunti, of them the
prakriti is the womb and I the father, who plants the seed.
For this reason, O Arjuna, I am the father and the Maya
the mother of this universe, which is our offspring. Now do not consider
these bodies as distinct, because the mind, intellect, the senses and
the elements are all the same. Are there not different organs in one and
the same body? So this variegated world has sprung from a single entity.
Just as a tree, produced from a single seed. has different kinds of
branches, some long, some short and some crooked, such is the
relationship between the universe and myself. Just as an earthern pot is
the child of clay and cloth the grand-child of cotton, (116-120), or the
innumerable waves are the offsprings of the sea, the universe stands in
the same relationship with me. Just as the Are and flames are the same,
so the universe and myself are one and the same. It is, therefore a
mistake to conceive of a relationship between us. If as a result of the
creation of this world. my form is suppressed there, what is it that
displays itself in the form of the world? Is a ruby lost in its own
lustre? If ornaments are made of gold, do they lose their quality of
being gold? Does a lotus lose its quality as a lotus, when it blooms? O
Arjuna, do the organs conceal the form of the body or do they constitute
its very form (121-125)? If the jowar (kind of grain) plant grows and
produces ears of corn, should we say that it has exhausted itself or
multiplied itself? It is, therefore, not possible for you to view me
apart from the world, because I am this entire universe. Please keep
this thought firmly fixed in your mind. Whatever different forms of
bodies I have assumed, know that it is because I am bound in them by the
fetters of qualities. Just as when a person wakes up from sleep, he says
that I had died in a dream, (126-130), or a patient suffering from
jaundice sees all things around him as yellow, or as one sees in the
sunlight the sun screened by the clouds or as a person is frightened of
his own shadow, thinking that it is a different person that he sees, in
the same way, I have become many in different bodies through bondage
which you should try to understand. This bondage does not last on the
attainment of my knowledge, but through ignorance we become our own
fetters (131-135). Therefore, O Arjuna, do hear about what this bondage
is and by what gunas one considers himself bound. I shall tell you now
how many are these gunas, what are their properties, what is their
nature and their names, and also from whom they have sprung.
- Sattva, rajas and tamas are qualities born of prakriti; they bind
fast, O mighty-armed (Arjuna), the immutable Self to the body.
Sattva, rajas and tamas are the names of these three
gunas and they are born of prakriti Of these three gunas, sattva is the
best, rajas is of middling quality and tamas is inferior. All these
three qualifies are seen in every mental state. Just as the same body
undergoes childhood, youth and old age (136-140) or when gold is mixed
with an alloy its weight increases with a consequent loss of purity, or
one falls into deep sleep through sloth, so the mental state which is
caused by tamas besides; sattva and rajas grows strong through
ignorance. Such are the gunas and I shall tell you now how these gunas
bind the Self. The Self becomes embodied by reason of his
body-consciousness, at an inauspicious time (141-145). From birth till
death, he identifies himself with his body and ascribes its properties
to himself. As soon as the fish swallows the bait, the angler winds his
line.
- Of these sattva being pure is luminous and wholesome; it binds him
by attachment to happiness and by attachment to knowledge, O sinless
one.
In this way, the hunter sattva gathers the embodied
Self like a deer in his snares of pleasure and knowledge. Then the
latter waxes eloquent with his knowledge, kicks about in the pride of
his learning and so becomes parted from the bliss of Self which is his
own. He becomes thoroughly pleased, if he is honoured as a learned
person, is elated with a trifling gain and boasts that he is easily
satisfied (146-150). He says, "there is no one as happy as myself, I am
so lucky." And the eight sattvic sentiments surge up in his mind. The
matter does not stop here, because another bond gets at him. He becomes
possessed by the goblin in the form of self-conceit of his erudition. He
does not feel sorry in the least for the loss of knowledge that he is
knowledge himself. On the contrary, he becomes puffed up by being
immersed in sensuous pleasures. Just as a king dreams that he has become
a beggar and thinks himself to be the lord of heaven. if he gets some
more alms, so the Self which is beyond body imagines himself because of
his mundane knowledge that he possesses a body (151-155). He becomes an
expert in active worldly life, proficient in sacrificial lore and his
knowledge reaches the sky. He boasts that no one is as learned as
himself, so much so that his mind has become like the sky, harboring the
moon of sagacity. This, quality of the sattva ties fetters in the form
of happiness and knowledge and drags the helpless person like a bull.
Now I shall tell you how the embodied self is bound by the quality of
rajas.
- Know that rajas is of the nature of passion, born of desire and
attachment; it binds fast a person, O son of Kunti (Arjuna), through
attachment to action.
It is called rajas as it amuses the embodied Self and
keep his desire for sensuous pleasures ever fresh (156-160). Even if it
gets a little access to the mind. it makes him run after sense- objects
and then the embodied self rides on the wind of passion. Then just as
sacrificial fire blazes forth when fed with ghee, and burns all things
great and small, so his desire becomes inordinate, and even painful
things seem pleasurable to him. Then even if he acquires the wealth of
the God of heaven, he considers it too little. In this way, when his
passion grows strong he is not satisfied even if the Meru mountain falls
in his hands and he craves for bigger things. He is willing to scarce
his life even for a two-penny coin and feels happy if he secures even a
blade of grass (161-165). He feels anxious as to how he will fare when
all his wealth is exhausted and expands his business with great zeal. He
begins to worry as to what he will live on in heaven, and so he
undertakes sacrifices. observes vows after vows, builds wells, tanks
etc. and performs only rites which bear fruit. Just as the wind blows
continuously without respite in the last month of summer, he labours
hard day and night in his business. The movements of fish or the
side-glances of a beautiful maiden are fickle and the lightening is more
fickle than them. But all these three are not At to hold a candle to the
rajas quality (166-170). One leaps into the Are of activity with great
haste in the hope of securing sensuous enjoyments in this world or
heaven. Thus the embodied Self, even though separate from the body, is
bound by the fetters of desires and becomes involved in various business
deals. In this way, he is bound by the strong fetters of the rajas
quality. Now I shall tell you the characteristics of the tamas quality.
- But know that tamas born of ignorance deludes all persons; it binds
them, O descendent of Bharata, by inattention, sloth and sleep.
That which, O Partha, is known as the tamas quality,
which acts like a vell and dims the vision of common-sense and is like a
cloudy sky of the night of infatuation. It grows with ignorance and
deludes the universe and makes it dance round its Angers (171-175). It
has thoughtlessness as its great mantra (mystic formula), it is a
decanter filled with the wine of ignorance, or a bewitching weapon which
infatuates all beings, By such devices it ties up those who regard their
body as the Self, When it begins to grow up in all created things, it
leaves no scope for others to grow. It blunts the organs, deludes the
mind and gives shelter to sloth. It makes the body slack, and one loses
all enthusiasm for work and yawns every now and then (176-180). Such a
person cannot see even when his eyes are open and gets up, responding to
a call, thinking that he heard some one. Just as a slab falls on one
side and does not turn the other way, so when he goes to sleep
contracting his body, he does not turn over. He does not feel like
getting up. even if the earth sinks or the heaven falls. When he feels
sleepy, he does not recollect what is proper or improper; but only likes
to remain in a reclining position. He raises his hand to the forehead or
sits with his head on the knees (181-185). He is so fond of sleep that
he scorns heavenly bliss before it. He has no other vice except that he
wishes to live as long as god Brahma and, pass it in slumber. If he
trips down while walking, he goes to sleep on the road, and when he is
sleepy he refuses even a drink of nectar offered to him. If he is forced
to work on occasions. he becomes blind with rage. He does not know how
to behave, with whom to talk and what and does not pause to think
whether a thing will become available or not (186-190). Just as a moth
jumps into fire. foolishly thinking that it will put out its flame with
its wings, so he ventures to do something which he ought not to do. In
short, he likes to do stupid careless mistakes. Thus the tamas quality
ties up the pure self with a triple bond of sleep, sloth and
heedlessness.
Just as the Are, while burning a piece of wood, appears
to- take its shape or the sky takes the form of an earthen pot or a lake
full of water has the reflection of the moon, so the embodied Self is
bound by the fetters of the gunas and imagines, through ignorance that
he possess their properties (191-195).
- Sattva makes one attached to happiness, and rajas to action, O
Bharata; but obscuring knowledge, tamas makes one attached to
negligence.
- By suppressing rajas and tamas, sattva prevails, O Bharata; rajas
(prevails) by suppressing sattva and tamas, and tamas (prevails) by
suppressing sattva and rajas.
Just as the bile, after suppressing phlegm and wind,
increases in the body and makes it heated or the cold sets in after the
hot and the rainy seasons are over, or the mind falls into the state of
deep slumber for a while, when the states of waking and dream disappear,
in the same way when the sattva increases, overpowering rajas and tamas,
a person says, "I am so happy." Similarly when tamas becomes
strong, overpowering the qualities of sattva and rajas, the embodied
Self is prone to commit blunders (196-200). In the same way, when rajas
overpowers and exceeds the sattva and tamas qualities, then this lord of
the body feels that nothing is more desirable than action. Thus I have
described to you the characteristics of the three qualities. Now listen
carefully to the symptoms of the growth of these qualities.
- When in all the gates of the body, the light of knowledge shines
forth, then one should know that sattva has increased.
- Greed activity, enterprise, restlessness and craving these arise
when rajas is on the increase, O best of the Bharatas (Arjuna).
- Dullness and inaction as also negligence and delusion these arise
when tamas increases, O Joy of the Kurus (Arjuna).
- If a person meets his death when sattva prevails, then he attains
the spotless worlds of those who know the highest (entities).
- Meeting his death in rajas he is born among those attached to work,
and the one absorbed in tamas is born in the dull species.
When the sattva increases in the body overpowering
rajas and tamas, then the following are the characteristics of the
embodied Self. Just as in the spring the lotus blooms and spreads its
fragrance all round, so the light of his knowledge spreads outside,
overflowing the interior (201-205). The discrimination remains watchful
in all the sense organs and even the hands and feet acquire vision. Just
as the swan decides which is milk and which is water, so the senses
themselves decide what is proper and what is improper and
sense-restraint becomes their servant. The ears avoid hearing what they
ought not to hear, the eyes avoid seeing what they ought not to see,
their tongue avoids speaking what ought not to be uttered. Just as
darkness flees from light, so prohibited actions dare not stand before
the senses (206-210). His intellect delves into all lores, as the river
is flooded in the rainy season. Just as the light of the full moon
floods the whole sky, so all knowledge spreads in his mind. All his
desires wane, his predilection for activity ebbs and his mind abhores
sensuous pleasures. If death intervenes when his sattva is on the
increase he takes birth in an excellent body as though a person has got
a bumper harvest and has received as guests his forefathers on the
festive occasion of their death anniversary (shraddha) day, (211-215).
If there be great riches in the house with generosity and courage of
mind to match, would not such a person receive plaudits in this world
and attain to heaven? If such a person who has a pure and spotless
conduct, with his sattva on the increase, dies, what would be his
destination? If such a person leaves his body, the best seat of sensuous
enjoyments, being endowed with the sattva, he becomes sattva incarnate
and takes his next birth among men of knowledge. O archer, if a crowned
king goes to the forest, does he suffer any want there (216-220)? O
Arjuna, if the lamp is taken to another hamlet, it continues to be a
lamp there and so when the sattva of a person becomes pure, his
knowledge increases and his intellect floats on that knowledge. Then
thinking over the order in which the world has sprung from the Great
Principle, he becomes merged in the Self along with his thought. When
the sattva increases, he takes birth and assumes the best body in the
family of' those who have got an access to the Self which - is the
thirty-seventh principle in Vedanta (XIII-5, 6) or the twenty-fifth
principle of the Sankhayas or the fourth which transcends the gunas
(221-225).
In the same way when the rajas increases overpowering
sattva and tamas, he runs riot in the terrain of the body by his
actions. Then he is possessed of the following characteristics. Just as
when the whirl-wind gathers all things from the earth and whirls them
high in the sky, so he allows a free hand to the senses to indulge in
sensual pleasures. He does not think it against the scriptures to cast a
lustful eye on another's wife and so his senses indulge freely in
sensual enjoyments, as sheep graze wherever they want. His greed becomes
so inordinate that only things escape his clutches which are beyond his
reach (226-230). And he does not flinch from undertaking any business.
He develops an extraordinary fancy to build a temple or perform a horse
sacrifice. He undertakes huge works like establishing townships or
constructing reservoirs or planting forests. But even then his desires
for happiness in this or the next work remain unfulfilled. His desires
become so inordinate and intolerable that even the sea accepts defeat or
the burning power of the Are proves mild before it (231-235). His hopes
and expectations gallop ahead of the mind and his desire remains
unsatisfied even if he traverses the whole world. Such signs make it
known that his rajas quality is on the increase, and if he dies in this
state, he enters a new human body and becomes endowed with the same
characteristics. Does a beggar become a king, if he sits in a palace
with all means of enjoyment at his beck and call? If a bull goes in a
marriage procession of a rich person, he does not get anything better
than jowar-stalks to eat (236-240). He, therefore, finds himself after
death in the company of men who are engrossed in worldly affairs day and
night without a moment's rest. In short, if a person dies after being
drowned in the deep waters in the form of rajas i.e. tendencies, he
takes birth in the family of a person engrossed in actions.
When the tamas quality overpowers the sattva and rajas
and increases in a person, he displays the following characteristics.
His mental state is like that of the sky on the dark night of the new
moon day when there is neither the sun nor moon to light it (241-245).
His mind then becomes listless and dull, and he loses all interest in
discriminating knowledge. The intellect loses its tenderness to such an
extent that it surpasses a stone in hardness and it appears as if he has
lost memory. His body is full of thoughtless arrogance in and out and
all his transactions are utterly foolish. The immoral actions which
ought to prick his conscience (literally senses) come to an end only
with his death. He takes great pleasure in doing wicked things, as an
owl sees only at night (246-250). He has an extraordinary passion to do
prohibited actions and his senses also run after them. He becomes
intoxicated without being drunk, raves without being in delirium of high
fever and becomes infatuated without love like a madman. He loses
control over his mind, but this is , not the state of samadhi, deep
contemplation, because his mind has become hysterical on account of
delusion. In short, these signs appear when the tamas quality waxes
strong with all its paraphernalia. If he dies at this time, he takes his
birth endowed with tamas (251-255). If a mustard seed is sown and grows
into a plant after losing its form, what will it produce except mustard?
Even though the Are becomes extinguished after lighting a lamp, whatever
the lamp touches catches Are. In the same way, whoever leaves his body
carrying with him a bundle of desires imbued with tamas, his new birth
also takes a form dominated by tamas. In short, if death comes when the
tamas waxes strong, he is reborn as an animal, a bird, a tree or an
insect.
- The fruit of a good action, they say, is good and spotless. But the
fruit of rajas is pain, and ignorance is the fruit of tamas.
For this reason it is stated in the Vedas that whatever
is produced by the sattva quality is a virtuous action (256-260).
Therefore the unique fruits of happiness and knowledge are gained
through pure sattva quality. All actions which result from rajas are
pleasant to look at like the vrindavan (colocynth) fruits but they are
full of pain. Just as the fruit of the neem tree looks fine, but has a
bitter taste as that of poison, such is the fruit of rajas-ridden
action. As poisonous roots produce only poisonous plants, so actions
arising from tamas yield fruits in the form of ignorance.
- From sattva arises knowledge, from rajas only greed and from tamas
arise negligence, delusion and ignorance.
Therefore, O Arjuna, the sattva is the cause of
knowledge, as the sun is the cause of the day (261-265). Similarly,
greed is caused by the rajas quality. as the forgetfulness of his
non-dual nature causes the Supreme Self to be embodied. O wise Arjuna,
the tamas quality gives rise to the three faults of delusion, ignorance
and heedlessness, I have taught you separately the distinctive
characteristics of these three qualities so that you can discern them
clearly like the avala fruit (emblic myrobalam) kept on an open palm.
Out of the three, rajas, and tamas lead to a man's fall, while the
sattva alone conduces to knowledge. It is for this reason that some
practise the sattvic states from their very birth, just as some prefer
the fourth kind of devotion (accompanied by knowledge of the Self to the
other three kinds of devotion and follow it (266-270).
- Abiding in sattva they go upwards, those in rajas remain in the
middle; and downward go those in tamas abiding in the functions of the
lowest quality.
Those who follow the sattvic way with a happy mood,
dwell in heaven after leaving the body. Similarly those who live and die
following the rajas way are born as human beings. There they have to eat
in the same plate (in the form of the body) hotchpotch rice of mixed
pulses and spices consisting of pleasure and pain and they cannot avoid
death. Likewise, those who grow in the tamas quality, get a warrant of
going to hell after death. Thus I have explained to you the three
qualities along with their characteristic functions under the
superintendence of the Self (271-275). The Self, without undergoing any
change, imitates the functions of the three gunas which are its
adjuncts. In a dream one becomes a king and wins a victory over or
suffers defeat from an advancing army of his enemy, but in reality he
has become all that himself. In the same way, the heaven, earth and the
nether world are modifications of the gunas. In reality, if one sees
what is beyond the gunas, one realises that all these modifications are
essentially of the nature of the Self.
- When the seer perceives no agent other than the qualities and knows
that which is higher than the qualities, he attains to My nature.
Enough of this elaborate discussion. Bear in mind that
there is naught except the supreme Self. Now I shall tell you what I had
narrated to you earlier. Know that all these three qualities assume the
form of the body, acting under the authority of the supreme Self
(276-280). Just as the Are assumes the form of the firewood which it
burns or the earth and water are seen in the form of a tree, or milk
when coagulated takes the form of curds, or sweetness appears in the
form of the sugar-cane, so these three qualities assume the form of body
along with the mind and lead to bondage. But, O archer, it is a marvel
that this wide net of the gunas do not come in the way of liberation.
These three gunas push the body to and from according to their
functions, but they do not cause any obstruction in your transcending
them (281-285).
Now I shall tell you the nature of deliverance, as you
are like a bee on the lotus in the form of knowledge. I have already
told you the ultimate truth that the conscious Self though abiding in
the qualities, is devoid of qualities, and I am repeating it here. This,
O Partha, one realises only when one attains the knowledge of the Self.
Just as one realises on waking up that the dream was false, or one
standing on the bank of a river sees one's many reflections in the
ripples of water, or an actor plays different roles with great skill but
is not deceived thereby, so the embodied Self does not regard himself as
possessed of gunas, but knows that he is theirmere witness (286-290).
Just as the sky does not change in the three seasons, so the Self,
though united with the three gunas, remains in his self-existent nature
which is beyond them. But he always retains his original nature
throughout, and when he realises this, he says "I am not the agent of
actions but their mere witness and it is the gunas which determine and
control all activity. All actions result from the modifications of the
three gunas; so they are all the products of gunas. I am related to the
gunas in the same way as the spring is to the beauty of the woods
(291-295). Though with the sunrise the stars become dim, the sunstone
sparkles, the lotuses bloom or the darkness is dispelled, the sun is not
the cause of them. In the same way although actions take place under my
authority, I am not their agent. though I dwell in the body. The gunas
become perceptible, as I display them and I support their power. I am
that which remains behind after their extinction. In this way, he who
has attained this knowledge has transcended the gunas and become
gunatita.
- After transcending the three qualities, which are the cause of the
body, the embodied Self enjoys immortality, freed from the miseries of
birth, death and old age.
Then he comes to realise unerringly that Brahman is
devoid of qualities. Now this knowledge has impressed its stamp on his
mind (296-300). Just as, O Arjuna, the rivers join the sea, or the
parrot leaves the tube and sits on the branch of a tree free from
delusion. so one who has transcended gunas realises that he himself is
Brahman. O wise Arjuna he who was snoring loudly in slumber in the form
of ignorance is awakened now to his essential nature. Since the mirror
of delusion has dropped from his hand, he cannot now see his reflection
in it. As with the stoppage of the wind the waves become one with the
sea, so with the loss of body-consciousness, the embodied Self becomes
one with the Supreme Self (301-305). When this happens, he who has
transcended the gunas becomes united with me. Just as the clouds become
dissolved in the sky at the end of the rainy season, so after becoming
one with me, he does not get into the clutches of the gunas, although he
is very much in the body. Just as a lamp kept in the glass-house spreads
its light outside without obstruction, or the submarine fire does not
get extinguished by the sea water, so his knowledge remains unaffected
even if the gunas come and go. He remains unconcerned in his body, as
the moon remains in the sky after being reflected in the mirror. These
three gunas bring to bear their influence on the body and make it
perform actions of diverse kinds, but he does not even look at them
(306-310). He is so engrossed in his inner Self that he is not conscious
of the activities of his body. If a serpent casts away its slough and
enters the nether region, who is there to take care of the discarded
slough? The same is the case here. Just as the fragrance which has left
the lotus enters the sky and does not return to the lotus, so with the
loss of body consciousness, he recognises his essential nature and is
conscious of nothing else. Therefore the six qualities of body such as
birth, old age and death remain in the body itself and do not affect the
man of knowledge. (311-315) When an earthen pot breaks into pieces, the
space enclosed therein merges automatically in the infinite space. In
the same way, when the consciousness of the body goes, he becomes
mindful 'of his innate nature and then what else could remain but the
Self? I call such a person who has attained to the knowledge of Self as
gunatita (i.e. one who has transcended the gunas). As the thunder of the
cloud delights the peacock, so this speech of Lord Krishna made Partha
very happy.
Arjuna said:
- By what marks, O Lord is one (known) who has transcended the three
gunas? How does he conduct himself and how does he overcome these three
qualities?
Then the heroic Arjuna said to Lord Krishna joyfully:
What, O Lord, are the characteristics of a person, who has realised the
Self (316-320)? How does one who has transcended the gunas behave and
how does he go beyond the gunas? O Lord, you are the home of kindness,
please explain all this to me. Now listen to the reply given by Shri
Krishna, who is the Lord of the six virtues. He said: I am surprised at
your question. If any conduct is ascribed to him, then his description
as gunatita will prove inappropriate. One who has transcended the gunas
is not subject to them. Even if he moves amidst them, he does not come
under their clutches. But if your doubt is how to know whether such a
person who is always associated with the gunas is under their subjection
or not (321-325), then you are welcome to ask about it. I shall tell you
the distinguishing marks of such a person.
The blessed Lord said:
- (When) illumination, activity and delusion, O son of Pandu (Arjuna),
are at work, he does not hate them nor does he crave for them when they
cease.
When the rajas quality waxes strong and the body
produces sprouts of actions, and he is drawn into the worldly. life,
then he is not puffed up with the pride that he alone is the doer of the
action because of his riches or feel sorry that he is not able to finish
the work because of his poverty. When the sattva quality increases and
knowledge spreads in all senses, he does not rejoice at his erudition,
nor does he feel bad when the tamas increases and he is permeated by
delusion (326-330). When he is under the influence of delusion, he does
not wish for knowledge, nor does he give up work at the time of
knowledge and become unhappy because of it. Just as the sun is not
concerned with whether it is morning, noon or evening, so he does not
pay any attention to the gunas. Is it possible that a person so
enlightened will need some other knowledge? Does the sea require the
rain to make it full? In the same way, how will he have the egoistic
feeling that he is the door of actions? Do the Himalayas shiver with
cold because of snow? Tell me, can the summer however severe scorch the
fire? So will he lose his knowledge when he comes under the sway of
delusion (331-335)?
- He who remains like one disinterested and is not moved by the gunas,
and who, knowing that the gunas act, remains aloof and does not waver,
Since he considers the gunas and their functions, as
his own Self, he is not separated from them. He remains in the body in a
disinterested spirit, just as a traveller breaks his journey on the way
and stays in a rest-house. Just as the battle ground is indifferent to
the conqueror or the conquered, so he neither conquers the gunas nor is
he overcome by them. Nor does he come under the sway of gunas and
perform actions or get them performed through them. He remains as
fndifferent to events around him, like the prana in the body or, a guest
who has come to the house or the pole at a meeting place. O Arjuna, just
as the Meru mountain does not deflect when assailed by the waves of the
mirage, so he is not perturbed by the movements of the gunas (336-340).
Is the sky ever moved by wind or has the darkness ever swallowed the
sun?
Just as a person wide awake does not dream, so an
enlightened person is not bound by the gunas. Without corning under the
influence of the gunas, he sees their play as from a distance, like a
spectator who sees the play of puppets. When his sattvic tendencies
remain engaged in good actions, his rajasic tendencies in sensuous
enjoyments and his tamasic tendencies in delusion, he knows that all
these actions of the gunas take place under the power of his Self. The
sun is a mere witness to all worldly affairs (341-345). The moon,
because of whom the sea gets its tides, the moonstone oozes and the
white lilies bloom, remains inactive. The sky remains steady, even when
the wind blows violently or remains lulled. In the same way, he does not
become agitated even if the gunas create a bustle. O Arjuna, in this
way, I have told you the characteristics of a person who. has
transcended the gunas. Now I shall tell you what his conduct is like
- And who remain self-poised, same in happiness and sorrow and same to
a lump of clay, stone and gold, who remains firm and same to pleasant
and unpleasant things and to censure and praise,
O Arjuna, just as there is nothing except yarn in the
cloth, so when he becomes one with me, he sees nothing but me in all the
things, animate and inanimate. Just as God gives the same salvation to
his devotees and enemies, so he treats equally pleasure and pain when
they come his way, like the scales which are well balanced (346-350). He
remains in the body like fish in water and experiences pleasure and
pain. Now he has given up body-consciousness and become one with the
Self. When the seed is sown in the ground. It grows and produces grain
or the rattling noise of the river subsides when it joins the sea. In
the same way, when a person has become one with the Self, he is not
affected by pleasure and pain, even though he remains in the body. Just
as the day and night are the same to a pole, so pleasure and pain are
the same to the Self in the body (351-355). Just as a man in sound sleep
feels the contact with a serpent as very much like the touch of the
nymph Urvashi, so a person immersed in his essential nature treats
equally pleasure and pain which come to his share. So dung and gold seem
alike to him and a jewel and a stone make no difference to him. Even if
heaven visits him or the tiger assails him, his Self-hood is not
disturbed. Just as a dead person does not become alive, or a roasted
seed does not grow, so his equanimity is not disturbed. Whether he is
praised as god Brahma or blamed as a base person, he remains unaffected
like a masa of ashes, which can neither burn nor become extinguished
(356-360). Praise or slander does not cause any pleasure or displeasure
in him, in the same way as there is neither darkness nor a lighted lamp
in the Sun's abode.
- And who is the same in honour and dishonour, who is equable to a
friend or a foe, and who has relinquished all undertakings, he is said
to be one who has transcended the gunas.
Even if he is worshipped as god or thrashed as a thief
or is crowned as king with plenty of oxen and elephants, or is seated
near friends or enemies, it is all the same to him. Just as the sun does
not know day and night, or the sky remains unaffected in all the
seasons, so his mind is not affected by adverse events. There is one
more thing about him. He is never seen taking part in worldly affairs,
(361-365), he does not start any work, his activity has come to a stop
and the fruits of his actions have got burnt in the fire of knowledge.
He does not brood over the sensuous pleasures in this or the next world
and enjoys whatever fate brings him. He does not rejoice when he is
happy nor does he become dejected with misery, as though he is a stone.
So also his mind does not reject or accept anything. Know that he alone
has transcended the gunas, who conducts himself in this manner. Now I
shall tell you what method one should follow to become a gunatita
(366-370).
- And he who serves Me exclusively with yoga of devotion goes beyond
these qualities and qualifies to become Brahman.
He who is exclusively devoted to me can burn the gunas.
I must now tell you what I am, how one should become devoted to me and
what are the characteristics of exclusive devotion. Just as a gem and
its splendour, water and its liquidity, the sky and space, sugar and its
sweetness are not different, or Are and its flame are the same or the
petals make the lotus or the branches and fruits mean the tree
(371-375), or just as cold and the vast sheets of snow constitutes the
Himalaya mountains or coagulated milk becomes the curds, so what is
known as the universe is myself. It is not necessary to feel the phases
of the moon to see them, or ghee remains the same in its frozen state,
or the gold bangle remains gold even without melting it, o. cloth, even
without being torn, is yarn, or the earthen pot is clay without being
broken into pieces, so it is not necessary to sublet the phenomenal
world to know me, but to know me along with it (376-380). If this
devotion is offered to me by making a distinction between myself and the
universe, it becomes wanton. So know me by an unswerving mind that I am
not distinct from the universe, O Partha. As a speck of gold affixed to
a gold ornament does not become distinct from it, so think yourself to
be not different from the universe. Just as the rays of the sun have the
same splendour and are not distinct from it, so let this notion of unity
be Axed in your mind. Just as there is no difference between the earth
particles and earth or the snow particles and the Himalayas, so see the
universe as abiding in me (381-385). Even the smallest wave is not
different from the sea; so the Self is not distinct from God. If one
attains this blissful state of vision of one's identity with God, it is
the highest form of devotion. This vision is the quintessence of
knowledge and yoga. Just as the mutual relation between the sea and the
cloud has a continuous flow, so his mental attitude remains the same.
Just as there is no joint connecting the mouth of the well with the sky,
similar is his oneness with the supreme Self (386-390).
Just as the Sun's splendour remains the same from his
disc upto the reflection, the idea that I am Brahman carries on the top
and disappears when the mind identifies itself with the Supreme Self.
Just as a piece of salt dissolves in the sea. or the fire becomes
extinguished after the grass is burnt, so in the absence of a notion of
distinction, knowledge also ceases to exist. The false notion that the
devotee is on this shore and I am on the yonder shore (of the sea of
existence) disappears and what remains is the eternal union between us
(391-395). Then all talk about the conquest of gunas ceases, because the
gunas also cease, when both of us unite in close embrace. In short, O
discerning Arjuna, this is what is known as the Brahmic state. He who
worships me with devotion alone attains to it. I would add that the
Brahmic state weds my devotee who is endowed with the above-mentioned
characteristics. Just as the flowing water of the Ganges has no other
destination but the sea, so whoever serves me with the vision of
knowledge, becomes a great devotee (literally a jewel in the diadem of
the Brahmic state) (396-400). This Brahmic state is also known as the
sayujya mukti (i.e. absorption of the Self in the Supreme Self or the
fourth aim of human existence). My worship is the ladder by which you
can reach me. But do not think that I am different from the means of
attaining me. Do not entertain the idea that you are distinct from
Brahman.
- For I am the embodiment of Brahman, immortal and immutable, and of
the perennial Law and of absolute bliss.
O son of Pandu, Brahman is my name and I am addressed by
this word. Just as the moon is not different from its disc, so, O
discerning Arjuna, there is no difference between Brahman and me
(401-405). This Brahman is eternal, immutable and vivid; it is
righteousness incarnate and the giver of unique and unlimited bliss. I am
the ultimate entity determined by the (Vedanta) doctrine, in which the
knowledge becomes dissolved after fulfilling its function.
Thus spoke to heroic Arjuna the Supreme Self, who is the
friend of dedicated devotees. Then Dhritarashtra said to Sanjaya, "Why are
you telling me all this without being asked? On this occasion, remove my
anxiety by giving me the glad news of my son's victory. Give up all this
worthless talk (406-410)". Hearing this Sanjaya was amazed and said to
himself, "Alas! see the pranks of fate. The king is only feeling concerned
about the war. May the Lord have mercy on him and destroy his malady of
infatuation by giving him a dose of discriminating knowledge." When
Sanjaya was thinking like this, he remembered the conversation between
Lord Krishna and Arjuna and his mind was flooded with joy. He will,
therefore, tell with great enthusiasm what the Lord said further.
Jnanadeva, the disciple of Nivritti says, "I shall impress upon your mind
the substance of his talk, please give me your attention (410-415)."
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