2871 lines
116 KiB
Plaintext
2871 lines
116 KiB
Plaintext
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400 BC
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THE SONG CELESTIAL
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OR
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BHAGAVAD-GITA
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translated by Sir Edwin Arnold
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CHAPTER I
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Dhritirashtra. Ranged thus for battle on the sacred plain-
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On Kurukshetra- say, Sanjaya! say
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What wrought my people, and the Pandavas?
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Sanjaya. When he beheld the host of Pandavas,
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Raja Duryodhana to Drona drew,
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And spake these words: "Ah, Guru! see this line,
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How vast it is of Pandu fighting-men,
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Embattled by the son of Drupada,
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Thy scholar in the war! Therein stand ranked
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Chiefs like Arjuna, like to Bhima chiefs,
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Benders of bows; Virata, Yuyudhan,
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Drupada, eminent upon his car,
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Dhrishtaket, Chekitan, Kasi's stout lord,
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Purujit, Kuntibhoj, and Saivya,
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With Yudhamanyu, and Uttamauj
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Subhadra's child; and Drupadi's;- all famed!
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All mounted on their shining chariots!
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On our side, too,- thou best of Brahmans! see
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Excellent chiefs, commanders of my line,
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Whose names I joy to count: thyself the first,
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Then Bhishma, Karna, Kripa fierce in fight,
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Vikarna, Aswatthaman; next to these
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Strong Saumadatti, with full many more
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Valiant and tried, ready this day to die
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For me their king, each with his weapon grasped,
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Each skilful in the field. Weakest- meseems-
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Our battle shows where Bhishma holds command,
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And Bhima, fronting him, something too strong!
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Have care our captains nigh to Bhishma's ranks
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Prepare what help they may! Now, blow my shell!"
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Then, at the signal of the aged king,
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With blare to wake the blood, rolling around
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Like to a lion's roar, the trumpeter
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Blew the great Conch; and, at the noise of it,
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Trumpets and drums, cymbals and gongs and horns
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Burst into sudden clamour; as the blasts
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Of loosened tempest, such the tumult seemed!
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Then might be seen, upon their car of gold
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Yoked with white steeds, blowing their battle-shells,
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Krishna the God, Arjuna at his side:
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Krishna, with knotted locks, blew his great conch
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Carved of the "Giant's bone;" Arjuna blew
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Indra's loud gift; Bhima the terrible-
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Wolf-bellied Bhima- blew a long reed-conch;
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And Yudhisthira, Kunti's blameless son,
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Winded a mighty shell, "Victory's Voice;"
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And Nakula blew shrill upon his conch
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Named the "Sweet-sounding," Sahadev on his
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Called "Gem-bedecked," and Kasi's Prince on his.
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Sikhandi on his car, Dhrishtadyumn,
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Virata, Satyaki the Unsubdued,
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Drupada, with his sons, (O Lord of Earth!)
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Long-armed Subhadra's children, all blew loud,
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So that the clangour shook their foemen's hearts,
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With quaking earth and thundering heav'n.
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Then 'twas-
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Beholding Dhritirashtra's battle set,
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Weapons unsheathing, bows drawn forth, the war
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Instant to break- Arjun, whose ensign-badge
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Was Hanuman the monkey, spake this thing
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To Krishna the Divine, his charioteer:
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"Drive, Dauntless One! to yonder open ground
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Betwixt the armies; I would see more nigh
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These who will fight with us, those we must slay
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To-day, in war's arbitrament; for, sure,
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On bloodshed all are bent who throng this plain,
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Obeying Dhritirashtra's sinful son."
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Thus, by Arjuna prayed, (O Bharata!)
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Between the hosts that heavenly Charioteer
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Drove the bright car, reining its milk-white steeds
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Where Bhishma led, and Drona, and their Lords.
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"See!" spake he to Arjuna, "where they stand,
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Thy kindred of the Kurus:" and the Prince
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Marked on each hand the kinsmen of his house,
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Grandsires and sires, uncles and brothers and sons,
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Cousins and sons-in-law and nephews, mixed
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With friends and honoured elders; some this side,
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Some that side ranged: and, seeing those opposed,
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Such kith grown enemies- Arjuna's heart
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Melted with pity, while he uttered this:
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Arjuna. Krishna! as I behold, come here to shed
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Their common blood, yon concourse of our kin,
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My members fail, my tongue dries in my mouth,
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A shudder thrills my body, and my hair
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Bristles with horror; from my weak hand slips
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Gandiv, the goodly bow; a fever burns
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My skin to parching; hardly may I stand;
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The life within me seems to swim and faint;
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Nothing do I foresee save woe and wail!
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It is not good, O Keshav! nought of good
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Can spring from mutual slaughter! Lo, I hate
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Triumph and domination, wealth and ease,
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Thus sadly won! Aho! what victory
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Can bring delight, Govinda! what rich spoils
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Could profit; what rule recompense; what span
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Of life itself seem sweet, bought with such blood?
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Seeing that these stand here, ready to die,
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For whose sake life was fair, and pleasure pleased,
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And power grew precious:- grandsires, sires, and sons,
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Brothers, and fathers-in-law, and sons-in-law,
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Elders and friends! Shall I deal death on these
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Even though they seek to slay us? Not one blow,
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O Madhusudan! will I strike to gain
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The rule of all Three Worlds; then, how much less
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To seize an earthly kingdom! Killing these
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Must breed but anguish, Krishna! If they be
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Guilty, we shall grow guilty by their deaths;
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Their sins will light on us, if we shall slay
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Those sons of Dhritirashtra, and our kin;
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What peace could come of that, O Madhava?
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For if indeed, blinded by lust and wrath,
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These cannot see, or will not see, the sin
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Of kingly lines o'erthrown and kinsmen slain,
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How should not we, who see, shun such a crime-
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We who perceive the guilt and feel the shame-
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O thou Delight of Men, Janardana?
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By overthrow of houses perisheth
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Their sweet continuous household piety,
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And- rites neglected, piety extinct-
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Enters impiety upon that home;
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Its women grow unwomaned, whence there spring
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Mad passions, and the mingling-up of castes,
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Sending a Hell-ward road that family,
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And whoso wrought its doom by wicked wrath.
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Nay, and the souls of honoured ancestors
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Fall from their place of peace, being bereft
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Of funeral-cakes and the wan death-water.
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So teach our holy hymns. Thus, if we slay
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Kinsfolk and friends for love of earthly power,
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Ahovat! what an evil fault it were!
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Better I deem it, if my kinsmen strike,
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To face them weaponless, and bare my breast
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To shaft and spear, than answer blow with blow.
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So speaking, in the face of those two hosts,
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Arjuna sank upon his chariot-seat,
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And let fall bow and arrows, sick at heart.
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HERE ENDETH CHAPTER I OF THE
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BHAGAVAD-GITA,
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Entitled "Arjun-Vishad,"
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Or "The Book of the Distress of Arjuna."
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CHAPTER II
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Sanjaya. Him, filled with such compassion and such grief,
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With eyes tear-dimmed, despondent, in stern words
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The Driver, Madhusudan, thus addressed:
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Krishna. How hath this weakness taken thee?
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Whence springs
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The inglorious trouble, shameful to the brave,
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Barring the path of virtue? Nay, Arjun!
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Forbid thyself to feebleness! it mars
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Thy warrior-name! cast off the coward-fit!
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Wake! Be thyself! Arise, Scourge of thy Foes!
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Arjuna. How can I, in the battle, shoot with shafts
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On Bhishma, or on Drona- O thou Chief!-
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Both worshipful, both honourable men?
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Better to live on beggar's bread
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With those we love alive,
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Than taste their blood in rich feasts spread,
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And guiltily survive!
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Ah! were it worse- who knows?- to be
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Victor or vanquished here,
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When those confront us angrily
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Whose death leaves living drear?
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In pity lost, by doubtings tossed,
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My thoughts- distracted- turn
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To Thee, the Guide I reverence most,
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That I may counsel learn:
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I know not what would heal the grief
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Burned into soul and sense,
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If I were earth's unchallenged chief-
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A god- and these gone thence!
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Sanjaya. So spake Arjuna to the Lord of Hearts,
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And sighing, "I will not fight!" held silence then.
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To whom, with tender smile, (O Bharata!)
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While the Prince wept despairing 'twixt those hosts,
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Krishna made answer in divinest verse:
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Krishna. Thou grievest where no grief should be! thou speak'st
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Words lacking wisdom! for the wise in heart
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Mourn not for those that live, nor those that die.
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Nor I, nor thou, nor any one of these,
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Ever was not, nor ever will not be,
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For ever and for ever afterwards.
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All, that doth live, lives always! To man's frame
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As there come infancy and youth and age,
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So come there raisings-up and layings-down
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Of other and of other life-abodes,
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Which the wise know, and fear not. This that irks-
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Thy sense-life, thrilling to the elements-
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Bringing thee heat and cold, sorrows and joys,
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'Tis brief and mutable! Bear with it, Prince!
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As the wise bear. The soul which is not moved,
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The soul that with a strong and constant calm
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Takes sorrow and takes joy indifferently,
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Lives in the life undying! That which is
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Can never cease to be; that which is not
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Will not exist. To see this truth of both
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Is theirs who part essence from accident,
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Substance from shadow. Indestructible,
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Learn thou! the Life is, spreading life through all;
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It cannot anywhere, by any means,
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Be anywise diminished, stayed, or changed.
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But for these fleeting frames which it informs
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With spirit deathless, endless, infinite,
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They perish. Let them perish, Prince! and fight!
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He who shall say, "Lo! I have slain a man!"
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He who shall think, "Lo! I am slain!" those both
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Know naught! Life cannot slay. Life is not slain!
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Never the spirit was born; the spirit shall cease to be never;
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Never was time it was not; End and Beginning are dreams!
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Birthless and deathless and changeless remaineth the spirit for
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ever;
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Death hath not touched it at all, dead though the house of it
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seems!
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Who knoweth it exhaustless, self-sustained,
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Immortal, indestructible,- shall such
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Say, "I have killed a man, or caused to kill?"
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Nay, but as when one layeth
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His worn-out robes away,
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And, taking new ones, sayeth,
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"These will I wear to-day!"
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So putteth by the spirit
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Lightly its garb of flesh,
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And passeth to inherit
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A residence afresh.
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I say to thee weapons reach not the Life;
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Flame burns it not, waters cannot o'erwhelm,
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Nor dry winds wither it. Impenetrable,
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Unentered, unassailed, unharmed, untouched,
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Immortal, all-arriving, stable, sure,
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Invisible, ineffable, by word
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And thought uncompassed, ever all itself,
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Thus is the Soul declared! How wilt thou, then,-
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Knowing it so,- grieve when thou shouldst not grieve?
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How, if thou hearest that the man new-dead
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Is, like the man new-born, still living man-
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One same, existent Spirit- wilt thou weep?
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The end of birth is death; the end of death
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Is birth: this is ordained! and mournest thou,
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Chief of the stalwart arm! for what befalls
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Which could not otherwise befall? The birth
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Of living things comes unperceived; the death
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Comes unperceived; between them, beings perceive:
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What is there sorrowful herein, dear Prince?
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Wonderful, wistful, to contemplate!
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Difficult, doubtful, to speak upon!
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Strange and great for tongue to relate,
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Mystical hearing for every one!
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Nor wotteth man this, what a marvel it is,
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When seeing, and saying, and hearing are done!
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This Life within all living things, my Prince!
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Hides beyond harm; scorn thou to suffer, then,
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For that which cannot suffer. Do thy part!
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Be mindful of thy name, and tremble not!
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Nought better can betide a martial soul
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Than lawful war; happy the warrior
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To whom comes joy of battle- comes, as now,
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Glorious and fair, unsought; opening for him
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A gateway unto Heav'n. But, if thou shunn'st
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This honourable field- a Kshattriya-
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If, knowing thy duty and thy task, thou bidd'st
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Duty and task go by- that shall be sin!
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And those to come shall speak thee infamy
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From age to age; but infamy is worse
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For men of noble blood to bear than death!
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The chiefs upon their battle-chariots
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Will deem 'twas fear that drove thee from the fray.
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Of those who held thee mighty-souled the scorn
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Thou must abide, while all thine enemies
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Will scatter bitter speech of thee, to mock
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The valour which thou hadst; what fate could fall
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More grievously than this? Either- being killed-
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Thou wilt win Swarga's safety, or- alive
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And victor- thou wilt reign an earthly king.
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Therefore, arise, thou Son of Kunti! brace
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Thine arm for conflict, nerve thy heart to meet-
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As things alike to thee- pleasure or pain,
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Profit or ruin, victory or defeat:
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So minded, gird thee to the fight, for so
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Thou shalt not sin!
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Thus far I speak to thee
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As from the "Sankhya"- unspiritually-
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Hear now the deeper teaching of the Yog,
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Which holding, understanding, thou shalt burst
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Thy Karmabandh, the bondage of wrought deeds.
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Here shall no end be hindered, no hope marred,
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No loss be feared: faith- yea, a little faith-
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Shall save thee from the anguish of thy dread.
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Here, Glory of the Kurus! shines one rule-
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One steadfast rule- while shifting souls have laws
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Many and hard. Specious, but wrongful deem
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The speech of those ill-taught ones who extol
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The letter of their Vedas, saying, "This
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Is all we have, or need;" being weak at heart
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With wants, seekers of Heaven: which comes- they say-
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As "fruit of good deeds done;" promising men
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Much profit in new births for works of faith;
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In various rites abounding; following whereon
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Large merit shall accrue towards wealth and power;
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Albeit, who wealth and power do most desire
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Least fixity of soul have such, least hold
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On heavenly meditation. Much these teach,
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From Veds, concerning the "three qualities;"
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But thou, be free of the "three qualities,"
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Free of the "pairs of opposites," and free
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From that sad righteousness which calculates;
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Self-ruled, Arjuna! simple, satisfied.
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Look! like as when a tank pours water forth
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To suit all needs, so do these Brahmans draw
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Text for all wants from tank of Holy Writ.
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But thou, want not! ask not! Find full reward
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Of doing right in right! Let right deeds be
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Thy motive, not the fruit which comes from them.
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And live in action! Labour! Make thine acts
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Thy piety, casting all self aside,
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Contemning gain and merit; equable
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In good or evil: equability
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Is Yog, is piety!
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Yet, the right act
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Is less, far less, than the right-thinking mind.
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Seek refuge in thy soul; have there thy heaven!
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Scorn them that follow virtue for her gifts!
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The mind of pure devotion- even here-
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Casts equally aside good deeds and bad,
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Passing above them. Unto pure devotion
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Devote thyself: with perfect meditation
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Comes perfect act, and the righthearted rise-
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More certainly because they seek no gain-
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Forth from the bands of body, step by step,
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To highest seats of bliss. When thy firm soul
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Hath shaken off those tangled oracles
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Which ignorantly guide, then shall it soar
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To high neglect of what's denied or said,
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This way or that way, in doctrinal writ.
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Troubled no longer by the priestly lore,
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Safe shall it live, and sure; steadfastly bent
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On meditation. This is Yog- and Peace!
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Arjuna. What is his mark who hath that steadfast heart,
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Confirmed in holy meditation? How
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Know we his speech, Kesava? Sits he, moves he
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Like other men?
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Krishna. When one, O Pritha's Son!-
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Abandoning desires which shake the mind-
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Finds in his soul full comfort for his soul,
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He hath attained the Yog- that man is such!
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In sorrows not dejected, and in joys
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Not overjoyed; dwelling outside the stress
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Of passion, fear, and anger; fixed in calms
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Of lofty contemplation;- such an one
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Is Muni, is the Sage, the true Recluse!
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He who to none and nowhere overbound
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By ties of flesh, takes evil things and good
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Neither desponding nor exulting, such
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Bears wisdom's plainest mark He who shall draw
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As the wise tortoise draws its four feet safe
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Under its shield, his five frail senses back
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Under the spirit's buckler from the world
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Which else assails them, such an one, my Prince!
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Hath wisdom's mark! Things that solicit sense
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Hold off from the self-governed; nay, it comes,
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The appetites of him who lives beyond
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Depart,- aroused no more. Yet may it chance,
|
||
|
O Son of Kunti that a governed mind
|
||
|
Shall some time feel the sense-storms sweep, and wrest
|
||
|
Strong self-control by the roots. Let him regain
|
||
|
His kingdom! let him conquer this, and sit
|
||
|
On Me intent. That man alone is wise
|
||
|
Who keeps the mastery of himself! If one
|
||
|
Ponders on objects of the sense, there springs
|
||
|
Attraction; from attraction grows desire,
|
||
|
Desire flames to fierce passion, passion breeds
|
||
|
Recklessness; then the memory- all betrayed-
|
||
|
Lets noble purpose go, and saps the mind,
|
||
|
Till purpose, mind, and man are all undone.
|
||
|
But, if one deals with objects of the sense
|
||
|
Not loving and not hating, making them
|
||
|
Serve his free soul, which rests serenely lord,
|
||
|
Lo! such a man comes to tranquillity;
|
||
|
And out of that tranquillity shall rise
|
||
|
The end and healing of his earthly pains,
|
||
|
Since the will governed sets the soul at peace.
|
||
|
The soul of the ungoverned is not his,
|
||
|
Nor hath he knowledge of himself; which lacked,
|
||
|
How grows serenity? and, wanting that,
|
||
|
Whence shall he hope for happiness?
|
||
|
The mind
|
||
|
That gives itself to follow shows of sense
|
||
|
Seeth its helm of wisdom rent away,
|
||
|
And, like a ship in waves of whirlwind, drives
|
||
|
To wreck and death. Only with him, great Prince!
|
||
|
Whose senses are not swayed by things of sense-
|
||
|
Only with him who holds his mastery,
|
||
|
Shows wisdom perfect. What is midnight-gloom
|
||
|
To unenlightened souls shines wakeful day
|
||
|
To his clear gaze; what seems as wakeful day
|
||
|
Is known for night, thick night of ignorance,
|
||
|
To his true-seeing eyes. Such is the Saint!
|
||
|
And like the ocean, day by day receiving
|
||
|
Floods from all lands, which never overflows;
|
||
|
Its boundary-line not leaping, and not leaving,
|
||
|
Fed by the rivers, but unswelled by those;-
|
||
|
So is the perfect one! to his soul's ocean
|
||
|
The world of sense pours streams of witchery,
|
||
|
They leave him as they find, without commotion,
|
||
|
Taking their tribute, but remaining sea.
|
||
|
Yea! whoso, shaking off the yoke of flesh
|
||
|
Lives lord, not servant, of his lusts; set free
|
||
|
From pride, from passion, from the sin of "Self,"
|
||
|
Toucheth tranquillity! O Pritha's Son!
|
||
|
That is the state of Brahm! There rests no dread
|
||
|
When that last step is reached! Live where he will,
|
||
|
Die when he may, such passeth from all 'plaining,
|
||
|
To blest Nirvana, with the Gods, attaining.
|
||
|
|
||
|
HERE ENDETH CHAPTER II OF THE
|
||
|
BHAGAVAD-GITA,
|
||
|
Entitled "Sankhya-Yog,"
|
||
|
Or "The Book of Doctrines."
|
||
|
CHAPTER III
|
||
|
Arjuna. Thou whom all mortals praise, Janardana!
|
||
|
If meditation be a nobler thing
|
||
|
Than action, wherefore, then, great Kesava!
|
||
|
Dost thou impel me to this dreadful fight?
|
||
|
Now am I by thy doubtful speech disturbed!
|
||
|
Tell me one thing, and tell me certainly;
|
||
|
By what road shall I find the better end?
|
||
|
Krishna. I told thee, blameless Lord! there be paths
|
||
|
Shown to this world; two schools of wisdom. First
|
||
|
The Sankhya's, which doth save in way of works
|
||
|
Prescribed by reason; next, the Yog, which bids
|
||
|
Attain by meditation, spiritually:
|
||
|
Yet these are one! No man shall 'scape from act
|
||
|
By shunning action; nay, and none shall come
|
||
|
By mere renouncements unto perfectness.
|
||
|
Nay, and no jot of time, at any time,
|
||
|
Rests any actionless; his nature's law
|
||
|
Compels him, even unwilling, into act;
|
||
|
[For thought is act in fancy]. He who sits
|
||
|
Suppressing all the instruments of flesh,
|
||
|
Yet in his idle heart thinking on them,
|
||
|
Plays the inept and guilty hypocrite:
|
||
|
But he who, with strong body serving mind,
|
||
|
Gives up his mortal powers to worthy work,
|
||
|
Not seeking gain, Arjuna! such an one
|
||
|
Is honourable. Do thine allotted task!
|
||
|
Work is more excellent than idleness;
|
||
|
The body's life proceeds not, lacking work.
|
||
|
There is a task of holiness to do,
|
||
|
Unlike world-binding toil, which bindeth not
|
||
|
The faithful soul; such earthly duty do
|
||
|
Free from desire, and thou shalt well perform
|
||
|
Thy heavenly purpose. Spake Prajapati-
|
||
|
In the beginning, when all men were made,
|
||
|
And, with mankind, the sacrifice- "Do this!
|
||
|
Work! sacrifice! Increase and multiply
|
||
|
With sacrifice! This shall be Kamaduk,
|
||
|
Your 'Cow of Plenty,' giving back her milk
|
||
|
Of all abundance. Worship the gods thereby;
|
||
|
The gods shall yield thee grace. Those meats ye
|
||
|
The gods will grant to Labour, when it pays
|
||
|
Tithes in the altar-flame. But if one eats
|
||
|
Fruits of the earth, rendering to kindly Heaven
|
||
|
No gift of toil, that thief steals from his world."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Who eat of food after their sacrifice
|
||
|
Are quit of fault, but they that spread a feast
|
||
|
All for themselves, eat sin and drink of sin.
|
||
|
By food the living live; food comes of rain,
|
||
|
And rain comes by the pious sacrifice,
|
||
|
And sacrifice is paid with tithes of toil;
|
||
|
Thus action is of Brahma, who is One,
|
||
|
The Only, All-pervading; at all times
|
||
|
Present in sacrifice. He that abstains
|
||
|
To help the rolling wheels of this great world,
|
||
|
Glutting his idle sense, lives a lost life,
|
||
|
Shameful and vain. Existing for himself,
|
||
|
Self-concentrated, serving self alone,
|
||
|
No part hath he in aught; nothing achieved,
|
||
|
Nought wrought or unwrought toucheth him; no hope
|
||
|
Of help for all the living things of earth
|
||
|
Depends from him. Therefore, thy task prescribed
|
||
|
With spirit unattached gladly perform,
|
||
|
Since in performance of plain duty man
|
||
|
Mounts to his highest bliss. By works alone
|
||
|
Janak and ancient saints reached blessedness!
|
||
|
Moreover, for the upholding of thy kind,
|
||
|
Action thou should'st embrace. What the wise choose
|
||
|
The unwise people take; what best men do
|
||
|
The multitude will follow. Look on me,
|
||
|
Thou Son of Pritha! in the three wide worlds
|
||
|
I am not bound to any toil, no height
|
||
|
Awaits to scale, no gift remains to gain,
|
||
|
Yet I act here! and, if I acted not-
|
||
|
Earnest and watchful- those that look to me
|
||
|
For guidance, sinking back to sloth again
|
||
|
Because I slumbered, would decline from good,
|
||
|
And I should break earth's order and commit
|
||
|
Her offspring unto ruin, Bharata!
|
||
|
Even as the unknowing toil, wedded to sense,
|
||
|
So let the enlightened toil, sense-freed, but set
|
||
|
To bring the world deliverance, and its bliss;
|
||
|
Not sowing in those simple, busy hearts
|
||
|
Seed of despair. Yea! let each play his part
|
||
|
In all he finds to do, with unyoked soul.
|
||
|
All things are everywhere by Nature wrought
|
||
|
In interaction of the quahties.
|
||
|
The fool, cheated by self, thinks, "This I did"
|
||
|
And "That I wrought;" but- ah, thou strong-armed Prince!-
|
||
|
A better-lessoned mind, knowing the play
|
||
|
Of visible things within the world of sense,
|
||
|
And how the qualities must qualify,
|
||
|
Standeth aloof even from his acts. Th' untaught
|
||
|
Live mixed with them, knowing not Nature's way,
|
||
|
Of highest aims unwitting, slow and dull.
|
||
|
Those make thou not to stumble, having the light;
|
||
|
But all thy dues discharging, for My sake,
|
||
|
With meditation centred inwardly,
|
||
|
Seeking no profit, satisfied, serene,
|
||
|
Heedless of issue- fight! They who shall keep
|
||
|
My ordinance thus, the wise and willing hearts,
|
||
|
Have quittance from all issue of their acts;
|
||
|
But those who disregard My ordinance,
|
||
|
Thinking they know, know nought, and fall to loss,
|
||
|
Confused and foolish. 'Sooth, the instructed one
|
||
|
Doth of his kind, following what fits him most:
|
||
|
And lower creatures of their kind; in vain
|
||
|
Contending 'gainst the law. Needs must it be
|
||
|
The objects of the sense will stir the sense
|
||
|
To like and dislike, yet th' enlightened man
|
||
|
Yields not to these, knowing them enemies.
|
||
|
Finally, this is better, that one do
|
||
|
His own task as he may, even though he fail,
|
||
|
Than take tasks not his own, though they seem good.
|
||
|
To die performing duty is no ill;
|
||
|
But who seeks other roads shall wander still.
|
||
|
Arjuna. Yet tell me, Teacher! by what force doth man
|
||
|
Go to his ill, unwilling; as if one
|
||
|
Pushed him that evil path?
|
||
|
Krishna. Kama it is!
|
||
|
Passion it is! born of the Darknesses,
|
||
|
Which pusheth him. Mighty of appetite,
|
||
|
Sinful, and strong is this!- man's enemy!
|
||
|
As smoke blots the white fire, as clinging rust
|
||
|
Mars the bright mirror, as the womb surrounds
|
||
|
The babe unborn, so is the world of things
|
||
|
Foiled, soiled, enclosed in this desire of flesh.
|
||
|
The wise fall, caught in it; the unresting foe
|
||
|
It is of wisdom, wearing countless forms,
|
||
|
Fair but deceitful, subtle as a flame.
|
||
|
Sense, mind, and reason- these, O Kunti's Son!
|
||
|
Are booty for it; in its play with these
|
||
|
It maddens man, beguiling, blinding him.
|
||
|
Therefore, thou noblest child of Bharata!
|
||
|
Govern thy heart! Constrain th' entangled sense!
|
||
|
Resist the false, soft sinfulness which saps
|
||
|
Knowledge and judgment! Yea, the world is strong
|
||
|
But what discerns it stronger, and the mind
|
||
|
Strongest; and high o'er all the ruling Soul.
|
||
|
Wherefore, perceiving Him who reigns supreme,
|
||
|
Put forth full force of Soul in thy own soul!
|
||
|
Fight! vanquish foes and doubts, dear Hero! slay
|
||
|
What haunts thee in fond shapes, and would betray!
|
||
|
|
||
|
HERE ENDETH CHAPTER III OF THE
|
||
|
BHAGAVAD-GITA,
|
||
|
Entitled "Karma-Yog,"
|
||
|
Or "The Book of Virtue in Work."
|
||
|
CHAPTER IV
|
||
|
Krishna. This deathless Yoga, this deep union,
|
||
|
I taught Vivaswata, the Lord of Light;
|
||
|
Vivaswata to Manu gave it; he
|
||
|
To Ikshwaku; so passed it down the line
|
||
|
Of all my royal Rishis. Then, with years,
|
||
|
The truth grew dim and perished, noble Prince!
|
||
|
Now once again to thee it is declared-
|
||
|
This ancient lore, this mystery supreme-
|
||
|
Seeing I find thee votary and friend.
|
||
|
Arjuna. Thy birth, dear Lord, was in these later days
|
||
|
And bright Vivaswata's preceded time!
|
||
|
How shall I comprehend this thing thou sayest,
|
||
|
"From the beginning it was I who taught?"
|
||
|
Krishna. Manifold the renewals of my birth
|
||
|
Have been, Arjuna! and of thy births, too!
|
||
|
But mine I know, and thine thou knowest not,
|
||
|
O Slayer of thy Foes! Albeit I be
|
||
|
Unborn, undying, indestructible,
|
||
|
The Lord of all things living; not the less-
|
||
|
By Maya, by my magic which I stamp
|
||
|
On floating Nature-forms, the primal vast-
|
||
|
I come, and go, and come. When Righteousness
|
||
|
Declines, O Bharata! when Wickedness
|
||
|
Is strong, I rise, from age to age, and take
|
||
|
Visible shape, and move a man with men,
|
||
|
Succouring the good, thrusting the evil back,
|
||
|
And setting Virtue on her seat again.
|
||
|
Who knows the truth touching my births on earth
|
||
|
And my divine work, when he quits the flesh
|
||
|
Puts on its load no more, falls no more down
|
||
|
To earthly birth: to Me he comes, dear Prince!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Many there be who come! from fear set free,
|
||
|
From anger, from desire; keeping their hearts
|
||
|
Fixed upon me- my Faithful- purified
|
||
|
By sacred flame of Knowledge. Such as these
|
||
|
Mix with my being. Whoso worship me,
|
||
|
Them I exalt; but all men everywhere
|
||
|
Shall fall into my path; albeit, those souls
|
||
|
Which seek reward for works, make sacrifice
|
||
|
Now, to the lower gods. I say to thee
|
||
|
Here have they their reward. But I am He
|
||
|
Made the Four Castes, and portioned them a place
|
||
|
After their qualities and gifts. Yea, I
|
||
|
Created, the Reposeful; I that live
|
||
|
Immortally, made all those mortal births:
|
||
|
For works soil not my essence, being works
|
||
|
Wrought uninvolved. Who knows me acting thus
|
||
|
Unchained by action, action binds not him;
|
||
|
And, so perceiving, all those saints of old
|
||
|
Worked, seeking for deliverance. Work thou
|
||
|
As, in the days gone by, thy fathers did.
|
||
|
Thou sayst, perplexed, It hath been asked before
|
||
|
By singers and by sages, "What is act,
|
||
|
And what inaction?" I will teach thee this,
|
||
|
And, knowing, thou shalt learn which work doth save
|
||
|
Needs must one rightly meditate those three-
|
||
|
Doing,- not doing,- and undoing. Here
|
||
|
Thorny and dark the path is! He who sees
|
||
|
How action may be rest, rest action- he
|
||
|
Is wisest 'mid his kind; he hath the truth!
|
||
|
He doeth well, acting or resting. Freed
|
||
|
In all his works from prickings of desire,
|
||
|
Burned clean in act by the white fire of truth,
|
||
|
The wise call that man wise; and such an one,
|
||
|
Renouncing fruit of deeds, always content.
|
||
|
Always self-satisfying, if he works,
|
||
|
Doth nothing that shall stain his separate soul,
|
||
|
Which- quit of fear and hope- subduing self-
|
||
|
Rejecting outward impulse-yielding up
|
||
|
To body's need nothing save body, dwells
|
||
|
Sinless amid all sin, with equal calm
|
||
|
Taking what may befall, by grief unmoved,
|
||
|
Unmoved by joy, unenvyingly; the same
|
||
|
In good and evil fortunes; nowise bound
|
||
|
By bond of deeds. Nay, but of such an one,
|
||
|
Whose crave is gone, whose soul is liberate,
|
||
|
Whose heart is set on truth- of such an one
|
||
|
What work he does is work of sacrifice,
|
||
|
Which passeth purely into ash and smoke
|
||
|
Consumed upon the altar! All's then God!
|
||
|
The sacrifice is Brahm, the ghee and grain
|
||
|
Are Brahm, the fire is Brahm, the flesh it eats
|
||
|
Is Brahm, and unto Brahm attaineth he
|
||
|
Who, in such office, meditates on Brahm.
|
||
|
Some votaries there be who serve the gods
|
||
|
With flesh and altar-smoke; but other some
|
||
|
Who, lighting subtler fires, make purer rite
|
||
|
With will of worship. Of the which be they
|
||
|
Who, in white flame of continence, consume
|
||
|
Joys of the sense, delights of eye and ear,
|
||
|
Foregoing tender speech and sound of song:
|
||
|
And they who, kindling fires with torch of Truth,
|
||
|
Burn on a hidden altar-stone the bliss
|
||
|
Of youth and love, renouncing happiness:
|
||
|
And they who lay for offering there their wealth,
|
||
|
Their penance, meditation, piety,
|
||
|
Their steadfast reading of the scrolls, their lore
|
||
|
Painfully gained with long austerities:
|
||
|
And they who, making silent sacrifice,
|
||
|
Draw in their breath to feed the flame of thought,
|
||
|
And breathe it forth to waft the heart on high,
|
||
|
Governing the ventage of each entering air
|
||
|
Lest one sigh pass which helpeth not the soul:
|
||
|
And they who, day by day denying needs,
|
||
|
Lay life itself upon the altar-flame,
|
||
|
Burning the body wan. Lo! all these keep
|
||
|
The rite of offering, as if they slew
|
||
|
Victims; and all thereby efface much sin.
|
||
|
Yea! and who feed on the immortal food
|
||
|
Left of such sacrifice, to Brahma pass,
|
||
|
To The Unending. But for him that makes
|
||
|
No sacrifice, he hath nor part nor lot
|
||
|
Even in the present world. How should he share
|
||
|
Another, O thou Glory of thy Line?
|
||
|
|
||
|
In sight of Brahma all these offerings
|
||
|
Are spread and are accepted! Comprehend
|
||
|
That all proceed by act; for knowing this,
|
||
|
Thou shalt be quit of doubt. The sacrifice
|
||
|
Which Knowledge pays is better than great gifts
|
||
|
Offered by wealth, since gifts' worth- O my Prince!
|
||
|
Lies in the mind which gives, the will that serves:
|
||
|
And these are gained by reverence, by strong search,
|
||
|
By humble heed of those who see the Truth
|
||
|
And teach it. Knowing Truth, thy heart no more
|
||
|
Will ache with error, for the Truth shall show
|
||
|
All things subdued to thee, as thou to Me.
|
||
|
Moreover, Son of Pandu! wert thou worst
|
||
|
Of all wrong-doers, this fair ship of Truth
|
||
|
Should bear thee safe and dry across the sea
|
||
|
Of thy transgressions. As the kindled flame
|
||
|
Feeds on the fuel till it sinks to ash,
|
||
|
So unto ash, Arjuna! unto nought
|
||
|
The flame of Knowledge wastes works' dross away!
|
||
|
There is no purifier like thereto
|
||
|
In all this world, and he who seeketh it
|
||
|
Shall find it- being grown perfect- in himself.
|
||
|
Believing, he receives it when the soul
|
||
|
Masters itself, and cleaves to Truth, and comes-
|
||
|
Possessing knowledge- to the higher peace,
|
||
|
The uttermost repose. But those untaught,
|
||
|
And those without full faith, and those who fear
|
||
|
Are shent; no peace is here or other where,
|
||
|
No hope, nor happiness for whoso doubts.
|
||
|
He that, being self-contained, hath vanquished doubt,
|
||
|
Disparting self from service, soul from works,
|
||
|
Enlightened and emancipate, my Prince!
|
||
|
Works fetter him no more! Cut then atwain
|
||
|
With sword of wisdom, Son of Bharata!
|
||
|
This doubt that binds thy heart-beats! cleave the bond
|
||
|
Born of thy ignorance! Be bold and wise!
|
||
|
Give thyself to the field with me! Arise!
|
||
|
|
||
|
HERE ENDETH CHAPTER IV OF THE
|
||
|
BHAGAVAD-GITA,
|
||
|
Entitled "Jnana Yog,"
|
||
|
Or "The Book of the Religion of Knowledge."
|
||
|
CHAPTER V
|
||
|
Arjuna. Yet, Krishna at the one time thou dost laud
|
||
|
Surcease of works, and, at another time,
|
||
|
Service through work. Of these twain plainly tell
|
||
|
Which is the better way?
|
||
|
Krishna. To cease from works
|
||
|
Is well, and to do works in holiness
|
||
|
Is well; and both conduct to bliss supreme;
|
||
|
But of these twain the better way is his
|
||
|
Who working piously refraineth not.
|
||
|
|
||
|
That is the true Renouncer, firm and fixed,
|
||
|
Who- seeking nought, rejecting nought- dwells proof
|
||
|
Against the "opposites." O valiant Prince!
|
||
|
In doing, such breaks lightly from all deed:
|
||
|
'Tis the new scholar talks as they were two,
|
||
|
This Sankhya and this Yoga: wise men know
|
||
|
Who husbands one plucks golden fruit of both!
|
||
|
The region of high rest which Sankhyans reach
|
||
|
Yogins attain. Who sees these twain as one
|
||
|
Sees with clear eyes! Yet such abstraction, Chief!
|
||
|
Is hard to win without much holiness.
|
||
|
Whoso is fixed in holiness, self-ruled,
|
||
|
Pure-hearted, lord of senses and of self,
|
||
|
Lost in the common life of all which lives-
|
||
|
A "Yogayukt"- he is a Saint who wends
|
||
|
Straightway to Brahm. Such an one is not touched
|
||
|
By taint of deeds. "Nought of myself I do!"
|
||
|
Thus will he think- who holds the truth of truths-
|
||
|
In seeing, hearing, touching, smelling; when
|
||
|
He eats, or goes, or breathes; slumbers or talks,
|
||
|
Holds fast or loosens, opes his eyes or shuts;
|
||
|
Always assured "This is the sense-world plays
|
||
|
With senses." He that acts in thought of Brahm,
|
||
|
Detaching end from act, with act content,
|
||
|
The world of sense can no more stain his soul
|
||
|
Than waters mar th' enamelled lotus-leaf.
|
||
|
With life, with heart, with mind,- nay, with the help
|
||
|
Of all five senses- letting selfhood go-
|
||
|
Yogins toil ever towards their souls' release.
|
||
|
Such votaries, renouncing fruit of deeds,
|
||
|
Gain endless peace: the unvowed, the passion-bound,
|
||
|
Seeking a fruit from works, are fastened down.
|
||
|
The embodied sage, withdrawn within his soul,
|
||
|
At every act sits godlike in "the town
|
||
|
Which hath nine gateways," neither doing aught
|
||
|
Nor causing any deed. This world's Lord makes
|
||
|
Neither the work, nor passion for the work,
|
||
|
Nor lust for fruit of work; the man's own self
|
||
|
Pushes to these! The Master of this World
|
||
|
Takes on himself the good or evil deeds
|
||
|
Of no man- dwelling beyond! Mankind errs here
|
||
|
By folly, darkening knowledge. But, for whom
|
||
|
That darkness of the soul is chased by light,
|
||
|
Splendid and clear shines manifest the Truth
|
||
|
As if a Sun of Wisdom sprang to shed
|
||
|
Its beams of dawn. Him meditating still,
|
||
|
Him seeking, with Him blended, stayed on Him,
|
||
|
The souls illuminated take that road
|
||
|
Which hath no turning back- their sins flung off,
|
||
|
By strength of faith. [Who will may have this Light;
|
||
|
Who hath it sees.] To him who wisely sees,
|
||
|
The Brahman with his scrolls and sanctities,
|
||
|
The cow, the elephant, the unclean dog,
|
||
|
The Outcast gorging dog's meat, are all one.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The world is overcome- aye! even here!
|
||
|
By such as fix their faith on Unity.
|
||
|
The sinless Brahma dwells in Unity,
|
||
|
And they in Brahma. Be not over-glad
|
||
|
Attaining joy, and be not over-sad
|
||
|
Encountering grief, but, stayed on Brahma, still
|
||
|
Constant let each abide! The sage whose soul
|
||
|
Holds off from outer contacts, in himself
|
||
|
Finds bliss; to Brahma joined by piety,
|
||
|
His spirit tastes eternal peace. The joys
|
||
|
Springing from sense-life are but quickening wombs
|
||
|
Which breed sure griefs: those joys begin and end!
|
||
|
The wise mind takes no pleasure, Kunti's Son!
|
||
|
In such as those! But if a man shall learn,
|
||
|
Even while he lives and bears his body's chain,
|
||
|
To master lust and anger, he is blest!
|
||
|
He is the Yukta; he hath happiness,
|
||
|
Contentment, light, within: his life is merged
|
||
|
In Brahma's life; he doth Nirvana touch!
|
||
|
Thus go the Rishis unto rest, who dwell
|
||
|
With sins effaced, with doubts at end, with hearts
|
||
|
Governed and calm. Glad in all good they live,
|
||
|
Nigh to the peace of God; and all those live
|
||
|
Who pass their days exempt from greed and wrath,
|
||
|
Subduing self and senses, knowing the Soul!
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Saint who shuts outside his placid soul
|
||
|
All touch of sense, letting no contact through;
|
||
|
Whose quiet eyes gaze straight from fixed brows,
|
||
|
Whose outward breath and inward breath are drawn
|
||
|
Equal and slow through nostrils still and close;
|
||
|
That one- with organs, heart, and mind constrained,
|
||
|
Bent on deliverance, having put away
|
||
|
Passion, and fear, and rage;- hath even now,
|
||
|
Obtained deliverance, ever and ever freed.
|
||
|
Yea! for he knows Me Who am He that heeds
|
||
|
The sacrifice and worship, God revealed;
|
||
|
And He who heeds not, being Lord of Worlds,
|
||
|
Lover of all that lives, God unrevealed,
|
||
|
Wherein who will shall find surety and shield!
|
||
|
|
||
|
HERE ENDETH CHAPTER V OF THE
|
||
|
BHAGAVAD-GITA,
|
||
|
Entitled "Karmasanyasayog,"
|
||
|
Or "The Book of Religion by Renouncing
|
||
|
Fruit of Works."
|
||
|
CHAPTER VI
|
||
|
Krishna. Therefore, who doeth work rightful to do,
|
||
|
Not seeking gain from work, that man, O Prince!
|
||
|
Is Sanyasi and Yogi- both in one
|
||
|
And he is neither who lights not the flame
|
||
|
Of sacrifice, nor setteth hand to task.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Regard as true Renouncer him that makes
|
||
|
Worship by work, for who renounceth not
|
||
|
Works not as Yogin. So is that well said:
|
||
|
"By works the votary doth rise to faith,
|
||
|
And saintship is the ceasing from all works;
|
||
|
Because the perfect Yogin acts- but acts
|
||
|
Unmoved by passions and unbound by deeds,
|
||
|
Setting result aside.
|
||
|
Let each man raise
|
||
|
The Self by Soul, not trample down his Self,
|
||
|
Since Soul that is Self's friend may grow Self's foe.
|
||
|
Soul is Self's friend when Self doth rule o'er Self,
|
||
|
But Self turns enemy if Soul's own self
|
||
|
Hates Self as not itself.
|
||
|
The sovereign soul
|
||
|
Of him who lives self-governed and at peace
|
||
|
Is centred in itself, taking alike
|
||
|
Pleasure and pain; heat, cold; glory and shame.
|
||
|
He is the Yogi, he is Yukta, glad
|
||
|
With joy of light and truth; dwelling apart
|
||
|
Upon a peak, with senses subjugate
|
||
|
Whereto the clod, the rock, the glistering gold
|
||
|
Show all as one. By this sign is he known
|
||
|
Being of equal grace to comrades, friends,
|
||
|
Chance-comers, strangers, lovers, enemies,
|
||
|
Aliens and kinsmen; loving all alike,
|
||
|
Evil or good.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sequestered should he sit,
|
||
|
Steadfastly meditating, solitary,
|
||
|
His thoughts controlled, his passions laid away,
|
||
|
Quit of belongings. In a fair, still spot
|
||
|
Having his fixed abode,- not too much raised,
|
||
|
Nor yet too low,- let him abide, his goods
|
||
|
A cloth, a deerskin, and the Kusa-grass.
|
||
|
There, setting hard his mind upon The One,
|
||
|
Restraining heart and senses, silent, calm,
|
||
|
Let him accomplish Yoga, and achieve
|
||
|
Pureness of soul, holding immovable
|
||
|
Body and neck and head, his gaze absorbed
|
||
|
Upon his nose-end, rapt from all around,
|
||
|
Tranquil in spirit, free of fear, intent
|
||
|
Upon his Brahmacharya vow, devout,
|
||
|
Musing on Me, lost in the thought of Me.
|
||
|
That Yogin, so devoted, so controlled,
|
||
|
Comes to the peace beyond,- My peace, the peace
|
||
|
Of high Nirvana!
|
||
|
|
||
|
But for earthly needs
|
||
|
Religion is not his who too much fasts
|
||
|
Or too much feasts, nor his who sleeps away
|
||
|
An idle mind; nor his who wears to waste
|
||
|
His strength in vigils. Nay, Arjuna! I call
|
||
|
That the true piety which most removes
|
||
|
Earth-aches and ills, where one is moderate
|
||
|
In eating and in resting, and in sport;
|
||
|
Measured in wish and act; sleeping betimes,
|
||
|
Waking betimes for duty.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When the man,
|
||
|
So living, centres on his soul the thought
|
||
|
Straitly restrained- untouched internally
|
||
|
By stress of sense- then is he Yukta. See!
|
||
|
Steadfast a lamp burns sheltered from the wind;
|
||
|
Such is the likeness of the Yogi's mind
|
||
|
Shut from sense-storms and burning bright to Heaven.
|
||
|
When mind broods placid, soothed with holy wont;
|
||
|
When Self contemplates self, and in itself
|
||
|
Hath comfort; when it knows the nameless joy
|
||
|
Beyond all scope of sense, revealed to soul-
|
||
|
Only to soul! and, knowing, wavers not,
|
||
|
True to the farther Truth; when, holding this,
|
||
|
It deems no other treasure comparable,
|
||
|
But, harboured there, cannot be stirred or shook
|
||
|
By any gravest grief, call that state "peace,"
|
||
|
That happy severance Yoga; call that man
|
||
|
The perfect Yogin!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Steadfastly the will
|
||
|
Must toil thereto, till efforts end in ease,
|
||
|
And thought has passed from thinking. Shaking off
|
||
|
All longings bred by dreams of fame and gain,
|
||
|
Shutting the doorways of the senses close
|
||
|
With watchful ward; so, step by step, it comes
|
||
|
To gift of peace assured and heart assuaged,
|
||
|
When the mind dwells self-wrapped, and the soul broods
|
||
|
Cumberless. But, as often as the heart
|
||
|
Breaks- wild and wavering- from control, so oft
|
||
|
Let him re-curb it, let him rein it back
|
||
|
To the soul's governance; for perfect bliss
|
||
|
Grows only in the bosom tranquillised,
|
||
|
The spirit passionless, purged from offence,
|
||
|
Vowed to the Infinite. He who thus vows
|
||
|
His soul to the Supreme Soul, quitting sin,
|
||
|
Passes unhindered to the endless bliss
|
||
|
Of unity with Brahma. He so vowed,
|
||
|
So blended, sees the Life-Soul resident
|
||
|
In all things living, and all living things
|
||
|
In that Life-Soul contained. And whoso thus
|
||
|
Discerneth Me in all, and all in Me,
|
||
|
I never let him go; nor looseneth he
|
||
|
Hold upon Me; but, dwell he where he may,
|
||
|
Whate'er his life, in Me he dwells and lives,
|
||
|
Because he knows and worships Me, Who dwell
|
||
|
In all which lives, and cleaves to Me in all.
|
||
|
Arjuna! if a man sees everywhere-
|
||
|
Taught by his own similitude- one Life,
|
||
|
One Essence in the Evil and the Good,
|
||
|
Hold him a Yogi, yea! well perfected!
|
||
|
Arjuna. Slayer of Madhu! yet again, this Yog,
|
||
|
This Peace, derived from equanimity,
|
||
|
Made known by thee- I see no fixity
|
||
|
Therein, no rest, because the heart of men
|
||
|
Is unfixed, Krishna! rash, tumultuous,
|
||
|
Wilful and strong. It were all one, I think,
|
||
|
To hold the wayward wind, as tame man's heart.
|
||
|
Krishna. Hero long-armed! beyond denial, hard
|
||
|
Man's heart is to restrain, and wavering;
|
||
|
Yet may it grow restrained by habit, Prince!
|
||
|
By wont of self-command. This Yog, I say,
|
||
|
Cometh not lightly to th' ungoverned ones;
|
||
|
But he who will be master of himself
|
||
|
Shall win it, if he stoutly strive thereto.
|
||
|
Arjuna. And what road goeth he who, having faith,
|
||
|
Fails, Krishna! in the striving; falling back
|
||
|
From holiness, missing the perfect rule?
|
||
|
Is he not lost, straying from Brahma's light,
|
||
|
Like the vain cloud, which floats 'twixt earth and heaven
|
||
|
When lightning splits it, and it vanisheth?
|
||
|
Fain would I hear thee answer me herein,
|
||
|
Since, Krishna! none save thou can clear the doubt.
|
||
|
Krishna. He is not lost, thou Son of Pritha! No!
|
||
|
Nor earth, nor heaven is forfeit, even for him,
|
||
|
Because no heart that holds one right desire
|
||
|
Treadeth the road of loss! He who should fail,
|
||
|
Desiring righteousness, cometh at death
|
||
|
Unto the Region of the Just; dwells there
|
||
|
Measureless years, and being born anew,
|
||
|
Beginneth life again in some fair home
|
||
|
Amid the mild and happy. It may chance
|
||
|
He doth descend into a Yogin house
|
||
|
On Virtue's breast; but that is rare! Such birth
|
||
|
Is hard to be obtained on this earth, Chief!
|
||
|
So hath he back again what heights of heart
|
||
|
He did achieve, and so he strives anew
|
||
|
To perfectness, with better hope, dear Prince!
|
||
|
For by the old desire he is drawn on
|
||
|
Unwittingly; and only to desire
|
||
|
The purity of Yog is to pass
|
||
|
Beyond the Sabdabrahm, the spoken Ved.
|
||
|
But, being Yogi, striving strong and long,
|
||
|
Purged from transgressions, perfected by births
|
||
|
Following on births, he plants his feet at last
|
||
|
Upon the farther path. Such as one ranks
|
||
|
Above ascetics, higher than the wise,
|
||
|
Beyond achievers of vast deeds! Be thou
|
||
|
Yogi Arjuna! And of such believe,
|
||
|
Truest and best is he who worships Me
|
||
|
With inmost soul, stayed on My Mystery!
|
||
|
|
||
|
HERE ENDETH CHAPTER VI OF THE
|
||
|
BHAGAVAD-GITA,
|
||
|
Entitled "Atmasanyamayog,"
|
||
|
Or "The Book of Religion of Self-Restraint."
|
||
|
CHAPTER VII
|
||
|
Krishna. Learn now, dear Prince! how, if thy soul be set
|
||
|
Ever on Me- still exercising Yog,
|
||
|
Still making Me thy Refuge- thou shalt come
|
||
|
Most surely unto perfect hold of Me.
|
||
|
I will declare to thee that utmost lore,
|
||
|
Whole and particular, which, when thou knowest,
|
||
|
Leaveth no more to know here in this world.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Of many thousand mortals, one, perchance,
|
||
|
Striveth for Truth; and of those few that strive-
|
||
|
Nay, and rise high- one only- here and there-
|
||
|
Knoweth Me, as I am, the very Truth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Earth, water, flame, air, ether, life, and mind,
|
||
|
And individuality- those eight
|
||
|
Make up the showing of Me, Manifest.
|
||
|
|
||
|
These be my lower Nature; learn the higher,
|
||
|
Whereby, thou Valiant One! this Universe
|
||
|
Is, by its principle of life, produced;
|
||
|
Whereby the worlds of visible things are born
|
||
|
As from a Yoni. Know! I am that womb:
|
||
|
I make and I unmake this Universe:
|
||
|
Than me there is no other Master, Prince!
|
||
|
No other Maker! All these hang on me
|
||
|
As hangs a row of pearls upon its string.
|
||
|
I am the fresh taste of the water; I
|
||
|
The silver of the moon, the gold o' the sun,
|
||
|
The word of worship in the Veds, the thrill
|
||
|
That passeth in the ether, and the strength
|
||
|
Of man's shed seed. I am the good sweet smell
|
||
|
Of the moistened earth, I am the fire's red light,
|
||
|
The vital air moving in all which moves,
|
||
|
The holiness of hallowed souls, the root
|
||
|
Undying, whence hath sprung whatever is;
|
||
|
The wisdom of the wise, the intellect
|
||
|
Of the informed, the greatness of the great.
|
||
|
The splendour of the splendid. Kunti's Son!
|
||
|
These am I, free from passion and desire;
|
||
|
Yet am I right desire in all who yearn,
|
||
|
Chief of the Bharatas! for all those moods,
|
||
|
Soothfast, or passionate, or ignorant,
|
||
|
Which Nature frames, deduce from me; but all
|
||
|
Are merged in me- not I in them! The world-
|
||
|
Deceived by those three qualities of being-
|
||
|
Wotteth not Me Who am outside them all,
|
||
|
Above them all, Eternal! Hard it is
|
||
|
To pierce that veil divine of various shows
|
||
|
Which hideth Me; yet they who worship Me
|
||
|
Pierce it and pass beyond.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I am not known
|
||
|
To evil-doers, nor to foolish ones,
|
||
|
Nor to the base and churlish; nor to those
|
||
|
Whose mind is cheated by the show of things,
|
||
|
Nor those that take the way of Asuras.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Four sorts of mortals know me: he who weeps,
|
||
|
Arjuna! and the man who yearns to know;
|
||
|
And he who toils to help; and he who sits
|
||
|
Certain of me, enlightened.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Of these four,
|
||
|
O Prince of India! highest, nearest, best
|
||
|
That last is, the devout soul, wise, intent
|
||
|
Upon "The One." Dear, above all, am I
|
||
|
To him; and he is dearest unto me!
|
||
|
All four are good, and seek me; but mine own,
|
||
|
The true of heart, the faithful- stayed on me,
|
||
|
Taking me as their utmost, blessedness,
|
||
|
They are not "mine," but I- even I myself!
|
||
|
At end of many births to Me they come!
|
||
|
Yet hard the wise Mahatma is to find,
|
||
|
That man who sayeth, "All is Vasudev!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
There be those, too, whose knowledge, turned aside
|
||
|
By this desire or that, gives them to serve
|
||
|
Some lower gods, with various rites, constrained
|
||
|
By that which mouldeth them. Unto all such-
|
||
|
Worship what shrine they will, what shapes, in faith-
|
||
|
'Tis I who give them faith! I am content!
|
||
|
The heart thus asking favour from its God,
|
||
|
Darkened but ardent, hath the end it craves,
|
||
|
The lesser blessing- but 'tis I who give!
|
||
|
Yet soon is withered what small fruit they reap:
|
||
|
Those men of little minds, who worship so,
|
||
|
Go where they worship, passing with their gods.
|
||
|
But Mine come unto me! Blind are the eyes
|
||
|
Which deem th' Unmanifested manifest,
|
||
|
Not comprehending Me in my true Self!
|
||
|
Imperishable, viewless, undeclared,
|
||
|
Hidden behind my magic veil of shows,
|
||
|
I am not seen by all; I am not known-
|
||
|
Unborn and changeless- to the idle world.
|
||
|
But I, Arjuna! know all things which were,
|
||
|
And all which are, and all which are to be,
|
||
|
Albeit not one among them knoweth Me!
|
||
|
|
||
|
By passion for the "pairs of opposites,"
|
||
|
By those twain snares of Like and Dislike, Prince!
|
||
|
All creatures live bewildered, save some few
|
||
|
Who, quit of sins, holy in act, informed,
|
||
|
Freed from the "opposites," and fixed in faith,
|
||
|
Cleave unto Me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Who cleave, who seek in Me
|
||
|
Refuge from birth and death, those have the Truth!
|
||
|
Those know Me BRAHMA: know Me Soul of Souls,
|
||
|
The ADHYATMAN: know KARMA, my work;
|
||
|
Know I am ADHIBHUTA, Lord of Life,
|
||
|
And ADHIDAIVA, Lord of all the Gods,
|
||
|
And ADHIYAJNA, Lord of Sacrifice;
|
||
|
Worship Me well, with hearts of love and faith,
|
||
|
And find and hold me in the hour of death.
|
||
|
|
||
|
HERE ENDETH CHAPTER VII OF THE
|
||
|
BHAGAVAD-GITA,
|
||
|
Entitled "Vijnanayog,"
|
||
|
Or "The Book of Religion by Discernment."
|
||
|
CHAPTER VIII
|
||
|
Arjuna. Who is that BRAHMA? What that Soul of Souls,
|
||
|
The ADHYATMAN? What, Thou Best of All!
|
||
|
Thy work, the KARMA? Tell me what it is
|
||
|
Thou namest ADHIBHUTA? What again
|
||
|
Means ADHIDAIVA? Yea, and how it comes
|
||
|
Thou canst be ADHIYAJNA in thy flesh?
|
||
|
Slayer of Madhu! Further, make me know
|
||
|
How good men find thee in the hour of death?
|
||
|
Krishna. I BRAHMA am! the One Eternal GOD,
|
||
|
And ADHYATMAN is My Being's name,
|
||
|
The Soul of Souls! What goeth forth from Me,
|
||
|
Causing all life to live, is KARMA called:
|
||
|
And, Manifested in divided forms,
|
||
|
I am the ADHIBHUTA, Lord of Lives;
|
||
|
And ADHIDAIVA, Lord of all the Gods,
|
||
|
Because I am PURUSHA, who who begets.
|
||
|
And ADHIYAJNA, Lord of Sacrifice,
|
||
|
I- speaking with thee in this body here-
|
||
|
Am, thou embodied one! (for all the shrines
|
||
|
Flame unto Me!) And, at the hour of death,
|
||
|
He that hath meditated Me alone,
|
||
|
In putting off his flesh, comes forth to Me,
|
||
|
Enters into My Being- doubt thou not!
|
||
|
But, if he meditated otherwise
|
||
|
At hour of death, in putting off the flesh,
|
||
|
He goes to what he looked for, Kunti's Son!
|
||
|
Because the Soul is fashioned to its like.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Have Me, then, in thy heart always! and fight!
|
||
|
Thou too, when heart and mind are fixed on Me,
|
||
|
Shalt surely come to Me! All come who cleave
|
||
|
With never-wavering will of firmest faith,
|
||
|
Owning none other Gods: all come to Me,
|
||
|
The Uttermost, Purusha, Holiest!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Whoso hath known Me, Lord of sage and singer,
|
||
|
Ancient of days; of all the Three Worlds Stay,
|
||
|
Boundless,- but unto every atom Bringer
|
||
|
Of that which quickens it: whoso, I say,
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hath known My form, which passeth mortal knowing;
|
||
|
Seen my effulgence- which no eye hath seen-
|
||
|
Than the sun's burning gold more brightly glowing,
|
||
|
Dispersing darkness,- unto him hath been
|
||
|
|
||
|
Right life! And, in the hour when life is ending,
|
||
|
With mind set fast and trustful piety,
|
||
|
Drawing still breath beneath calm brows unbending,
|
||
|
In happy peace that faithful one doth die,-
|
||
|
|
||
|
In glad peace passeth to Purusha's heaven.
|
||
|
The place which they who read the Vedas name
|
||
|
AKSHARAM, "Ultimate;" whereto have striven
|
||
|
Saints and ascetics- their road is the same.
|
||
|
|
||
|
That way- the highest way- goes he who shuts
|
||
|
The gates of all his senses, locks desire
|
||
|
Safe in his heart, centres the vital airs
|
||
|
Upon his parting thought, steadfastly set;
|
||
|
And, murmuring OM, the sacred syllable-
|
||
|
Emblem of BRAHM- dies, meditating Me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For who, none other Gods regarding, looks
|
||
|
Ever to Me, easily am I gained
|
||
|
By such a Yogi; and, attaining Me,
|
||
|
They fall not- those Mahatmas- back to birth,
|
||
|
To life, which is the place of pain, which ends,
|
||
|
But take the way of utmost blessedness.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The worlds, Arjuna!- even Brahma's world-
|
||
|
Roll back again from Death to Life's unrest;
|
||
|
But they, O Kunti's Son! that reach to Me,
|
||
|
Taste birth no more. If ye know Brahma's Day
|
||
|
Which is a thousand Yugas; if ye know
|
||
|
The thousand Yugas making Brahma's Night,
|
||
|
Then know ye Day and Night as He doth know!
|
||
|
When that vast Dawn doth break, th' Invisible
|
||
|
Is brought anew into the Visible;
|
||
|
When that deep Night doth darken, all which is
|
||
|
Fades back again to Him Who sent it forth;
|
||
|
Yea! this vast company of living things-
|
||
|
Again and yet again produced- expires
|
||
|
At Brahma's Nightfall; and, at Brahma's Dawn,
|
||
|
Riseth, without its will, to life new-born.
|
||
|
But- higher, deeper, innermost- abides
|
||
|
Another Life, not like the life of sense,
|
||
|
Escaping sight, unchanging. This endures
|
||
|
When all created things have passed away;
|
||
|
This is that Life named the Unmanifest,
|
||
|
The Infinite! the All! the Uttermost.
|
||
|
Thither arriving none return. That Life
|
||
|
Is Mine, and I am there! And, Prince! by faith
|
||
|
Which wanders not, there is a way to come
|
||
|
Thither. I, the PURUSHA, I Who spread
|
||
|
The Universe around me- in Whom dwell
|
||
|
All living Things- may so be reached and seen!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Richer than holy fruit on Vedas growing,
|
||
|
Greater than gifts, better than prayer or fast,
|
||
|
Such wisdom is! The Yogi, this way knowing,
|
||
|
Comes to the Utmost Perfect Peace at last.
|
||
|
|
||
|
HERE ENDETH CHAPTER VIII OF THE
|
||
|
BHAGAVAD-GITA;
|
||
|
Entitled "Aksharaparabrahmayog,"
|
||
|
Or "The Book of Religion by Devotion
|
||
|
to the One Supreme God."
|
||
|
CHAPTER IX
|
||
|
Krishna. Now will I open unto thee- whose heart
|
||
|
Rejects not- that last lore, deepest-concealed,
|
||
|
That farthest secret of My Heavens and Earths,
|
||
|
Which but to know shall set thee free from ills,-
|
||
|
A royal lore! a Kingly mystery!
|
||
|
Yea! for the soul such light as purgeth it
|
||
|
From every sin; a light of holiness
|
||
|
With inmost splendour shining; plain to see;
|
||
|
Easy to walk by, inexhaustible!
|
||
|
|
||
|
They that receive not this, failing in faith
|
||
|
To grasp the greater wisdom, reach not Me,
|
||
|
Destroyer of thy foes! They sink anew
|
||
|
Into the realm of Flesh, where all things change!
|
||
|
|
||
|
By Me the whole vast Universe of things
|
||
|
Is spread abroad;- by Me, the Unmanifest!
|
||
|
In Me are all existences contained;
|
||
|
Not I in them!
|
||
|
Yet they are not contained,
|
||
|
Those visible things! Receive and strive to embrace
|
||
|
The mystery majestical! My Being-
|
||
|
Creating all, sustaining all- still dwells
|
||
|
Outside of all!
|
||
|
|
||
|
See! as the shoreless airs
|
||
|
Move in the measureless space, but are not space,
|
||
|
[And space were space without the moving airs];
|
||
|
So all things are in Me, but are not I.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At closing of each Kalpa, Indian Prince!
|
||
|
All things which be back to My Being come:
|
||
|
At the beginning of each Kalpa, all
|
||
|
Issue new-born from Me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
By Energy
|
||
|
And help of Prakriti, my outer Self,
|
||
|
Again, and yet again, I make go forth
|
||
|
The realms of visible things- without their will-
|
||
|
All of them- by the power of Prakriti.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yet these great makings, Prince! involve Me not
|
||
|
Enchain Me not ! I sit apart from them,
|
||
|
Other, and Higher, and Free; nowise attached!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Thus doth the stuff of worlds, moulded by Me,
|
||
|
Bring forth all that which is, moving or still,
|
||
|
Living or lifeless! Thus the worlds go on!
|
||
|
|
||
|
The minds untaught mistake Me, veiled in form;-
|
||
|
Naught see they of My secret Presence, nought
|
||
|
Of My hid Nature, ruling all which lives.
|
||
|
Vain hopes pursuing, vain deeds doing; fed
|
||
|
On vainest knowledge, senselessly they seek
|
||
|
An evil way, the way of brutes and fiends.
|
||
|
But My Mahatmas, those of noble soul
|
||
|
Who tread the path celestial, worship Me
|
||
|
With hearts unwandering,- knowing Me the Source,
|
||
|
Th' Eternal Source, of Life. Unendingly
|
||
|
They glorify Me; seek Me; keep their vows
|
||
|
Of reverence and love, with changeless faith
|
||
|
Adoring Me. Yea, and those too adore,
|
||
|
Who, offering sacrifice of wakened hearts,
|
||
|
Have sense of one pervading Spirit's stress,
|
||
|
One Force in every place, though manifold!
|
||
|
I am the Sacrifice! I am the Prayer!
|
||
|
I am the Funeral-Cake set for the dead!
|
||
|
I am the healing herb! I am the ghee,
|
||
|
The Mantra, and the flame, and that which burns!
|
||
|
I am- of all this boundless Universe-
|
||
|
The Father, Mother, Ancestor, and Guard!
|
||
|
The end of Learning! That which purifies
|
||
|
In lustral water! I am OM! I am
|
||
|
Rig-Veda, Sama-Veda, Yajur-Ved;
|
||
|
The Way, the Fosterer, the Lord, the Judge,
|
||
|
The Witness; the Abode, the Refuge-House,
|
||
|
The Friend, the Fountain and the Sea of Life
|
||
|
Which sends, and swallows up; Treasure of Worlds
|
||
|
And Treasure-Chamber! Seed and Seed-Sower,
|
||
|
Whence endless harvests spring! Sun's heat is mine;
|
||
|
Heaven's rain is mine to grant or to withhold;
|
||
|
Death am I, and Immortal Life I am,
|
||
|
Arjuna! SAT and ASAT, Visible Life,
|
||
|
And Life Invisible!
|
||
|
Yea! those who learn
|
||
|
The threefold Veds, who drink the Soma-wine,
|
||
|
Purge sins, pay sacrifice- from Me they earn
|
||
|
Passage to Swarga; where the meats divine
|
||
|
|
||
|
Of great gods feed them in high Indra's heaven.
|
||
|
Yet they, when that prodigious joy is o'er,
|
||
|
Paradise spent, and wage for merits given,
|
||
|
Come to the world of death and change once more.
|
||
|
|
||
|
They had their recompense! they stored their treasure,
|
||
|
Following the threefold Scripture and its writ;
|
||
|
Who seeketh such gaineth the fleeting pleasure
|
||
|
Of joy which comes and goes! I grant them it!
|
||
|
|
||
|
But to those blessed ones who worship Me,
|
||
|
Turning not otherwhere, with minds set fast,
|
||
|
I bring assurance of full bliss beyond.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Nay, and of hearts which follow other gods
|
||
|
In simple faith, their prayers arise to me,
|
||
|
O Kunti's Son! though they pray wrongfully;
|
||
|
For I am the Receiver and the Lord
|
||
|
Of every sacrifice, which these know not
|
||
|
Rightfully; so they fall to earth again!
|
||
|
Who follow gods go to their gods; who vow
|
||
|
Their souls to Pitris go to Pitris; minds
|
||
|
To evil Bhuts given o'er sink to the Bhuts;
|
||
|
And whoso loveth Me cometh to Me.
|
||
|
Whoso shall offer Me in faith and love
|
||
|
A leaf, a flower, a fruit, water poured forth,
|
||
|
That offering I accept, lovingly made
|
||
|
With pious will. Whate'er thou doest, Prince!
|
||
|
Eating or sacrificing, giving gifts,
|
||
|
Praying or fasting, let it all be done
|
||
|
For Me, as Mine. So shalt thou free thyself
|
||
|
From Karmabandh, the chain which holdeth men
|
||
|
To good and evil issue, so shalt come
|
||
|
Safe unto Me- when thou art quit of flesh-
|
||
|
By faith and abdication joined to Me!
|
||
|
|
||
|
I am alike for all! I know not hate,
|
||
|
I know not favour! What is made is Mine!
|
||
|
But them that worship Me with love, I love;
|
||
|
They are in Me, and I in them!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Nay, Prince!
|
||
|
If one of evil life turn in his thought
|
||
|
Straightly to Me, count him amidst the good;
|
||
|
He hath the high way chosen; he shall grow
|
||
|
Righteous ere long; he shall attain that peace
|
||
|
Which changes not. Thou Prince of India!
|
||
|
Be certain none can perish, trusting Me!
|
||
|
O Pritha's Son! whoso will turn to Me,
|
||
|
Though they be born from the very womb of Sin,
|
||
|
Woman or man; sprung of the Vaisya caste
|
||
|
Or lowly disregarded Sudra,- all
|
||
|
Plant foot upon the highest path; how then
|
||
|
The holy Brahmans and My Royal Saints?
|
||
|
Ah! ye who into this ill world are come-
|
||
|
Fleeting and false- set your faith fast on Me!
|
||
|
Fix heart and thought on Me! Adore Me! Bring
|
||
|
Offerings to Me! Make Me prostrations! Make
|
||
|
Me your supremest joy! and, undivided,
|
||
|
Unto My rest your spirits shall be guided.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
HERE ENDETH CHAPTER IX OF THE
|
||
|
BHAGAVAD-GITA,
|
||
|
Entitled "Rajavidyarajaguhyayog,"
|
||
|
Or "The Book of Religion by the Kingly Knowledge
|
||
|
and the Kingly Mystery."
|
||
|
CHAPTER X
|
||
|
Krishna. Hear farther yet, thou Long-Armed Lord! these latest
|
||
|
words I say-
|
||
|
Uttered to bring thee bliss and peace, who lovest Me alway-
|
||
|
Not the great company of gods nor kingly Rishis know
|
||
|
My Nature, Who have made the gods and Rishis long ago;
|
||
|
He only knoweth- only he is free of sin, and wise,
|
||
|
Who seeth Me, Lord of the Worlds, with faith-enlightened eyes,
|
||
|
Unborn, undying, unbegun. Whatever Natures be
|
||
|
To mortal men distributed, those natures spring from Me!
|
||
|
Intellect, skill, enlightenment, endurance, self-control,
|
||
|
Truthfulness, equability, and grief or joy of soul,
|
||
|
And birth and death, and fearfulness, and fearlessness, and shame,
|
||
|
And honour, and sweet harmlessness, and peace which is the same
|
||
|
Whate'er befalls, and mirth, and tears, and piety and thrift,
|
||
|
And wish to give, and will to help,- all cometh of My gift!
|
||
|
The Seven Chief Saints, the Elders Four, the Lordly Manus set-
|
||
|
Sharing My work- to rule the worlds, these too did I beget;
|
||
|
And Rishis, Pitris, Manus, all, by one thought of My mind;
|
||
|
Thence did arise, to fill this world, the races of mankind;
|
||
|
Wherefrom who comprehends My Reign of mystic Majesty-
|
||
|
That truth of truths- is thenceforth linked in faultless faith to
|
||
|
Me:
|
||
|
Yea! knowing Me the source of all, by Me all creatures wrought,
|
||
|
The wise in spirit cleave to Me, into My Being brought;
|
||
|
Hearts fixed on Me; breaths breathed to Me; praising Me, each to
|
||
|
each,
|
||
|
So have they happiness and peace, with pious thought and speech;
|
||
|
And unto these- thus serving well, thus loving ceaselessly-
|
||
|
I give a mind of perfect mood, whereby they draw to Me;
|
||
|
And, all for love of them, within their darkened souls I dwell,
|
||
|
And, with bright rays of wisdom's lamp, their ignorance dispel.
|
||
|
Arjuna. Yes! Thou art Parabrahm! The High Abode!
|
||
|
The Great Purification! Thou art God
|
||
|
Eternal, All-creating, Holy, First,
|
||
|
Without beginning! Lord of Lords and Gods!
|
||
|
Declared by all the Saints- by Narada,
|
||
|
Vyasa Asita, and Devalas;
|
||
|
And here Thyself declaring unto me!
|
||
|
What Thou hast said now know I to be truth,
|
||
|
O Kesava! that neither gods nor men
|
||
|
Nor demons comprehend Thy mystery
|
||
|
Made manifest, Divinest! Thou Thyself
|
||
|
Thyself alone dost know, Maker Supreme!
|
||
|
Master of all the living! Lord of Gods!
|
||
|
King of the Universe! To Thee alone
|
||
|
Belongs to tell the heavenly excellence
|
||
|
Of those perfections wherewith Thou dost fill
|
||
|
These worlds of Thine; Pervading, Immanent!
|
||
|
How shall I learn, Supremest Mystery!
|
||
|
To know Thee, though I muse continually?
|
||
|
Under what form of Thine unnumbered forms
|
||
|
Mayst Thou be grasped? Ah! yet again recount,
|
||
|
Clear and complete, Thy great appearances,
|
||
|
The secrets of Thy Majesty and Might,
|
||
|
Thou High Delight of Men! Never enough
|
||
|
Can mine ears drink the Amrit of such words!
|
||
|
Krishna. Hanta! So be it! Kuru Prince! I will to thee unfold
|
||
|
Some portions of My Majesty, whose powers are manifold!
|
||
|
I am the Spirit seated deep in every creature's heart;
|
||
|
From Me they come; by Me they live; at My word they depart!
|
||
|
Vishnu of the Adityas I am, those Lords of Light;
|
||
|
Maritchi of the Maruts, the Kings of Storm and Blight;
|
||
|
By day I gleam, the golden Sun of burning cloudless Noon;
|
||
|
By Night, amid the asterisms I glide, the dappled Moon!
|
||
|
Of Vedas I am Sama-Ved, of gods in Indra's Heaven
|
||
|
Vasava; of the faculties to living beings given
|
||
|
The mind which apprehends and thinks; of Rudras Sankara;
|
||
|
Of Yakshas and of Rakshasas, Vittesh; and Pavaka
|
||
|
Of Vasus, and of mountain-peaks Meru; Vrihaspati
|
||
|
Know Me 'mid planetary Powers; 'mid Warriors heavenly
|
||
|
Skanda; of all the water-floods the Sea which drinketh each,
|
||
|
And Bhrigu of the holy Saints, and OM of sacred speech;
|
||
|
Of prayers the prayer ye whisper; of hills Himila's snow,
|
||
|
And Aswattha, the fig-tree, of all the trees that grow;
|
||
|
Of the Devarshis, Narada; and Chitrarath of them
|
||
|
That sing in Heaven, and Kapila of Munis, and the gem
|
||
|
Of flying steeds, Uchchaisravas, from Amritwave which burst;
|
||
|
Of elephants Airavata; of males the Best and First;
|
||
|
Of weapons Heav'n's hot thunderbolt; of cows white Kamadhuk,
|
||
|
From whose great milky udder-teats all hearts' desires are strook;
|
||
|
Vasuki of the serpent-tribes, round Mandara entwined;
|
||
|
And thousand-fanged Ananta, on whose broad coils reclined
|
||
|
Leans Vishnu; and of water-things Varuna; Aryam
|
||
|
Of Pitris, and, of those that judge, Yama the Judge I am;
|
||
|
Of Daityas dread Prahlada; of what metes days and years,
|
||
|
Time's self I am; of woodland-beasts- buffaloes, deers, and bears-
|
||
|
The lordly-painted tiger; of birds the vast Garud,
|
||
|
The whirlwind 'mid the winds; 'mid chiefs Rama with blood imbrued,
|
||
|
Makar 'mid fishes of the sea, and Ganges 'mid the streams;
|
||
|
Yea! First, and Last, and Centre of all which is or seems
|
||
|
I am, Arjuna! Wisdom Supreme of what is wise,
|
||
|
Words on the uttering lips I am, and eyesight of the eyes.
|
||
|
And "A" of written characters, Dwandwa of knitted speech,
|
||
|
And Endless Life, and boundless Love, whose power
|
||
|
sustaineth each;
|
||
|
And bitter Death which seizes all, and joyous sudden Birth,
|
||
|
Which brings to light all beings that are to be on earth;
|
||
|
And of the viewless virtues, Fame, Fortune, Song am I,
|
||
|
And Memory, and Patience; and Craft, and Constancy:
|
||
|
Of Vedic hymns the Vrihatsam, of metres Gayatri,
|
||
|
Of months the Margasirsha, of all the seasons three
|
||
|
The flower-wreathed Spring; in dicer's-play the conquering
|
||
|
Double-Eight;
|
||
|
The splendour of the splendid, and the greatness of the great,
|
||
|
Victory I am, and Action! and the goodness of the good,
|
||
|
And Vasudev of Vrishni's race, and of this Pandu brood
|
||
|
Thyself!- Yea, my Arjuna! thyself; for thou art Mine!
|
||
|
Of poets Usana, of saints Vyasa, sage divine;
|
||
|
The policy of conquerors, the potency of kings,
|
||
|
The great unbroken silence in learning's secret things;
|
||
|
The lore of all the learned, the seed of all which springs.
|
||
|
Living or lifeless, still or stirred, whatever beings be,
|
||
|
None of them is in all the worlds, but it exists by Me!
|
||
|
Nor tongue can tell, Arjuna! nor end of telling come
|
||
|
Of these My boundless glories, whereof I teach thee some;
|
||
|
For wheresoe'er is wondrous work, and majesty, and might,
|
||
|
From Me hath all proceeded. Receive thou this aright!
|
||
|
Yet how shouldst thou receive, O Prince! the vastness of this word?
|
||
|
I, who am all, and made it all, abide its separate Lord!
|
||
|
|
||
|
HERE ENDETH CHAPTER X OF THE
|
||
|
BHAGAVAD-GITA,
|
||
|
Entitled "Vibhuti Yog,"
|
||
|
Or "The Book of Religion by the Heavenly Perfections."
|
||
|
CHAPTER XI
|
||
|
Arjuna. This, for my soul's peace, have I heard from Thee,
|
||
|
The unfolding of the Mystery Supreme
|
||
|
Named Adhyatman; comprehending which,
|
||
|
My darkness is dispelled; for now I know-
|
||
|
O Lotus-eyed!- whence is the birth of men,
|
||
|
And whence their death, and what the majesties
|
||
|
Of Thine immortal rule. Fain would I see,
|
||
|
As thou Thyself declar'st it, Sovereign Lord!
|
||
|
The likeness of that glory of Thy Form
|
||
|
Wholly revealed. O Thou Divinest One!
|
||
|
If this can be, if I may bear the sight,
|
||
|
Make Thyself visible, Lord of all prayers!
|
||
|
Show me Thy very self, the Eternal God!
|
||
|
Krishna. Gaze, then, thou Son of Pritha! I manifest for thee
|
||
|
Those hundred thousand thousand shapes that clothe my Mystery:
|
||
|
I show thee all my semblances, infinite, rich, divine,
|
||
|
My changeful hues, my countless forms. See! in this face of mine,
|
||
|
Adityas, Vasus, Rudras, Aswins, and Maruts; see
|
||
|
Wonders unnumbered, Indian Prince! revealed to none save thee.
|
||
|
Behold! this is the Universe!- Look! what is live and dead
|
||
|
I gather all in one- in Me! Gaze, as thy lips have said
|
||
|
On GOD, ETERNAL, VERY GOD! See ME! what thou prayest!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Thou canst not!- nor, with human eyes, Arjuna! ever mayest!
|
||
|
Therefore I give thee sense divine. Have other eyes, new light!
|
||
|
And, look! This is My glory, unveiled to mortal sight!
|
||
|
Sanjaya. Then, O King! to God, so saying,
|
||
|
Stood, to Pritha's Son displaying
|
||
|
All the splendour, wonder, dread
|
||
|
Of His vast Almighty-head.
|
||
|
Out of countless eyes beholding,
|
||
|
Out of countless mouths commanding,
|
||
|
Countless mystic forms enfolding
|
||
|
In one Form: supremely standing
|
||
|
Countless radiant glories wearing,
|
||
|
Countless heavenly weapons bearing,
|
||
|
Crowned with garlands of star-clusters,
|
||
|
Robed in garb of woven lustres,
|
||
|
Breathing from His perfect Presence
|
||
|
Breaths of every subtle essence
|
||
|
Of all heavenly odours; shedding
|
||
|
Blinding brilliance; overspreading-
|
||
|
Boundless, beautiful- all spaces
|
||
|
With His all-regarding faces;
|
||
|
So He showed! If there should rise
|
||
|
Suddenly within the skies
|
||
|
Sunburst of a thousand suns
|
||
|
Flooding earth with beams undeemed-of,
|
||
|
Then might be that Holy One's
|
||
|
Majesty and radiance dreamed of!
|
||
|
|
||
|
So did Pandu's Son behold
|
||
|
All this universe enfold
|
||
|
All its huge diversity
|
||
|
Into one vast shape, and be
|
||
|
Visible, and viewed, and blended
|
||
|
In one Body- subtle, splendid,
|
||
|
Nameless- th' All-comprehending
|
||
|
God of Gods, the Never-Ending
|
||
|
Deity!
|
||
|
|
||
|
But, sore amazed,
|
||
|
Thrilled, o'erfilled, dazzled, and dazed,
|
||
|
Arjuna knelt; and bowed his head,
|
||
|
And clasped his palms; and cried, and said:
|
||
|
Arjuna. Yea! I have seen! I see!
|
||
|
Lord! all is wrapped in Thee!
|
||
|
The gods are in Thy glorious frame! the creatures
|
||
|
Of earth, and heaven, and hell
|
||
|
In Thy Divine form dwell,
|
||
|
And in Thy countenance shine all the features
|
||
|
|
||
|
Of Brahma, sitting lone
|
||
|
Upon His lotus-throne;
|
||
|
Of saints and sages, and the serpent races
|
||
|
Ananta, Vasuki;
|
||
|
Yea! mightiest Lord! I see
|
||
|
Thy thousand thousand arms and breasts, and faces,
|
||
|
|
||
|
And eyes,- on every side
|
||
|
Perfect, diversified;
|
||
|
And nowhere end of Thee, nowhere beginning,
|
||
|
Nowhere a centre! Shifts-
|
||
|
Wherever soul's gaze lifts-
|
||
|
Thy central Self, all-wielding, and all-winning!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Infinite King! I see
|
||
|
The anadem on Thee,
|
||
|
The club, the shell, the discus; see Thee burning
|
||
|
In beams insufferable,
|
||
|
Lighting earth, heaven, and hell
|
||
|
With brilliance blazing, glowing, flashing; turning
|
||
|
|
||
|
Darkness to dazzling day,
|
||
|
Look I whichever way;
|
||
|
Ah, Lord! I worship Thee, the Undivided,
|
||
|
The Uttermost of thought,
|
||
|
The Treasure-Palace wrought
|
||
|
To hold the wealth of the worlds; the Shield provided
|
||
|
|
||
|
To shelter Virtue's laws;
|
||
|
The Fount whence Life's stream draws
|
||
|
All waters of all rivers of all being:
|
||
|
The One Unborn, Unending:
|
||
|
Unchanging and Unblending!
|
||
|
With might and majesty, past thought, past seeing!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Silver of moon and gold
|
||
|
Of sun are glories rolled
|
||
|
From Thy great eyes; Thy visage, beaming tender
|
||
|
Throughout the stars and skies,
|
||
|
Doth to warm life surprise
|
||
|
Thy Universe. The worlds are filled with wonder
|
||
|
|
||
|
Of Thy perfections! Space
|
||
|
Star-sprinkled, and void place
|
||
|
From pole to pole of the Blue, from bound to bound,
|
||
|
Hath Thee in every spot,
|
||
|
Thee, Thee!- Where Thou art not,
|
||
|
O Holy, Marvellous Form! is nowhere found!
|
||
|
|
||
|
O Mystic, Awful One!
|
||
|
At sight of Thee, made known,
|
||
|
The Three Worlds quake; the lower gods draw nigh Thee;
|
||
|
They fold their palms, and bow
|
||
|
Body, and breast, and brow,
|
||
|
And, whispering worship, laud and magnify Thee!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Rishis and Siddhas cry
|
||
|
"Hail! Highest Majesty!
|
||
|
From sage and singer breaks the hymn of glory
|
||
|
In dulcet harmony,
|
||
|
Sounding the praise of Thee;
|
||
|
While countless companies take up the story,
|
||
|
|
||
|
Rudras, who ride the storms,
|
||
|
Th' Adityas' shining forms,
|
||
|
Vasus and Sadhyas, Viswas, Ushmapas;
|
||
|
Maruts, and those great Twins
|
||
|
The heavenly, fair, Aswins,
|
||
|
Gandharvas, Rakshasas, Siddhas, and Asuras,-
|
||
|
|
||
|
These see Thee, and revere
|
||
|
In sudden-stricken fear;
|
||
|
Yea! the Worlds,- seeing Thee with form stupendous,
|
||
|
With faces manifold,
|
||
|
With eyes which all behold,
|
||
|
Unnumbered eyes, vast arms, members tremendous,
|
||
|
|
||
|
Flanks, lit with sun and star,
|
||
|
Feet planted near and far,
|
||
|
Tushes of terror, mouths wrathful and tender;-
|
||
|
The Three wide Worlds before Thee
|
||
|
Adore, as I adore Thee,
|
||
|
Quake, as I quake, to witness so much splendour!
|
||
|
|
||
|
I mark Thee strike the skies
|
||
|
With front, in wondrous wise
|
||
|
Huge, rainbow-painted, glittering; and thy mouth
|
||
|
Opened, and orbs which see
|
||
|
All things, whatever be
|
||
|
In all Thy worlds, east, west, and north and south.
|
||
|
|
||
|
O Eyes of God! O Head!
|
||
|
My strength of soul is fled,
|
||
|
Gone is heart's force, rebuked is mind's desire!
|
||
|
When I behold Thee so,
|
||
|
With awful brows a-glow,
|
||
|
With burning glance, and lips lighted by fire
|
||
|
|
||
|
Fierce as those flames which shall
|
||
|
Consume, at close of all,
|
||
|
Earth, Heaven! Ah me! I see no Earth and Heaven!
|
||
|
Thee, Lord of Lords! I see,
|
||
|
Thee only- only Thee!
|
||
|
Now let Thy mercy unto me be given,
|
||
|
|
||
|
Thou Refuge of the World!
|
||
|
Lo! to the cavern hurled
|
||
|
Of Thy wide-opened throat, and lips white-tushed,
|
||
|
I see our noblest ones,
|
||
|
Great Dhritarashtra's sons,
|
||
|
Bhishma, Drona, and Karna, caught and crushed!
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Kings and Chiefs drawn in,
|
||
|
That gaping gorge within;
|
||
|
The best of both these armies torn and riven!
|
||
|
Between Thy jaws they lie
|
||
|
Mangled full bloodily,
|
||
|
Ground into dust and death! Like streams down-driven
|
||
|
|
||
|
With helpless haste, which go
|
||
|
In headlong furious flow
|
||
|
Straight to the gulfing deeps of th' unfilled ocean,
|
||
|
So to that flaming cave
|
||
|
Those heroes great and brave
|
||
|
Pour, in unending streams, with helpless motion!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Like moths which in the night
|
||
|
Flutter towards a light,
|
||
|
Drawn to their fiery doom, flying and dying,
|
||
|
So to their death still throng,
|
||
|
Blind, dazzled, borne along
|
||
|
Ceaselessly, all those multitudes, wild flying!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Thou, that hast fashioned men,
|
||
|
Devourest them again,
|
||
|
One with another, great and small, alike!
|
||
|
The creatures whom Thou mak'st,
|
||
|
With flaming jaws Thou tak'st,
|
||
|
Lapping them up! Lord God! Thy terrors strike
|
||
|
|
||
|
From end to end of earth,
|
||
|
Filling life full, from birth
|
||
|
To death, with deadly, burning, lurid dread!
|
||
|
Ah, Vishnu! make me know
|
||
|
Why is Thy visage so?
|
||
|
Who art Thou, feasting thus upon Thy dead?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Who? awful Deity!
|
||
|
I bow myself to Thee,
|
||
|
Namostu Te, Devavara! Prasid!
|
||
|
O Mightiest Lord! rehearse
|
||
|
Why hast Thou face so fierce?
|
||
|
Whence doth this aspect horrible proceed?
|
||
|
Krishna. Thou seest Me as Time who kills,
|
||
|
Time who brings all to doom,
|
||
|
The Slayer Time, Ancient of Days, come hither to consume;
|
||
|
Excepting thee, of all these hosts of hostile chiefs arrayed,
|
||
|
There stands not one shall leave alive the battlefield! Dismayed
|
||
|
No longer be! Arise! obtain renown! destroy thy foes!
|
||
|
Fight for the kingdom waiting thee when thou hast vanquished those.
|
||
|
By Me they fall- not thee! the stroke of death is dealt them now,
|
||
|
Even as they show thus gallantly; My instrument art thou!
|
||
|
Strike, strong-armed Prince, at Drona! at Bhishma strike! deal death
|
||
|
On Karna, Jyadratha; stay all their warlike breath!
|
||
|
'Tis I who bid them perish! Thou wilt but slay the slain;
|
||
|
Fight! they must fall, and thou must live, victor upon this plain!
|
||
|
Sanjaya. Hearing mighty Keshav's word,
|
||
|
Trembling that helmed Lord
|
||
|
Clasped his lifted palms, and- praying
|
||
|
Grace of Krishna- stood there, saying,
|
||
|
With bowed brow and accents broken,
|
||
|
These words, timorously spoken:
|
||
|
Arjuna. Worthily, Lord of Might!
|
||
|
The whole world hath delight
|
||
|
In Thy surpassing power, obeying Thee;
|
||
|
The Rakshasas, in dread
|
||
|
At sight of Thee, are sped
|
||
|
To all four quarters; and the company
|
||
|
|
||
|
Of Siddhas sound Thy name.
|
||
|
How should they not proclaim
|
||
|
Thy Majesties, Divinest, Mightiest?
|
||
|
Thou Brahm, than Brahma greater!
|
||
|
Thou Infinite Creator!
|
||
|
Thou God of gods, Life's Dwelling-place and Rest.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Thou, of all souls the Soul!
|
||
|
The Comprehending Whole!
|
||
|
Of being formed, and formless being the Framer;
|
||
|
O Utmost One! O Lord!
|
||
|
Older than eld, Who stored
|
||
|
The worlds with wealth of life! O Treasure-Claimer,
|
||
|
|
||
|
Who wottest all, and art
|
||
|
Wisdom Thyself! O Part
|
||
|
In all, and All; for all from Thee have risen
|
||
|
Numberless now I see
|
||
|
The aspects are of Thee!
|
||
|
Vayu Thou art, and He who keeps the prison
|
||
|
|
||
|
Of Narak, Yama dark;
|
||
|
And Agni's shining spark;
|
||
|
Varuna's waves are Thy waves. Moon and starlight
|
||
|
Are Thine! Prajapati
|
||
|
Art Thou, and 'tis to Thee
|
||
|
They knelt in worshipping the old world's far light,
|
||
|
|
||
|
The first of mortal men.
|
||
|
Again, Thou God! again
|
||
|
A thousand thousand times be magnified!
|
||
|
Honour and worship be-
|
||
|
Glory and praise,- to Thee
|
||
|
Namo, Namaste, cried on every side;
|
||
|
Cried here, above, below,
|
||
|
Uttered when Thou dost go,
|
||
|
Uttered where Thou dost come! Namo! we call;
|
||
|
Namostu! God adored!
|
||
|
Namostu! Nameless Lord
|
||
|
Hail to Thee! Praise to Thee Thou One in all;
|
||
|
|
||
|
For Thou art All! Yea, Thou!
|
||
|
Ah! if in anger now
|
||
|
Thou shouldst remember I did think Thee Friend,
|
||
|
Speaking with easy speech,
|
||
|
As men use each to each;
|
||
|
Did call Thee "Krishna," "Prince," nor comprehend
|
||
|
|
||
|
Thy hidden majesty,
|
||
|
The might, the awe of Thee;
|
||
|
Did, in my heedlessness, or in my love,
|
||
|
On journey, or in jest,
|
||
|
Or when we lay at rest,
|
||
|
Sitting at council, straying in the grove,
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alone, or in the throng,
|
||
|
Do Thee, most Holy! wrong,
|
||
|
Be Thy grace granted for that witless sin
|
||
|
For Thou art, now I know,
|
||
|
Father of all below,
|
||
|
Of all above, of all the worlds within
|
||
|
|
||
|
Guru of Gurus; more
|
||
|
To reverence and adore
|
||
|
Than all which is adorable and high!
|
||
|
How, in the wide worlds three
|
||
|
Should any equal be?
|
||
|
Should any other share Thy Majesty?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Therefore, with body bent
|
||
|
And reverent intent,
|
||
|
I praise, and serve, and seek Thee, asking grace.
|
||
|
As father to a son,
|
||
|
As friend to friend, as one
|
||
|
Who loveth to his lover, turn Thy face
|
||
|
|
||
|
In gentleness on me!
|
||
|
Good is it I did see
|
||
|
This unknown marvel of Thy Form! But fear
|
||
|
Mingles with joy! Retake,
|
||
|
Dear Lord! for pity's sake
|
||
|
Thine earthly shape, which earthly eyes may bear!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Be merciful, and show
|
||
|
The visage that I know;
|
||
|
Let me regard Thee, as of yore, arrayed
|
||
|
With disc and forehead-gem,
|
||
|
With mace and anadem,
|
||
|
Thou that sustainest all things! Undismayed
|
||
|
|
||
|
Let me once more behold
|
||
|
The form I loved of old,
|
||
|
Thou of the thousand arms and countless eyes!
|
||
|
This frightened heart is fain
|
||
|
To see restored again
|
||
|
My Charioteer, in Krishna's kind disguise.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Krishna. Yea! thou hast seen, Arjuna! because I loved thee well,
|
||
|
The secret countenance of Me, revealed by mystic spell,
|
||
|
Shining, and wonderful, and majestic, manifold,
|
||
|
Which none save thou in all the years had favour to behold;
|
||
|
For not by Vedas cometh this, nor sacrifice, nor alms,
|
||
|
Nor works well-done, nor penance long, nor prayers, nor chanted
|
||
|
psalms,
|
||
|
That mortal eyes should bear to view the Immortal Soul unclad,
|
||
|
Prince of the Kurus! This was kept for thee alone! Be glad!
|
||
|
Let no more trouble shake thy heart, because thine eyes have seen
|
||
|
My terror with My glory. As I before have been
|
||
|
So will I be again for thee; with lightened heart behold!
|
||
|
Once more I am thy Krishna, the form thou knew'st of old!
|
||
|
Sanjaya. These words to Arjuna spake
|
||
|
Vasudev, and straight did take
|
||
|
Back again the semblance dear
|
||
|
Of the well-loved charioteer;
|
||
|
Peace and joy it did restore
|
||
|
When the Prince beheld once more
|
||
|
Mighty BRAHMA'S form and face
|
||
|
Clothed in Krishna's gentle grace.
|
||
|
Arjuna. Now that I see come back, Janardana!
|
||
|
This friendly human frame, my mind can think
|
||
|
Calm thoughts once more; my heart beats still again!
|
||
|
Krishna. Yea! it was wonderful and terrible
|
||
|
To view me as thou didst, dear Prince! The gods
|
||
|
Dread and desire continually to view!
|
||
|
Yet not by Vedas, nor from sacrifice,
|
||
|
Nor penance, nor gift-giving, nor with prayer
|
||
|
Shall any so behold, as thou hast seen!
|
||
|
Only by fullest service, perfect faith,
|
||
|
And uttermost surrender am I known
|
||
|
And seen, and entered into, Indian Prince!
|
||
|
Who doeth all for Me; who findeth Me
|
||
|
In all; adoreth always; loveth all
|
||
|
Which I have made, and Me, for Love's sole end,
|
||
|
That man, Arjuna! unto Me doth wend.
|
||
|
|
||
|
HERE ENDETH CHAPTER XI OF THE
|
||
|
BHAGAVAD-GITA,
|
||
|
Entitled "Viswarupadarsanam,"
|
||
|
Or "The Book of the Manifesting of the
|
||
|
One and Manifold."
|
||
|
CHAPTER XII
|
||
|
Arjuna. Lord! of the men who serve Thee- true in heart-
|
||
|
As God revealed; and of the men who serve,
|
||
|
Worshipping Thee Unrevealed, Unbodied, Far,
|
||
|
Which take the better way of faith and life?
|
||
|
Krishna. Whoever serve Me- as I show Myself-
|
||
|
Constantly true, in full devotion fixed,
|
||
|
Those hold I very holy. But who serve-
|
||
|
Worshipping Me The One, The Invisible,
|
||
|
The Unrevealed, Unnamed, Unthinkable,
|
||
|
Uttermost, All-pervading, Highest, Sure-
|
||
|
Who thus adore Me, mastering their sense,
|
||
|
Of one set mind to all, glad in all good,
|
||
|
These blessed souls come unto Me.
|
||
|
Yet, hard
|
||
|
The travail is for such as bend their minds
|
||
|
To reach th' Unmanifest. That viewless path
|
||
|
Shall scarce be trod by man bearing the flesh!
|
||
|
But whereso any doeth all his deeds
|
||
|
Renouncing self for Me, full of Me, fixed
|
||
|
To serve only the Highest, night and day
|
||
|
Musing on Me- him will I swiftly lift
|
||
|
Forth from life's ocean of distress and death,
|
||
|
Whose soul clings fast to Me. Cling thou to Me!
|
||
|
Clasp Me with heart and mind! so shalt thou dwell
|
||
|
Surely with Me on high. But if thy thought
|
||
|
Droops from such height; if thou be'st weak to set
|
||
|
Body and soul upon Me constantly,
|
||
|
Despair not! give Me lower service! I seek
|
||
|
To reach Me, worshipping with steadfast will;
|
||
|
And, if thou canst not worship steadfastly,
|
||
|
Work for Me, toil in works pleasing to Me!
|
||
|
For he that laboureth right for love of Me
|
||
|
Shall finally attain! But, if in this
|
||
|
Thy faint heart fails, bring Me thy failure! find
|
||
|
Refuge in Me! let fruits of labour go,
|
||
|
Renouncing hope for Me, with lowliest heart,
|
||
|
So shalt thou come; for, though to know is more
|
||
|
Than diligence, yet worship better is
|
||
|
Than knowing, and renouncing better still.
|
||
|
Near to renunciation- very near-
|
||
|
Dwelleth Eternal Peace!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Who hateth nought
|
||
|
Of all which lives, living himself benign,
|
||
|
Compassionate, from arrogance exempt,
|
||
|
Exempt from love of self, unchangeable
|
||
|
By good or ill; patient, contented, firm
|
||
|
In faith, mastering himself, true to his word,
|
||
|
Seeking Me, heart and soul; vowed unto Me,-
|
||
|
That man I love! Who troubleth not his kind,
|
||
|
And is not troubled by them; clear of wrath,
|
||
|
Living too high for gladness, grief, or fear,
|
||
|
That man I love! Who, dwelling quiet-eyed,
|
||
|
Stainless, serene, well-balanced, unperplexed,
|
||
|
Working with Me, yet from all works detached,
|
||
|
That man I love! Who, fixed in faith on Me,
|
||
|
Dotes upon none, scorns none; rejoices not,
|
||
|
And grieves not, letting good or evil hap
|
||
|
Light when it will, and when it will depart,
|
||
|
That man I love! Who, unto friend and foe
|
||
|
Keeping an equal heart, with equal mind
|
||
|
Bears shame and glory; with an equal peace
|
||
|
Takes heat and cold, pleasure and pain; abides
|
||
|
Quit of desires, hears praise or calumny
|
||
|
In passionless restraint, unmoved by each;
|
||
|
Linked by no ties to earth, steadfast in Me,
|
||
|
That man I love! But most of all I love
|
||
|
Those happy ones to whom 'tis life to live
|
||
|
In single fervid faith and love unseeing,
|
||
|
Drinking the blessed Amrit of my Being!
|
||
|
|
||
|
HERE ENDETH CHAPTER XII OF THE
|
||
|
BHAGAVAD-GITA,
|
||
|
Entitled "Bhaktiyog,"
|
||
|
Or "The Book of the Religion of Faith."
|
||
|
CHAPTER XIII
|
||
|
Arjuna. Now would I hear, O gracious Kesava!
|
||
|
Of Life which seems, and Soul beyond, which sees,
|
||
|
And what it is we know- or think to know.
|
||
|
Krishna. Yea! Son of Kunti! for this flesh ye see
|
||
|
Is Kshetra, is the field where Life disports;
|
||
|
And that which views and knows it is the Soul,
|
||
|
Kshetrajna. In all "fields," thou Indian prince!
|
||
|
I am Kshetrajna. I am what surveys!
|
||
|
Only that knowledge knows which knows the known
|
||
|
By the knower! What it is, that "field" of life,
|
||
|
What qualities it hath, and whence it is,
|
||
|
And why it changeth, and the faculty
|
||
|
That wotteth it, the mightiness of this,
|
||
|
And how it wotteth- hear these things from Me!
|
||
|
|
||
|
The elements, the conscious life, the mind,
|
||
|
The unseen vital force, the nine strange gates
|
||
|
Of the body, and the five domains of sense;
|
||
|
Desire, dislike, pleasure and pain, and thought
|
||
|
Deep-woven, and persistency of being;
|
||
|
These all are wrought on Matter by the Soul!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Humbleness, truthfulness, and harmlessness,
|
||
|
Patience and honour, reverence for the wise.
|
||
|
Purity, constancy, control of self,
|
||
|
Contempt of sense-delights, self-sacrifice,
|
||
|
Perception of the certitude of ill
|
||
|
In birth, death, age, disease, suffering, and sin;
|
||
|
Detachment, lightly holding unto home,
|
||
|
Children, and wife, and all that bindeth men;
|
||
|
An ever-tranquil heart in fortunes good
|
||
|
And fortunes evil, with a will set firm
|
||
|
To worship Me- Me only! ceasing not;
|
||
|
Loving all solitudes, and shunning noise
|
||
|
Of foolish crowds; endeavours resolute
|
||
|
To reach perception of the Utmost Soul,
|
||
|
And grace to understand what gain it were
|
||
|
So to attain,- this is true Wisdom, Prince!
|
||
|
And what is otherwise is ignorance!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now will I speak of knowledge best to know-
|
||
|
That Truth which giveth man Amrit to drink,
|
||
|
The Truth of HIM, the Para-Brahm, the All,
|
||
|
The Uncreated; not Asat, nor Sat,
|
||
|
Not Form, nor the Unformed; yet both, and more;-
|
||
|
Whose hands are everywhere, and everywhere
|
||
|
Planted His feet, and everywhere His eyes
|
||
|
Beholding, and His ears in every place
|
||
|
Hearing, and all His faces everywhere
|
||
|
Enlightening and encompassing His worlds.
|
||
|
Glorified in the senses He hath given,
|
||
|
Yet beyond sense He is; sustaining all,
|
||
|
Yet dwells He unattached: of forms and modes
|
||
|
Master, yet neither form nor mode hath He;
|
||
|
He is within all beings- and without-
|
||
|
Motionless, yet still moving; not discerned
|
||
|
For subtlety of instant presence; close
|
||
|
To all, to each; yet measurelessly far!
|
||
|
Not manifold, and yet subsisting still
|
||
|
In all which lives; for ever to be known
|
||
|
As the Sustainer, yet, at the End of Times,
|
||
|
He maketh all to end- and re-creates.
|
||
|
The Light of Lights He is, in the heart of the Dark
|
||
|
Shining eternally. Wisdom He is
|
||
|
And Wisdom's way, and Guide of all the wise,
|
||
|
Planted in every heart.
|
||
|
|
||
|
So have I told
|
||
|
Of Life's stuff, and the moulding, and the lore
|
||
|
To comprehend. Whoso, adoring Me,
|
||
|
Perceiveth this, shall surely come to Me!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Know thou that Nature and the Spirit both
|
||
|
Have no beginning! Know that qualities
|
||
|
And changes of them are by Nature wrought;
|
||
|
That Nature puts to work the acting frame,
|
||
|
But Spirit doth inform it, and so cause
|
||
|
Feeling of pain and pleasure. Spirit, linked
|
||
|
To moulded matter, entereth into bond
|
||
|
With qualities by Nature framed, and, thus
|
||
|
Married to matter, breeds the birth again
|
||
|
In good or evil yonis.
|
||
|
Yet is this-
|
||
|
Yea! in its bodily prison!- Spirit pure,
|
||
|
Spirit supreme; surveying, governing,
|
||
|
Guarding, possessing; Lord and Master still
|
||
|
PURUSHA, Ultimate, One Soul with Me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Whoso thus knows himself, and knows his soul
|
||
|
PURUSHA, working through the qualities
|
||
|
With Nature's modes, the light hath come for him!
|
||
|
Whatever flesh he bears, never again
|
||
|
Shall he take on its load. Some few there be
|
||
|
By meditation find the Soul in Self
|
||
|
Self-schooled; and some by long philosophy
|
||
|
And holy life reach thither; some by works:
|
||
|
Some, never so attaining, hear of light
|
||
|
From other lips, and seize, and cleave to it
|
||
|
Worshipping; yea! and those- to teaching true-
|
||
|
Overpass Death!
|
||
|
Wherever, Indian Prince!
|
||
|
Life is- of moving things, or things unmoved,
|
||
|
Plant or still seed- know, what is there hath grown
|
||
|
By bond of Matter and of Spirit: Know
|
||
|
He sees indeed who sees in all alike
|
||
|
The living, lordly Soul; the Soul Supreme,
|
||
|
Imperishable amid the Perishing:
|
||
|
For, whoso thus beholds, in every place,
|
||
|
In every form, the same, one, Living Life,
|
||
|
Doth no more wrongfulness unto himself,
|
||
|
But goes the highest road which brings to bliss.
|
||
|
Seeing, he sees, indeed, who sees that works
|
||
|
Are Nature's wont, for Soul to practise by
|
||
|
Acting, yet not the agent; sees the mass
|
||
|
Of separate living things- each of its kind-
|
||
|
Issue from One, and blend again to One:
|
||
|
Then hath he BRAHMA, he attains!
|
||
|
O Prince!
|
||
|
That Ultimate, High Spirit, Uncreate,
|
||
|
Unqualified, even when it entereth flesh
|
||
|
Taketh no stain of acts, worketh in nought!
|
||
|
Like to th' ethereal air, pervading all,
|
||
|
Which, for sheer subtlety, avoideth taint,
|
||
|
The subtle Soul sits everywhere, unstained:
|
||
|
Like to the light of the all-piercing sun
|
||
|
[Which is not changed by aught it shines upon,]
|
||
|
The Soul's light shineth pure in every place;
|
||
|
And they who, by such eye of wisdom, see
|
||
|
How Matter, and what deals with it, divide;
|
||
|
And how the Spirit and the flesh have strife,
|
||
|
Those wise ones go the way which leads to Life!
|
||
|
|
||
|
HERE ENDETH CHAPTER XIII OF THE
|
||
|
BHAGAVAD-GITA,
|
||
|
Entitled "Kshetrakshetrajnavibhagayog,"
|
||
|
Or "The Book of Religion by Separation of Matter and Spirit."
|
||
|
CHAPTER XIV
|
||
|
Krishna. Yet farther will I open unto thee
|
||
|
This wisdom of all wisdoms, uttermost,
|
||
|
The which possessing, all My saints have passed
|
||
|
To perfectness. On such high verities
|
||
|
Reliant, rising into fellowship
|
||
|
With Me, they are not born again at birth
|
||
|
Of Kalpas, nor at Pralyas suffer change!
|
||
|
|
||
|
This Universe the womb is where I plant
|
||
|
Seed of all lives! Thence, Prince of India, comes
|
||
|
Birth to all beings! Whoso, Kunti's Son!
|
||
|
Mothers each mortal form, Brahma conceives,
|
||
|
And I am He that fathers, sending seed!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sattwan, Raias, and Tamas, so are named
|
||
|
The qualities of Nature, "Soothfastness,"
|
||
|
"Passion," and "Ignorance." These three bind down
|
||
|
The changeless Spirit in the changeful flesh.
|
||
|
Whereof sweet "Soothfastness," by purity
|
||
|
Living unsullied and enlightened, binds
|
||
|
The sinless Soul to happiness and truth;
|
||
|
And Passion, being kin to appetite,
|
||
|
And breeding impulse and propensity,
|
||
|
Binds the embodied Soul, O Kunti's Son!
|
||
|
By tie of works. But Ignorance, begot
|
||
|
Of Darkness, blinding mortal men, binds down
|
||
|
Their souls to stupor, sloth, and drowsiness.
|
||
|
Yea, Prince of India! Soothfastness binds souls
|
||
|
In pleasant wise to flesh; and Passion binds
|
||
|
By toilsome strain; but Ignorance, which blots
|
||
|
The beams of wisdom, binds the soul to sloth.
|
||
|
Passion and Ignorance, once overcome,
|
||
|
Leave Soothfastness, O Bharata! Where this
|
||
|
With Ignorance are absent, Passion rules;
|
||
|
And Ignorance in hearts not good nor quick.
|
||
|
When at all gateways of the Body shines
|
||
|
The Lamp of Knowledge, then may one see well
|
||
|
Soothfastness settled in that city reigns;
|
||
|
Where longing is, and ardour, and unrest,
|
||
|
Impulse to strive and gain, and avarice,
|
||
|
Those spring from Passion- Prince!- engrained; and where
|
||
|
Darkness and dulness, sloth and stupor are,
|
||
|
'Tis Ignorance hath caused them, Kuru Chief!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Moreover, when a soul departeth, fixed
|
||
|
In Soothfastness, it goeth to the place-
|
||
|
Perfect and pure- of those that know all Truth.
|
||
|
If it departeth in set habitude
|
||
|
Of Impulse, it shall pass into the world
|
||
|
Of spirits tied to works; and, if it dies
|
||
|
In hardened Ignorance, that blinded soul
|
||
|
Is born anew in some unlighted womb.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The fruit of Soothfastness is true and sweet;
|
||
|
The fruit of lusts is pain and toil; the fruit
|
||
|
Of Ignorance is deeper darkness. Yea!
|
||
|
For Light brings light, and Passion ache to have;
|
||
|
And gloom, bewilderments, and ignorance
|
||
|
Grow forth from Ignorance. Those of the first
|
||
|
Rise ever higher; those of the second mode
|
||
|
Take a mid place; the darkened souls sink back
|
||
|
To lower deeps, loaded with witlessness!
|
||
|
|
||
|
When, watching life, the living man perceives
|
||
|
The only actors are the Qualities,
|
||
|
And knows what rules beyond the Qualities,
|
||
|
Then is he come nigh unto Me!
|
||
|
The Soul,
|
||
|
Thus passing forth from the Three Qualities-
|
||
|
Whereby arise all bodies- overcomes
|
||
|
Birth, Death, Sorrow, and Age; and drinketh deep
|
||
|
The undying wine of Amrit.
|
||
|
Arjuna. Oh, my Lord!
|
||
|
Which be the signs to know him that hath gone
|
||
|
Past the Three Modes? How liveth he? What way
|
||
|
Leadeth him safe beyond the threefold Modes?
|
||
|
Krishna. He who with equanimity surveys
|
||
|
Lustre of goodness, strife of passion, sloth
|
||
|
Of ignorance, not angry if they are,
|
||
|
Not wishful when they are not: he who sits
|
||
|
A sojourner and stranger in their midst
|
||
|
Unruffled, standing off, saying- serene-
|
||
|
When troubles break, "These be the Qualities!
|
||
|
He unto whom- self-centred- grief and joy
|
||
|
Sound as one word; to whose deep-seeing eyes
|
||
|
The clod, the marble, and the gold are one;
|
||
|
Whose equal heart holds the same gentleness
|
||
|
For lovely and unlovely things, firm-set,
|
||
|
Well-pleased in praise and dispraise; satisfied
|
||
|
With honour or dishonour; unto friends
|
||
|
And unto foes alike in tolerance;
|
||
|
Detached from undertakings,- he is named
|
||
|
Surmounter of the Qualities!
|
||
|
|
||
|
And such-
|
||
|
With single, fervent faith adoring Me,
|
||
|
Passing beyond the Qualities, conforms
|
||
|
To Brahma, and attains Me!
|
||
|
|
||
|
For I am
|
||
|
That whereof Brahma is the likeness! Mine
|
||
|
The Amrit is; and Immortality
|
||
|
Is mine; and mine perfect Felicity!
|
||
|
|
||
|
HERE ENDETH CHAPTER XIV OF THE
|
||
|
BHAGAVAD-GITA,
|
||
|
Entitled "Gunatrayavibhagayog,"
|
||
|
Or "The Book of Religion by Separation from
|
||
|
the Qualities."
|
||
|
CHAPTER XV
|
||
|
Krishna. Men call the Aswattha,- the Banyan-tree,-
|
||
|
Which hath its boughs beneath, its roots above,-
|
||
|
The ever-holy tree. Yea! for its leaves
|
||
|
Are green and waving hymns which whisper Truth!
|
||
|
Who knows the Aswattha, knows Veds, and all.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Its branches shoot to heaven and sink to earth,
|
||
|
Even as the deeds of men, which take their birth
|
||
|
From qualities: its silver sprays and blooms,
|
||
|
And all the eager verdure of its girth,
|
||
|
Leap to quick life at kiss of sun and air,
|
||
|
As men's lives quicken to the temptings fair
|
||
|
Of wooing sense: its hanging rootlets seek
|
||
|
The soil beneath, helping to hold it there,
|
||
|
|
||
|
As actions wrought amid this world of men
|
||
|
Bind them by ever-tightening bonds again.
|
||
|
If ye knew well the teaching of the Tree,
|
||
|
What its shape saith; and whence it springs; and, then
|
||
|
|
||
|
How it must end, and all the ills of it,
|
||
|
The axe of sharp Detachment ye would whet,
|
||
|
And cleave the clinging snaky roots, and lay
|
||
|
This Aswattha of sense-life low,- to set
|
||
|
|
||
|
New growths upspringing to that happier sky,-
|
||
|
Which they who reach shall have no day to die,
|
||
|
Nor fade away, nor fall- to Him, I mean,
|
||
|
FATHER and FIRST, Who made the mystery
|
||
|
|
||
|
Of old Creation; for to Him come they
|
||
|
From passion and from dreams who break away;
|
||
|
Who part the bonds constraining them to flesh,
|
||
|
And,- Him, the Highest, worshipping alway-
|
||
|
|
||
|
No longer grow at mercy of what breeze
|
||
|
Of summer pleasure stirs the sleeping trees,
|
||
|
What blast of tempest tears them, bough and stem:
|
||
|
To the eternal world pass such as these!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Another Sun gleams there! another Moon!
|
||
|
Another Light,- not Dusk, nor Dawn, nor Noon-
|
||
|
Which they who once behold return no more;
|
||
|
They have attained My rest, life's Utmost boon!
|
||
|
|
||
|
When, in this world of manifested life,
|
||
|
The undying Spirit, setting forth from Me,
|
||
|
Taketh on form, it draweth to itself
|
||
|
From Being's storehouse,- which containeth all,-
|
||
|
Senses and intellect. The Sovereign Soul
|
||
|
Thus entering the flesh, or quitting it,
|
||
|
Gathers these up, as the wind gathers scents,
|
||
|
Blowing above the flower.-beds. Ear and Eye,
|
||
|
And Touch and Taste, and Smelling, these it takes,-
|
||
|
Yea, and a sentient mind;- linking itself
|
||
|
To sense-things so.
|
||
|
The unenlightened ones
|
||
|
Mark not that Spirit when he goes or comes,
|
||
|
Nor when he takes his pleasure in the form,
|
||
|
Conjoined with qualities; but those see plain
|
||
|
Who have the eyes to see. Holy souls see
|
||
|
Which strive thereto. Enlightened, they perceive
|
||
|
That Spirit in themselves; but foolish ones,
|
||
|
Even though they strive, discern not, having hearts
|
||
|
Unkindled, ill-informed!
|
||
|
Know, too, from Me
|
||
|
Shineth the gathered glory of the suns
|
||
|
Which lighten all the world: from Me the moons
|
||
|
Draw silvery beams, and fire fierce loveliness.
|
||
|
I penetrate the clay, and lend all shapes
|
||
|
Their living force; I glide into the plant-
|
||
|
Root, leaf, and bloom- to make the woodlands green
|
||
|
With springing sap. Becoming vital warmth,
|
||
|
I glow in glad, respiring frames, and pass,
|
||
|
With outward and with inward breath, to feed
|
||
|
The body by all meats.
|
||
|
For in this world
|
||
|
Being is twofold: the Divided, one;
|
||
|
The Undivided, one. All things that live
|
||
|
Are "the Divided." That which sits apart,
|
||
|
"The Undivided."
|
||
|
Higher still is He,
|
||
|
The Highest, holding all, whose Name is LORD,
|
||
|
The Eternal, Sovereign, First! Who fills all worlds,
|
||
|
Sustaining them. And- dwelling thus beyond
|
||
|
Divided Being and Undivided- I
|
||
|
Am called of men and Vedas, Life Supreme,
|
||
|
The PURUSHOTTAMA.
|
||
|
Who knows Me thus,
|
||
|
With mind unclouded, knoweth all, dear Prince!
|
||
|
And with his whole soul ever worshippeth Me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now is the sacred, secret Mystery
|
||
|
Declared to thee! Who comprehendeth this
|
||
|
Hath wisdom! He is quit of works in bliss!
|
||
|
|
||
|
HERE ENDETH CHAPTER XV OF THE
|
||
|
BHAGAVAD-GITA,
|
||
|
Entitled "Purushottamapraptiyog,"
|
||
|
Or "The Book of Religion by Attaining the Supreme."
|
||
|
CHAPTER XVI
|
||
|
Krishna. Fearlessness, singleness of soul, the wilL
|
||
|
Always to strive for wisdom; opened hand
|
||
|
And governed appetites; and piety,
|
||
|
And love of lonely study; humbleness,
|
||
|
Uprightness, heed to injure nought which lives,
|
||
|
Truthfulness, slowness unto wrath, a mind
|
||
|
That lightly letteth go what others prize;
|
||
|
And equanimity, and charity
|
||
|
Which spieth no man's faults; and tenderness
|
||
|
Towards all that suffer; a contented heart,
|
||
|
Fluttered by no desires; a bearing mild,
|
||
|
Modest, and grave, with manhood nobly mixed,
|
||
|
With patience, fortitude, and purity;
|
||
|
An unrevengeful spirit, never given
|
||
|
To rate itself too high;- such be the signs,
|
||
|
O Indian Prince! of him whose feet are set
|
||
|
On that fair path which leads to heavenly birth!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Deceitfulness, and arrogance, and pride,
|
||
|
Quickness to anger, harsh and evil speech,
|
||
|
And ignorance, to its own darkness blind,-
|
||
|
These be the signs, My Prince! of him whose birth
|
||
|
Is fated for the regions of the vile.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Heavenly Birth brings to deliverance,
|
||
|
So should'st thou know! The birth with Asuras
|
||
|
Brings into bondage. Be thou joyous, Prince!
|
||
|
Whose lot is set apart for heavenly Birth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Two stamps there are marked on all living men,
|
||
|
Divine and Undivine; I spake to thee
|
||
|
By what marks thou shouldst know the Heavenly Man,
|
||
|
Hear from me now of the Unheavenly!
|
||
|
|
||
|
They comprehend not, the Unheavenly,
|
||
|
How Souls go forth from Me; nor how they come
|
||
|
Back unto Me: nor is there Truth in these,
|
||
|
Nor purity, nor rule of Life. "This world
|
||
|
Hath not a Law, nor Order, nor a Lord,"
|
||
|
So say they: "nor hath risen up by Cause
|
||
|
Following on Cause, in perfect purposing,
|
||
|
But is none other than a House of Lust."
|
||
|
And, this thing thinking, all those ruined ones-
|
||
|
Of little wit, dark-minded- give themselves
|
||
|
To evil deeds, the curses of their kind.
|
||
|
Surrendered to desires insatiable,
|
||
|
Full of deceitfulness, folly, and pride,
|
||
|
In blindness cleaving to their errors, caught
|
||
|
Into the sinful course, they trust this lie
|
||
|
As it were true- this lie which leads to death-
|
||
|
Finding in Pleasure all the good which is,
|
||
|
And crying "Here it finisheth!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ensnared
|
||
|
In nooses of a hundred idle hopes,
|
||
|
Slaves to their passion and their wrath, they buy
|
||
|
Wealth with base deeds, to glut hot appetites;
|
||
|
"Thus much, to-day," they say, "we gained! thereby
|
||
|
Such and such wish of heart shall have its fill;
|
||
|
And this is ours! and th' other shall be ours!
|
||
|
To-day we slew a foe, and we will slay
|
||
|
Our other enemy to-morrow! Look!
|
||
|
Are we not lords? Make we not goodly cheer?
|
||
|
Is not our fortune famous, brave, and great?
|
||
|
Rich are we, proudly born! What other men
|
||
|
Live like to us? Kill, then, for sacrifice!
|
||
|
Cast largesse, and be merry!" So they speak
|
||
|
Darkened by ignorance; and so they fall-
|
||
|
Tossed to and fro with projects, tricked, and bound
|
||
|
In net of black delusion, lost in lusts-
|
||
|
Down to foul Naraka. Conceited, fond,
|
||
|
Stubborn and proud, dead-drunken with the wine
|
||
|
Of wealth, and reckless, all their offerings
|
||
|
Have but a show of reverence, being not made
|
||
|
In piety of ancient faith. Thus vowed
|
||
|
To self-hood, force, insolence, feasting, wrath,
|
||
|
These My blasphemers, in the forms they wear
|
||
|
And in the forms they breed, my foemen are,
|
||
|
Hateful and hating; cruel, evil, vile,
|
||
|
Lowest and least of men, whom I cast down
|
||
|
Again, and yet again, at end of lives,
|
||
|
Into some devilish womb, whence- birth by birth-
|
||
|
The devilish wombs re-spawn them, all beguiled;
|
||
|
And, till they find and worship Me, sweet Prince!
|
||
|
Tread they that Nether Road.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Doors of Hell
|
||
|
Are threefold, whereby men to ruin pass,-
|
||
|
The door of Lust, the door of Wrath, the door
|
||
|
Of Avarice. Let a man shun those three!
|
||
|
He who shall turn aside from entering
|
||
|
All those three gates of Narak, wendeth straight
|
||
|
To find his peace, and comes to Swarga's gate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
HERE ENDETH CHAPTER XVI OF THE
|
||
|
BHAGAVAD-GITA,
|
||
|
Entitled "Daivasarasaupadwibhagayog,"
|
||
|
Or "The Book of the Separateness of the
|
||
|
Divine and Undivine."
|
||
|
CHAPTER XVII
|
||
|
Arjuna. If men forsake the holy ordinance,
|
||
|
Heedless of Shastras, yet keep faith at heart
|
||
|
And worship, what shall be the state of those,
|
||
|
Great Krishna! Sattwan, Rajas, Tamas? Say!
|
||
|
Krishna. Threefold the faith is of mankind, and springs
|
||
|
From those three qualities,- becoming "true,"
|
||
|
Or "passion-stained," or "dark," as thou shalt hear!
|
||
|
|
||
|
The faith of each believer, Indian Prince!
|
||
|
Conforms itself to what he truly is.
|
||
|
Where thou shalt see a worshipper, that one
|
||
|
To what he worships lives assimilate,
|
||
|
[Such as the shrine, so is the votary,]
|
||
|
The "soothfast" souls adore true gods; the souls
|
||
|
Obeying Rajas worship Rakshasas
|
||
|
Or Yakshas; and the men of Darkness pray
|
||
|
To Pretas and to Bhutas. Yea, and those
|
||
|
Who practise bitter penance, not enjoined
|
||
|
By rightful rule- penance which hath its root
|
||
|
In self-sufficient, proud hypocrisies-
|
||
|
Those men, passion-beset, violent, wild,
|
||
|
Torturing- the witless ones- My elements
|
||
|
Shut in fair company within their flesh,
|
||
|
(Nay, Me myself, present within the flesh!)
|
||
|
Know them to devils devoted, not to Heaven!
|
||
|
For like as foods are threefold for mankind
|
||
|
In nourishing, so is there threefold way
|
||
|
Of worship, abstinence, and almsgiving!
|
||
|
Hear this of Me! there is a food which brings
|
||
|
Force, substance, strength, and health, and joy to live,
|
||
|
Being well-seasoned, cordial, comforting,
|
||
|
The "Soothfast" meat. And there be foods which bring
|
||
|
Aches and unrests, and burning blood, and grief
|
||
|
Being too biting, heating, salt, and sharp,
|
||
|
And therefore craved by too strong appetite.
|
||
|
And there is foul food- kept from over-night,
|
||
|
Savourless, filthy, which the foul will eat,
|
||
|
A feast of rottenness, meet for the lips
|
||
|
Of such as love the "Darkness."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Thus with rites;-
|
||
|
A sacrifice not for rewardment made,
|
||
|
Offered in rightful wise, when he who vows
|
||
|
Sayeth, with heart devout, "This I should do!
|
||
|
Is "Soothfast" rite. But sacrifice for gain,
|
||
|
Offered for good repute, be sure that this,
|
||
|
O Best of Bharatas! is Rajas-rite,
|
||
|
With stamp of "passion." And a sacrifice
|
||
|
Offered against the laws, with no due dole
|
||
|
Of food-giving, with no accompaniment
|
||
|
Of hallowed hymn, nor largesse to the priests,
|
||
|
In faithless celebration, call it vile,
|
||
|
The deed of "Darkness!"- lost!
|
||
|
Worship of gods
|
||
|
Meriting worship; lowly reverence
|
||
|
Of Twice-borns, Teachers, Elders; Purity,
|
||
|
Rectitude, and the Brahmacharya's vow,
|
||
|
And not to injure any helpless thing,-
|
||
|
These make a true religiousness of Act.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Words causing no man woe, words ever true,
|
||
|
Gentle and pleasing words, and those ye say
|
||
|
In murmured reading of a Sacred Writ,-
|
||
|
These make the true religiousness of Speech.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Serenity of soul, benignity,
|
||
|
Sway of the silent Spirit, constant stress
|
||
|
To sanctify the Nature,- these things make
|
||
|
Good rite, and true religiousness of Mind.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Such threefold faith, in highest piety
|
||
|
Kept, with no hope of gain, by hearts devote
|
||
|
Is perfect work of Sattwan, true belief.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Religion shown in act of proud display
|
||
|
To win good entertainment, worship, fame,
|
||
|
Such- say I- is of Rajas, rash and vain.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Religion followed by a witless will
|
||
|
To torture self, or come at power to hurt
|
||
|
Another,- 'tis of Tamas, dark and ill.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The gift lovingly given, when one shall say
|
||
|
"Now must I gladly give!" when he who takes
|
||
|
Can render nothing back; made in due place,
|
||
|
Due time, and to a meet recipient,
|
||
|
Is gift of Sattwan, fair and profitable.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The gift selfishly given, where to receive
|
||
|
Is hoped again, or when some end is sought,
|
||
|
Or where the gift is proffered with a grudge,
|
||
|
This is of Rajas, stained with impulse, ill.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The gift churlishly flung, at evil time,
|
||
|
In wrongful place, to base recipient,
|
||
|
Made in disdain or harsh unkindliness,
|
||
|
Is gift of Tamas, dark; it doth not bless!
|
||
|
|
||
|
HERE ENDETH CHAPTER XVII OF THE
|
||
|
BHAGAVAD-GITA,
|
||
|
Entitled "Sraddhatrayavibhagayog,"
|
||
|
Or "The Book of Religion by the Threefold
|
||
|
Kinds of Faith."
|
||
|
CHAPTER XVIII
|
||
|
Arjuna. Fain would I better know, Thou Glorious One!
|
||
|
The very truth- Heart's Lord!- of Sannyas,
|
||
|
Abstention; and Renunciation, Lord!
|
||
|
Tyaga; and what separates these twain!
|
||
|
Krishna. The poets rightly teach that Sannyas
|
||
|
Is the foregoing of all acts which spring
|
||
|
Out of desire; and their wisest say
|
||
|
Tyaga is renouncing fruit of acts.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There be among the saints some who have held
|
||
|
All action sinful, and to be renounced;
|
||
|
And some who answer, "Nay! the goodly acts-
|
||
|
As worship, penance, alms- must be performed!"
|
||
|
Hear now My sentence, Best of Bharatas!
|
||
|
|
||
|
'Tis well set forth, O Chaser of thy Foes!
|
||
|
Renunciation is of threefold form,
|
||
|
And Worship, Penance, Alms, not to be stayed;
|
||
|
Nay, to be gladly done; for all those three
|
||
|
Are purifying waters for true souls!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yet must be practised even those high works
|
||
|
In yielding up attachment, and all fruit
|
||
|
Produced by works. This is My judgment, Prince!
|
||
|
This My insuperable and fixed decree!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Abstaining from a work by right prescribed
|
||
|
Never is meet! So to abstain doth spring
|
||
|
From "Darkness," and Delusion teacheth it.
|
||
|
Abstaining from a work grievous to flesh,
|
||
|
When one saith "'Tis unpleasing!" this is null!
|
||
|
Such an one acts from "passion;" nought of gain
|
||
|
Wins his Renunciation! But, Arjun!
|
||
|
Abstaining from attachment to the work,
|
||
|
Abstaining from rewardment in the work,
|
||
|
While yet one doeth it full faithfully,
|
||
|
Saying, "'Tis right to do!" that is "true" act
|
||
|
And abstinence! Who doeth duties so,
|
||
|
Unvexed if his work fail, if it succeed
|
||
|
Unflattered, in his own heart justified,
|
||
|
Quit of debates and doubts, his is "true" act:
|
||
|
For, being in the body, none may stand
|
||
|
Wholly aloof from act; yet, who abstains
|
||
|
From profit of his acts is abstinent.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The fruit of labours, in the fives to come,
|
||
|
Is threefold for all men,- Desirable,
|
||
|
And Undesirable, and mixed of both;
|
||
|
But no fruit is at all where no work was.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hear from me, Long-armed Lord! the makings five
|
||
|
Which go to every act, in Sankhya taught
|
||
|
As necessary. First the force; and then
|
||
|
The agent; next, the various instruments;
|
||
|
Fourth, the especial effort; fifth, the God.
|
||
|
What work soever any mortal doth
|
||
|
Of body, mind, or speech, evil or good,
|
||
|
By these five doth he that. Which being thus,
|
||
|
Whoso, for lack of knowledge, seeth himself
|
||
|
As the sole actor, knoweth nought at all
|
||
|
And seeth nought. Therefore, I say, if one-
|
||
|
Holding aloof from self- with unstained mind
|
||
|
Should slay all yonder host, being bid to slay,
|
||
|
He doth not slay; he is not bound thereby!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Knowledge, the thing known, and the mind which knows,
|
||
|
These make the threefold starting-ground of act.
|
||
|
The act, the actor, and the instrument,
|
||
|
These make the threefold total of the deed.
|
||
|
But knowledge, agent, act, are differenced
|
||
|
By three dividing qualities. Hear now
|
||
|
Which be the qualities dividing them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There is "true" Knowledge. Learn thou it is this:
|
||
|
To see one changeless Life in all the Lives,
|
||
|
And in the Separate, One Inseparable.
|
||
|
There is imperfect Knowledge: that which sees
|
||
|
The separate existences apart,
|
||
|
And, being separated, holds them real.
|
||
|
There is false Knowledge: that which blindly clings
|
||
|
To one as if 'twere all, seeking no Cause,
|
||
|
Deprived of light, narrow, and dull, and "dark."
|
||
|
|
||
|
There is "right" Action: that which- being enjoined-
|
||
|
Is wrought without attachment, passionlessly,
|
||
|
For duty, not for love, nor hate, nor gain.
|
||
|
There is "vain" Action: that which men pursue
|
||
|
Aching to satisfy desires, impelled
|
||
|
By sense of self, with all-absorbing stress:
|
||
|
This is of Rajas- passionate and vain.
|
||
|
There is "dark" Action: when one doth a thing
|
||
|
Heedless of issues, heedless of the hurt
|
||
|
Or wrong for others, heedless if he harm
|
||
|
His own soul- 'tis of Tamas, black and bad!
|
||
|
|
||
|
There is the "rightful" doer. He who acts
|
||
|
Free from self-seeking, humble, resolute,
|
||
|
Steadfast, in good or evil hap the same,
|
||
|
Content to do aright- he "truly" acts.
|
||
|
There is th' "impassioned" doer. He that works
|
||
|
From impulse, seeking profit, rude and bold
|
||
|
To overcome, unchastened; slave by turns
|
||
|
Of sorrow and of joy: of Rajas he!
|
||
|
And there be evil doers; loose of heart,
|
||
|
Low-minded, stubborn, fraudulent, remiss,
|
||
|
Dull, slow, despondent- children of the "dark."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hear, too, of Intellect and Steadfastness
|
||
|
The threefold separation, Conqueror-Prince!
|
||
|
How these are set apart by Qualities.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Good is the Intellect which comprehends
|
||
|
The coming forth and going back of life,
|
||
|
What must be done, and what must not be done,
|
||
|
What should be feared, and what should not be feared,
|
||
|
What binds and what emancipates the soul:
|
||
|
That is of Sattwan, Prince! of "soothfastness."
|
||
|
Marred is the Intellect which, knowing right
|
||
|
And knowing wrong, and what is well to do
|
||
|
And what must not be done, yet understands
|
||
|
Nought with firm mind, nor as the calm truth is:
|
||
|
This is of Rajas, Prince! and "passionate!"
|
||
|
Evil is Intellect which, wrapped in gloom,
|
||
|
Looks upon wrong as right, and sees all things
|
||
|
Contrariwise of Truth. O Pritha's Son!
|
||
|
That is of Tamas, "dark" and desperate!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Good is the steadfastness whereby a man
|
||
|
Masters his beats of heart, his very breath
|
||
|
Of life, the action of his senses; fixed
|
||
|
In never-shaken faith and piety:
|
||
|
That is of Sattwan, Prince! "soothfast" and fair!
|
||
|
Stained is the steadfastness whereby a man
|
||
|
Holds to his duty, purpose, effort, end,
|
||
|
For life's sake, and the love of goods to gain,
|
||
|
Arjuna! 'tis of Raias, passion-stamped!
|
||
|
Sad is the steadfastness wherewith the fool
|
||
|
Cleaves to his sloth, his sorrow, and his fears,
|
||
|
His folly and despair. This- Pritha's Son!-
|
||
|
Is born of Tamas, "dark" and miserable!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hear further, Chief of Bharatas! from Me
|
||
|
The threefold kinds of Pleasure which there be.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Good Pleasure is the pleasure that endures,
|
||
|
Banishing pain for aye; bitter at first
|
||
|
As poison to the soul, but afterward
|
||
|
Sweet as the taste of Amrit. Drink of that!
|
||
|
It springeth in the Spirit's deep content.
|
||
|
And painful Pleasure springeth from the bond
|
||
|
Between the senses and the sense-world. Sweet
|
||
|
As Amrit is its first taste, but its last
|
||
|
Bitter as poison. 'Tis of Rajas, Prince!
|
||
|
And foul and "dark" the Pleasure is which springs
|
||
|
From sloth and sin and foolishness; at first
|
||
|
And at the last, and all the way of life
|
||
|
The soul bewildering. 'Tis of Tamas, Prince!
|
||
|
|
||
|
For nothing lives on earth, nor 'midst the gods
|
||
|
In utmost heaven, but hath its being bound
|
||
|
With these three Qualities, by Nature framed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The work of Brahmans, Kshatriyas, Vaisyas,
|
||
|
And Sudras, O thou Slayer of thy Foes!
|
||
|
Is fixed by reason of the Qualities
|
||
|
Planted in each:
|
||
|
A Brahman's virtues, Prince
|
||
|
Born of his nature, are serenity,
|
||
|
Self-mastery, religion, purity,
|
||
|
Patience, uprightness, learning, and to know
|
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The truth of things which be. A Kshatriya's pride,
|
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|
Born of his nature, lives in valour, fire,
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|
Constancy, skilfulness, spirit in fight,
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And open-handedness and noble mien,
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|
As of a lord of men. A Vaisya's task,
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|
Born with his nature, is to till the ground,
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Tend cattle, venture trade. A Sudra's state,
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Suiting his nature, is to minister.
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|
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Whoso performeth- diligent, content-
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The work allotted him, whate'er it be,
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||
|
Lays hold of perfectness! Hear how a man
|
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Findeth perfection, being so content:
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|
He findeth it through worship- wrought by work-
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|
Of HIM that is the Source of all which lives,
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|
Of HIM by Whom the universe was stretched.
|
||
|
|
||
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Better thine own work is, though done with fault,
|
||
|
Than doing others' work, ev'n excellently.
|
||
|
He shall not fall in sin who fronts the task
|
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|
Set him by Nature's hand! Let no man leave
|
||
|
His natural duty, Prince! though it bear blame!
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||
|
For every work hath blame, as every flame
|
||
|
Is wrapped in smoke! Only that man attains
|
||
|
Perfect surcease of work whose work was wrought
|
||
|
With mind unfettered, soul wholly subdued,
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||
|
Desires for ever dead, results renounced.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Learn from me, Son of Kunti! also this,
|
||
|
How one, attaining perfect peace, attains
|
||
|
BRAHM, the supreme, the highest height of all!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Devoted- with a heart grown pure, restrained
|
||
|
In lordly self-control, forgoing wiles
|
||
|
Of song and senses, freed from love and hate,
|
||
|
Dwelling 'mid solitudes, in diet spare,
|
||
|
With body, speech, and will tamed to obey,
|
||
|
Ever to holy meditation vowed,
|
||
|
From passions liberate, quit of the Self,
|
||
|
Of arrogance, impatience, anger, pride;
|
||
|
Freed from surroundings, quiet, lacking nought-
|
||
|
Such an one grows to oneness with the BRAHM;
|
||
|
Such an one, growing one with BRAHM, serene,
|
||
|
Sorrows no more, desires no more; his soul,
|
||
|
Equally loving all that lives, loves well
|
||
|
Me, Who have made them, and attains to Me.
|
||
|
By this same love and worship doth he know
|
||
|
Me as I am, how high and wonderful,
|
||
|
And knowing, straightway enters into Me.
|
||
|
And whatsoever deeds he doeth- fixed
|
||
|
In Me, as in his refuge- he hath won
|
||
|
For ever and for ever by My grace
|
||
|
Th' Eternal Rest! So win thou! In thy thoughts
|
||
|
Do all thou dost for Me! Renounce for Me!
|
||
|
Sacrifice heart and mind and will to Me!
|
||
|
Live in the faith of Me! In faith of Me
|
||
|
All dangers thou shalt vanquish, by My grace;
|
||
|
But, trusting to thyself and heeding not,
|
||
|
Thou can'st but perish! If this day thou say'st,
|
||
|
Relying on thyself, "I will not fight!"
|
||
|
Vain will the purpose prove! thy qualities
|
||
|
Would spur thee to the war. What thou dost shun,
|
||
|
Misled by fair illusions, thou wouldst seek
|
||
|
Against thy will, when the task comes to thee
|
||
|
Waking the promptings in thy nature set.
|
||
|
There lives a Master in the hearts of men
|
||
|
Maketh their deeds, by subtle pulling-strings,
|
||
|
Dance to what tune HE will. With all thy soul
|
||
|
Trust Him, and take Him for thy succour, Prince!
|
||
|
So- only so, Arjuna!- shalt thou gain-
|
||
|
By grace of Him- the uttermost repose,
|
||
|
The Eternal Place!
|
||
|
Thus hath been opened thee
|
||
|
This Truth of Truths, the Mystery more hid
|
||
|
Than any secret mystery. Meditate!
|
||
|
And- as thou wilt- then act!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Nay! but once more
|
||
|
Take My last word, My utmost meaning have!
|
||
|
Precious thou art to Me; right well-beloved!
|
||
|
Listen! tell thee for thy comfort this.
|
||
|
Give Me thy heart! adore Me! serve Me! cling
|
||
|
In faith and love and reverence to Me!
|
||
|
So shalt thou come to Me! I promise true,
|
||
|
For thou art sweet to Me!
|
||
|
And let go those-
|
||
|
Rites and writ duties! Fly to Me alone!
|
||
|
Make Me thy single refuge! will free
|
||
|
Thy soul from all its sins! Be of good cheer!
|
||
|
|
||
|
[Hide, the holy Krishna saith,
|
||
|
This from him that hath no faith,
|
||
|
Him that worships not, nor seeks
|
||
|
Wisdom's teaching when she speaks:
|
||
|
Hide it from all men who mock;
|
||
|
But, wherever, 'mid the flock
|
||
|
Of My lovers, one shall teach
|
||
|
This divinest, wisest, speech-
|
||
|
Teaching in the faith to bring
|
||
|
Truth to them, and offering
|
||
|
Of all honour unto Me-
|
||
|
Unto Brahma cometh he!
|
||
|
Nay, and nowhere shall ye find
|
||
|
Any man of all mankind
|
||
|
Doing dearer deed for Me;
|
||
|
Nor shall any dearer be
|
||
|
In My earth. Yea, furthermore,
|
||
|
Whoso reads this converse o'er,
|
||
|
Held by Us upon the plain,
|
||
|
Pondering piously and fain,
|
||
|
He hath paid Me sacrifice!
|
||
|
(Krishna speaketh in this wise!)
|
||
|
Yea, and whoso, full of faith,
|
||
|
Heareth wisely what it saith,
|
||
|
Heareth meekly,- when he dies,
|
||
|
Surely shall his spirit rise
|
||
|
To those regions where the Blest,
|
||
|
Free of flesh, in joyance rest.]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hath this been heard by thee, O Indian Prince!
|
||
|
With mind intent? hath all the ignorance-
|
||
|
Which bred thy trouble- vanished, My Arjun?
|
||
|
Arjuna. Trouble and ignorance are gone! the Light
|
||
|
Hath come unto me, by Thy favour, Lord!
|
||
|
Now am I fixed! my doubt is fled away!
|
||
|
According to Thy word, so will I do!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sanjaya. Thus gathered I the gracious speech of Krishna, O my
|
||
|
King!
|
||
|
Thus have I told, with heart a-thrill, this wise and wondrous thing
|
||
|
By great Vyasa's learning writ, how Krishna's self made known
|
||
|
The Yoga, being Yoga's Lord. So is the high truth shown!
|
||
|
And aye, when I remember, O Lord my King, again
|
||
|
Arjuna and the God in talk, and all this holy strain,
|
||
|
Great is my gladness: when I muse that splendour, passing speech,
|
||
|
Of Hari, visible and plain, there is no tongue to reach
|
||
|
My marvel and my love and bliss. O Archer-Prince! all hail!
|
||
|
O Krishna, Lord of Yoga! surely there shall not fail
|
||
|
Blessing, and victory, and power, for Thy most mighty sake,
|
||
|
Where this song comes of Arjun, and how with God he spake.
|
||
|
|
||
|
HERE ENDS, WITH CHAPTER XVIII,
|
||
|
Entitled "Mokshasanyasayog,"
|
||
|
Or "The Book of Religion by Deliverance and Renunciation,"
|
||
|
THE BHAGAVAD-GITA.
|
||
|
THE END
|