KATHA UPANISHAD
KATHA UPANISHAD
FIRST CYCLE
: FIRST CHAPTER

-
Vajashravasa, desiring, gave all
he had. Now Vajashravasa had a son named Nachiketas.

-
As the gifts were led past, faith
took possession of him who was yet a boy unwed and he pondered:

-
“Cattle that have drunk their
water, eaten their grass, yielded their milk, worn out their organs, of undelight
are the worlds which he reaches who gives such as these.ˮ

-
He said to his father, “Me, O my
father, to whom wilt thou give?ˮ A second time and a third he said it, and he
replied, “To Death I give thee.ˮ

-
“Among many I walk the first,
among many I walk the mid-most; something Death means to do which today by me
he will accomplish.
Page – 237

-
“Look back and see, even as were the
men of old, — look round! — even so are they that have come after. Mortal man
withers like the fruits of the field and like the fruits of the field he is born
again.ˮ

His attendants say to Yama:
-
“Fire is the Brahmin who enters as
a guest the houses of men; him thus they appease. Bring, O son of Vivasvan,¹ the
water of the guest-rite.

-
“That man of little understanding
in whose house a Brahmin dwells fasting, all his hope and his expectation and
all he has gained and the good and truth that he has spoken and the wells he has
dug and the sacrifices he has offered and all his sons and his cattle are torn
from him by that guest unhonoured.ˮ

Yama speaks:
-
“Because for three nights thou
hast dwelt in my house, O Brahmin, a guest worthy of reverence, — salutation to
thee, O Brahmin, on me let there be the weal, — therefore three boons do thou
choose, for each night a boon.ˮ
¹Yama, lord of death, is also the master of the
Law in the world, and he is therefore the child of the Sun, luminous Master of
Truth from which the Law is born.
Page – 238

Nachiketas
speaks:
-
“Tranquillised in his thought and
serene of mind be the Gautama, my father, let his passion over me pass away from
him; assured in heart let him greet me from thy grasp delivered; this boon I
choose, the first of three.ˮ

Yama speaks:
-
“Even as before assured in
heart and by me released, shall he be, Auddalaki Aruni, thy father; sweetly
shall he sleep through the nights and his passion shall pass away from him,
having seen thee from deathʼs jaws delivered.ˮ

Nachiketas speaks:
-
“In heaven fear is not at all, in
heaven, O Death, thou art not, nor old age and its terrors; crossing over hunger
and thirst as over two rivers, leaving sorrow behind the soul in heaven
rejoices.

-
“Therefore that heavenly Flame¹
which thou, O Death, studiest, expound unto me, for I believe. They who win
their world of heaven, have immortality for their portion. This for the second
boon I have chosen.ˮ
¹ The celestial force concealed subconsciently in
manʼs mortality by the kindling of which and its right ordering man transcends
his earthly nature; not the physical flame of the external sacrifice to which
these profound phrases are inapplicable.
Page – 239

Yama speaks:
-
“Hearken to me and understand, O Nachiketas;
I declare to thee that heavenly Flame, for I know it. Know this to be the
possession of infinite existence and the foundation and the thing hidden in the
secret cave of our being.ˮ

-
Of the Flame that is the
worldʼs beginning¹ he told him and what are the bricks to him and how many and
the way of their setting; and Nachiketas too repeated it even as it was told;
then Death was pleased and said to him yet farther;

-
Yea, the Great Soul was gratified
and said to him, “Yet a farther boon today I give thee; for even by thy name
shall this Fire be called; this necklace also take unto thee, a necklace² of
many figures.

-
“Whoso lights the three fires³
of Nachiketas and comes to union with the Three4
and does the triple works,5
beyond
¹The
Divine Force, concealed in the subconscient, is that which has originated and
built up the worlds. At the other end in the superconscient it reveals itself as
the Divine Being, Lord and Knower who has manifested Himself out of the Brahman.
²The
necklace of many figures is Prakriti, creative Nature which comes under the
control of the soul that has attained to the divine existence.
³Probably, ,the divine force utilised to raise to
divinity the triple being of man.
4
Possibly, the three Purushas, soul-states or Personalities of the divine Being,
indicated by the three letters A U M. The highest Brahman is beyond the three
letters of the mystic syllable.
5
The sacrifice of the lower existence to the divine, consummated on the three
planes of man’s physical, vital and mental consciousness.
Page – 240
birth and death he crosses; for he finds the God of our
adoration, the Knower¹ who is born from the Brahman, whom having beheld he
attains to
surpassing peace.

-
“When a man has the three flames
of Nachiketas and knows this that is Triple, when so knowing he beholds the
Flame of Nachiketas, then he thrusts from in front of him the meshes of the
snare of death; leaving sorrow behind him he in heaven rejoices.

-
“This is the heavenly Flame, O Nachiketas, which thou hast chosen for the second boon; of this Flame the
peoples shall speak that it is thine indeed. A third boon choose, O Nachiketas.ˮ

Nachiketas speaks:
-
“This debate that there is over the
man who has passed and some say ʻThis he is notʼ and some that ʻhe isʼ, that,
taught by thee, I would know; this is the third boon of the boons of my
choosing.ˮ

Yama speaks:
-
“Even by the gods was this
debated of old; for it is not
¹The
Purusha or Divine Being, Knower of the Field, who dwells within all and for
whose pleasure Prakriti fulfils the cosmic play.
Page – 241
easy of knowledge, since very subtle is
the law of it. Another boon choose, O Nachiketas; importune me not, nor urge me; this, this
abandon.ˮ

Nachiketas speaks:
-
“Even by the gods was this
debated, it is sure, and thou thyself hast said that it is not easy of
knowledge; never shall I find another like thee¹
to tell of it, nor is there any other boon that is equal.ˮ

Yama speaks:
-
“Choose sons and grandsons who
shall live each a hundred years, choose much cattle and elephants and gold and
horses; choose a mighty reach of earth and thyself live for as many years as
thou listest.

-
“This boon if thou deemest equal to
that of thy asking, choose wealth and long living; possess thou; O Nachiketas, a mighty country; I give thee thy desire of all desirable things for
thy portion.

-
“Yea, all desires that are hard
to win in the world of mortals, all demand at thy pleasure; lo, these delectable
women with
¹Yama is the knower and keeper of the cosmic Law
through which the soul has to rise by death and life to the freedom of
Immortality.
Page – 242
their chariots and their bugles, whose like are not to be
won by men, these I will give thee, live with them for thy hand-maidens. But of
death question
not, O Nachiketas.ˮ

Nachiketas speaks:
-
“Until the morrow mortal man has
these things, O Ender, and they wear away all this keenness and glory of his
senses; nay, all life is even for a little. Thine are these chariots and thine
the dancing of these women and their singing.

-
“Man is not to be satisfied by
riches, and riches we shall have if we have beheld thee and shall live as long
as thou shall be lord of us. ¹This boon and no other is for my choosing.

-
“Who that is a mortal man and
grows old and dwells down upon the unhappy earth, when he has come into the
presence
of the ageless Immortals and knows, yea, who when he looks very close at beauty
and enjoyment and pleasure, can take delight in overlong living?

-
“This of which they thus debate,
O Death, declare to me, even that which is in the great passage; than this boon
which enters in into the secret that is hidden from us, no other chooses Nachiketas.ˮ
¹Life being a figure of
death and Death of life, the only true existence is the infinite, divine and
immortal.
Page – 243
FIRST CYCLE
: SECOND CHAPTER

Yama speaks:
-
“One thing is the good and quite
another thing is the pleasant, and both seize upon a man with different
meanings. Of these whoso takes the good, it is well with him; he falls from the
aim of life who chooses the pleasant.

-
“The good and the pleasant come to
a man and the thoughtful mind turns all around them and distinguishes. The wise
chooses out the good from the pleasant, but the dull soul chooses the pleasant
rather than the getting of his good and its having.

-
“And thou, O Nachiketas, hast
looked close at the objects of desire, at pleasant things and beautiful, and
thou hast cast them from thee: thou hast not entered into the net of riches in
which many men sink to perdition.

-
“For far apart are these,
opposite, divergent, the one that is known as the Ignorance and the other the
Knowledge. But Nachiketas I deem truly desirous of the knowledge whom so many
desirable things could not make to lust after them.
Page – 244

-
“They who dwell in the
ignorance, within it, wise in their own wit and deeming themselves very learned,
men bewildered are they who wander about stumbling round and round helplessly
like blind men led by the blind.

-
“The childish wit bewildered and
drunken with the illusion of riches cannot open its eyes to see the passage to
heaven: for
he that thinks this world is and there is no other, comes again and again into
Deathʼs thraldom.

-
“He that is not easy to be heard
of by many, and even of those that have heard, they are many who have not known
Him, — a miracle is the man that can speak of Him wisely or is skilful to win
Him, and when one is found, a miracle is the listener who can know Him even when
taught of Him by the knower.

-
“An inferior man cannot tell you
of Him; for thus told thou canst not truly know Him, since He is thought of in
many aspects. Yet unless told of Him by another thou canst not find thy way to
Him; for He is subtler than subtlety and that which logic cannot reach.

-
“This wisdom is not to be
had by reasoning, O beloved
Page – 245
Nachiketas; only when told thee by another
it brings real knowledge, — the wisdom which thou hast gotten. Truly thou art
steadfast in the Truth!
Even such a questioner as thou art may I meet with
always.ˮ

Nachiketas speaks:
-
“I know of treasure that it is
not for ever; for not by things unstable shall one attain That One which is
stable; therefore I heaped the fire of Nachiketas, and by the sacrifice of
momentary things I won the Eternal.ˮ

Yama speaks:
-
“When thou hast seen in thy grasp, O Nachiketas, the possession of desire and the firm foundation of this
world and an infinity of power and the other shore of security and great praise
and wide-moving foundation,1 wise and strong in steadfastness thou didst cast
these things from thee.

-
“Realising the God by attainment
to Him through spiritual Yoga, even the Ancient of Days who hath entered deep
into that which is hidden and is hard to see, for he is established in our
secret being and lodged in the cavern heart of things, the wise and steadfast
man casts away from him joy and sorrow.

1 Or,
and great fame chanted through widest regions,
Page – 246
-
“When a mortal man has heard,
when he has grasped, when he has forcefully separated the Righteous One from his
body and won that subtle Being, then he has delight, for he has got that which
one can indeed delight in. Verily, I deem of Nachiketas as a house wide open.ˮ

Nachiketas speaks:
-
“Tell me of That which thou seest
otherwhere than in virtue and otherwhere than in unrighteousness, otherwhere
than in this created and this uncreated, otherwhere than in that which has been
and that which shall be.ˮ

Yama speaks:
-
“The seat or goal that all the
Vedas glorify and which austerities declare, for the desire of which men practise holy living, of That will I tell thee in brief compass. OM is that
goal, O Nachiketas.

-
“For this Syllable is Brahman,
this Syllable is the Most High: this Syllable if one knows, whatsoever one shall
desire, it is his.

-
“This support is the best, this
support is the highest, knowing this support one grows great in the world of the
Brahman.
Page – 247

-
“The Wise One is not born,
neither does he die: he came not from anywhere, neither is he any one: he is
unborn, he is everlasting, he is ancient and sempiternal: he is not slain in
the slaying of the body.

-
“If the slayer think that he
slays, if the slain think that he is slain, both of these have not the
knowledge. This slays not, neither is He slain.

-
“Finer than the fine, huger
than the huge the self hides in the secret heart of the creature: when a man
strips himself of will and is weaned from sorrow, then he beholds Him; purified
from the mental elements he sees the greatness of the Self-being.

-
“Seated He journeys far off,
lying down he goes everywhere. Who other than I is fit to know God, even Him who
is rapture and the transcendence of rapture?

-
“Realising the Bodiless in
bodies, the Established in things unsettled, the Great and Omnipresent Self, the
wise and steadfast soul grieves no longer.
Page – 248

-
“The Self is not to be won by
eloquent teaching, nor by brain power, nor by much learning: but only he whom
this Being chooses can win Him; for to him this Self bares His body.

-
“None who has not ceased from
doing evil, or who is not calm, or not concentrated in his being, or whose mind
has not been tranquillised, can by wisdom attain to Him.

-
“He to whom the sages are as
meat and heroes as food for his eating and Death is an ingredient of His
banquet, how thus shall one know of Him where He abides?ˮ
Page – 249
FIRST CYCLE
: THIRD CHapter

Yama speaks:
-
“There are two that drink deep of
the truth in the world of work well accomplished: they are lodged in the secret
plane of being, in the highest kingdom of the most High: as of light and shade
the knowers of Brahman speak of them, and those of the five fires and those who
kindle thrice the fire of Nachiketas.

-
“May we have strength to kindle
the Agni of Nachiketas for he is the bridge of those who do sacrifice and he is
Brahman Supreme and imperishable, and the far shore of security to those who
would cross this Ocean.

-
“Know the body for a chariot and
the soul for the master of the chariot: know Reason for the charioteer and the
mind for the reins only.

-
“The senses they speak of as the
steeds and the objects of sense as the paths in which they move; and One yoked
with self and the mind and the senses, as the enjoyer, say the thinkers.
Page – 250

-
“Now he that is without knowledge
with his mind ever unapplied, his senses are to him as wild horses and will not
obey their driver of the chariot.

-
“But he that has knowledge with
his mind ever applied, his senses are to him as noble steeds and they obey the
driver.

-
“Yea, he that is without knowledge
and is unmindful and is ever unclean, reaches not that goal, but wanders in the
cycle of phenomena.

-
“But he that has knowledge and is
mindful, pure always, reaches that goal whence he is not born again.

-
“That man who uses the mind for
reins and the knowledge for the driver, reaches the end of his road, the highest
seat of Vishnu.

-
“Than the senses the objects of
sense are higher: and higher than the objects of sense is the Mind: and higher
than the
Page – 251
Mind is the faculty of knowledge: and
than that the Great-Self is higher.

-
“And higher than the Great-Self
is the Unmanifest and higher than the Unmanifest is the Purusha: than the
Purusha there is none higher: He is the culmination. He is the highest goal of
the journey.

-
“He is the secret Self in
all existences and does not manifest Himself to the vision: yet is He seen by
the seers of the subtle by a subtle and perfect understanding.

-
“Let the wise man restrain speech
in his mind and mind in Self, and knowledge in the Great-Self, and that again
let him restrain in the Self that is at peace.

-
“Arise, awake, find out the great
ones and learn of them: for sharp as a razorʼs edge, hard to traverse,
difficult of going is that path, say the sages.

-
“That in which sound is not, nor
touch, nor shape, nor diminution, nor taste nor smell, that which is eternal,
and It is without end or beginning, higher than the Great-Self, the
Page – 252
stable; that having seen, from the mouth
of death there is deliverance.ˮ

-
The man of intelligence having
spoken or heard the eternal story of Nachiketas wherein Death was the speaker,
grows great in the world of the Brahman.

-
He who being pure recites
this supreme secret at the time of the Shraddha in the assembly of the Brahmins,
that turns for him to infinite existence.
Page – 253
SECOND CYCLE
: FIRST Chapter

Yama speaks:
-
“The self-born has set the doors
of the body to face outwards, therefore the soul of a man gazes outward and not
at the Self within: hardly a wise man here and there, desiring immortality,
turns his eyes inward and sees the Self within him.

-
“The rest childishly follow after
desire and pleasure and walk into the snare of Death that gapes wide for them.
But calm souls, having learned of immortality, seek not for permanence in the
things of this world that pass and are not.

-
“By the Self one knows form and
taste and smell, by the Self one knows sound and touch and the joy of man with
woman: what is there left in this world of which the Self not knows? This is That thou seekest.

-
“The calm soul having comprehended
the great Lord, the omnipresent Self by whom one beholds both to the end of
dream and to the end of waking, ceases from grieving.
Page – 254

-
“He that has known from the very
close this Eater of sweetness, the Jiva, the self within that is lord of what
was and what shall be, shrinks not thereafter from aught nor abhors any. This is That thou seekest.

-
“He is the seer that sees Him who
came into being before austerity and was before the waters: peep in the heart of
the creature he sees Him, for there He stands by the mingling of the elements.
This is That thou seekest.

-
“This is Aditi, the mother of the
Gods, who was born through the Prana and by the mingling of the elements had her
being: deep in the heart of things she has entered, there she is seated. This is That thou seekest.

-
“As a woman carries with care the
unborn child in her womb, so is the Master of Knowledge lodged in the tinders:
and day by day should men worship him, who live the waking life and stand before
him with sacrifices; for he is that Agni. This is That thou seekest.

Page – 255
-
“He from whom the sun
arises and to whom the sun returns, and in Him are all the Gods established;
none passes beyond Him. This is That thou seekest.

-
“What is in this world, is also
in the other: and what is in the other, that again is in this: who thinks he
sees difference here, from death to death he goes.

-
“Through the mind must we
understand that there is nothing in this world that really varies: who thinks he
sees difference here, from death to death he goes.

-
“The Purusha who is seated in the
midst of our self is no larger than the finger of a man; He is the Lord
of what was and what shall be. Him having seen one shrinks not from aught, nor
abhors any. This is That thou seekest.

-
“The Purusha that is within us is
no larger than the finger of a man: He is like a blazing fire that is without
smoke, He is lord of His past and His future. He alone is today and He alone
shall be tomorrow. This is That thou seekest.
Page – 256

-
“As water that rains in the rough
and difficult places, runs to many sides on the mountain tops, so he that sees
separate law and action of the One Spirit, follows in the track of what
he sees.

-
“But as pure water that is poured into
pure water, even as it was such it remains, so is it with the soul of the
thinker who knows God, O seed of Gautama.ˮ
Page – 257
SECOND
CYCLE : SECOND
Chapter

Yama speaks:
-
“The unborn who is not
devious-minded has a city with eleven gates: when he takes up his abode in it,
he grieves not, but when he is set free from it, that is his deliverance. This is That thou seekest.

-
“Lo, the Swan whose dwelling is in
the purity, He is the Vasu in the inter-regions, the Sacrificer at the
altar, the Guest in the vessel of the drinking: He is in man and in the Great
Ones and His home is in the law, and His dwelling is in the firmament: He is all
that is born of water and all that is born of earth and all that is born on the
mountains. He is the Truth and He is the Mighty One.

-
“This is He that draws the
main breath upward and casts the lower breath downward. The Dwarf that sits in
the centre, to Him all the Gods do homage.

-
“When this encased Spirit that is
in the body, falls away from it, when He is freed from its casing, what
is there then that remains? This is That thou seekest.
Page – 258

-
“Man that is mortal lives not by
the breath, no, nor by the lower breath; but by something else we live in which
both these have their being.

-
“Surely, O Gautama, I will tell
thee of this secret and eternal Brahman and likewise what becomes of the soul
when one dies.

-
“For some enter a womb to the
embodying of the Spirit and others follow after the Immovable: according to
their deeds is their goal and after the measure of their revealed knowledge.

-
“This that wakes in the sleepers
creating desire upon desire, this Purusha, Him they call the Bright One, Him
Brahman, Him Immortality, and in Him are all the worlds established: none goes
beyond Him. This is That thou seekest.

-
“Even as one Fire has entered into
the world, but it shapes itself to the forms it meets, so there is one Spirit
within all creatures, but it shapes itself to form and form: it is likewise
outside these.
Page – 259

-
“Even as one Air has entered into
the world, but it shapes itself to the forms it meets, so there is one Spirit
within all creatures, but it shapes itself to form and form: it is likewise
outside these.

-
“Even as the Sun is the eye of
all this world, yet is not soiled by the outward blemishes of the visual, so
there is one Spirit within all creatures, but the sorrow of this world soils it
not: for it is beyond grief and danger.

-
“One calm and controlling
Spirit within all creatures that makes one form into many fashions: the calm and
strong who see Him in their self as in a mirror, theirs is eternal felicity and
ʼtis not for others.

-
“The One Eternal in the
transient, the One consciousness in many conscious beings, who being One
orders the desires of many: the calm and strong who behold Him in their self as
in a mirror, theirs is eternal peace and ʼtis not for others.

-
“ ʻThis is Heʼ is all they
can realise of Him, a highest felicity which none can point to nor any define
it. How shall I know of Him whether He shines or reflects one light and another?
Page – 260

-
“There the sun cannot shine and
the moon has no lustre: all the stars are blind: there our lightnings flash not,
neither any earthly fire. For all that is bright is but the shadow of His
brightness and by His shining all this shines.ˮ
Page – 261
SECOND
CYCLE : THIRD
CHapter

Yama speaks:
-
“This is an eternal Ashwattha-tree
whose root is above, but its branches are downward. It is He that is called the
Bright One and Brahman, and Immortality, and in Him are all the worlds
established, none goes beyond Him. This is That thou seekest.

-
“All this universe of motion moves
in the Prana and from the Prana also it proceeded: a mighty terror is He, yea, a
thunderbolt uplifted. Who know Him, are the immortals.

-
“For fear of Him the Fire burns:
for fear of Him the Sun gives heat: for fear of Him Indra and Vayu and Death
hasten in their courses.

-
“If in this world of men and
before thy body fall from thee, thou wert able to apprehend it, then thou availeth for embodiment in the worlds that He creates.

Page – 262
-
“In the self one sees God as in a
mirror, but as in a dream in the world of the Fathers: and as in water one sees
the surface of an object, so one sees Him in the world of the Gandharvas. But He
is seen as light and shade in the heaven of the Spirit.

-
“The calm soul having comprehended
the separateness of the senses and the rising of them and their setting and
their separate emergence, puts from him pain and sorrow.

-
“The mind is higher than the
senses, and higher than the mind is the genius, above the genius is the Mighty
Spirit, and higher than the Mighty One is the Unmanifested.

-
“But highest above the Unmanifested is the Purusha who pervades all and alone has no sign nor feature.
Mortal man knowing Him is released into immortality.

-
“God has not set His body within
the ken of seeing, neither does any man with the eye behold Him, but to the
heart and the mind and the super-mind He is manifest. Who know Him are the
immortals.

Page – 263
-
“When the five senses cease and
are at rest and the mind rests with them and the higher mind ceases from its
workings, that is the highest state, say thinkers.

-
“The state unperturbed when the
senses are imprisoned in the mind, of this they say ʻIt is Yogaʼ. Then man
becomes very vigilant, for Yoga is the birth of things and their ending.¹

-
“Not with the mind has man the
power to get God, no, nor through speech, nor by the eye. Unless one says ʻHe
isʼ, how can one become sensible of Him?

-
“One must apprehend God in the
concept ʻHe Isʼ and also in His essential: but when he has grasped Him as the
ʻIsʼ, then the essential of God dawns upon a man.

-
“When every desire that finds
lodging in the heart of man, has been loosened from its moorings, then this
mortal puts on immortality: even here he tastes God, in this human body.

¹Shankara
interprets, “as Yoga has a beginning (birth) so has an endingˮ. But this is not
what the Sruti says.
Page – 264
-
“Yea, when all the strings of the
heart are rent asunder, even here, in this human birth, then the mortal becomes
immortal. This is the whole teaching of the Scriptures.

-
“A hundred and one are the nerves
of the heart, and of all these only one issues out through the head of a man: by
this his soul mounts up to its immortal home, but the rest lead him to all sorts
and conditions of births in his passing.

-
“The Purusha, the Spirit within,
who is no larger than the finger of a man is seated for ever in the heart of
creatures: one must separate Him with patience from oneʼs own body as one
separates from a blade of grass its main fibre. Thou shalt know Him for the
Bright Immortal, yea, for the Bright Immortal.ˮ

-
Thus did Nachiketas with Death
for his teacher win the God-knowledge: he learned likewise the whole ordinance
of Yoga: thereafter he obtained God and became void of stain and void of death.
So shall another be who comes likewise to the Science of the Spirit.
Page – 265
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