MUNDAKA UPANISHAD
MUNDAKA UPANISHAD
CHAPTER
ONE : SECTION
I

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Brahma first of
the Gods was born, the creator of all, the worldʼs protector, he to Atharvan,
his eldest son, declared the God-knowledge in which all sciences have their
foundation.

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The God-knowledge
by Brahma declared to Atharvan, Atharvan of old declared to Angir; he to
Satyavaha the Bharadwaja told it, the Bharadwaja to Angiras, both the higher and
the lower knowledge.

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Shaunaka, the
great house-lord, came to Angiras in the due way of the disciple and asked of
him, “Lord, by knowing what does all this that is become known?ˮ

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To him thus spoke Angiras: Twofold is the knowledge that must be known of which the knowers of the
Brahman tell, the higher and the lower knowledge.

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Of which the
lower, the Rig-veda and the Yajur-veda, and the Sama-veda and the Atharva-veda,
chanting, ritual, grammar, etymological interpretation, and prosody and
astronomy. And then the higher by which is known the Immutable.

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That the
invisible, that the unseizable, without connections, without hue, without eye or
ear, that which is without hands or feet, eternal, pervading, which is in all
things and impalpable, that which is Imperishable, that which is the womb of
creatures sages behold everywhere.

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As the spider
puts out and gathers in, as herbs spring up upon the earth, as hair of head and
body grow from a living man, so here all is born from the Immutable.

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Brahman grows by
his energy at work, and then from Him is Matter born, and out of Matter life,
and mind and truth and the worlds, and in works immortality.

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He who is the
Omniscient, the all-wise. He whose energy is all made of knowledge, from Him is
born this that is Brahman here, this Name and Form and Matter.
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CHAPTER
ONE : SECTION
II

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This is That, the
Truth of things: works which the sages beheld in the Mantras1
were in the Treta ² manifoldly extended. Works do ye perform religiously with one passion for the
Truth; this is your road to the heaven of good deeds.

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When the fire of
the sacrifice is kindled and the flame sways and quivers, then between the
double pourings of butter cast therein with faith thy offerings.

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For he whose
altar-fires are empty of the new-moon offering and the full-moon offering, and
the offering of the rains and the offering of the first fruits, or unfed, or fed
without right ritual, or without guests or without the dues to the Vishwa-Devas,
destroys his hope of all the seven worlds.

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Kali, the black, Karali, the terrible, Manojava, thought-swift, Sulohita, blood-red,
Sudhumravarna, smoke-hued, Sphulingini, scattering sparks, Vishwaruchi, the
all-beauti-
¹The inspired verses of the
Veda. ²The second of the four ages.
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ful these are the seven
swaying tongues of the fire.

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He who in
these when they are blazing bright performs the rites, in their due season, him
his fires of sacrifice take and they lead him, these rays of the sun, there
where the Over-lord of the Gods is the Inhabitant on high.

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“Come with usˮ, “Come with usˮ, they cry to him, these luminous fires of sacrifice and they bear
him by the rays of the sun speaking to him pleasant words of sweetness, doing
him homage, “This is your holy world of Brahman and the heaven of your
righteousness.ˮ

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But frail are the
ships of sacrifice, frail these forms of sacrifice, all the eighteen of them, in
which are declared the lower works; fools are they who hail them as the highest
good and they come yet again to this world of age and death.

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They who dwell
shut within the ignorance and they hold themselves for learned men thinking,
“We, even we are the wise and the sagesˮ — fools are they and they wander around
beaten and stumbling like blind men led by the blind.

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They dwell
in many bonds of the Ignorance, children thinking, “We have achieved our aim of
Paradiseˮ; for when the men of works are held by their affections, and arrive
not at the Knowledge, then they are overtaken by anguish, then their Paradise
wastes by enjoying and they fall from their heavens.

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Minds bewildered
who hold the oblation offered and the well dug for the greatest righteousness
and know not any other highest good, on the back of heaven they enjoy the world
won by their righteousness and enter again this or even a lower world.

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But they who in
the forest follow after faith and self-discipline, calm and full of knowledge,
living upon alms, cast from them the dust of their passions, and through the
gate of the Sun they pass on there where is the Immortal, the Spirit, the Self undecaying and imperishable.

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The seeker of
the Brahman, having put to the test the worlds piled up by works, arrives at
world-distaste, for1 not
by work done is reached He who is Uncreated. For the knowledge of That, let him
approach, fuel in hand, a Guru, one who is learned in the Veda and is devoted to
contemplation of the Brahman.
¹ Or, He, the uncreated, lives
not by that which is made. Literally, not by the made (or, by that which is
done) the Unmade (He who is uncreated).
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To him because
he has taken entire refuge with him, with a heart tranquillised and a spirit at
peace, that man of knowledge declares in its principles the science of the
Brahman by which one comes to know the Immutable Spirit, the True and Real.
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CHAPTER
TWO : SECTION
I

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This is That, the
Truth of things: as from one high-kindled fire thousands of different sparks are
born and all have the same form of fire, so, O fair son, from the immutable
manifold becomings are born and even into that they depart.

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He, the divine,
the formless Spirit, even He is the outward and the inward and he the Unborn; He
is beyond life, beyond mind, luminous. Supreme beyond the immutable.

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Life and mind and
the senses are born from Him and the sky, and the wind, and light, and the
waters and earth upholding all that is.

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Fire is the head
of Him and His eyes are the Sun and Moon, the quarters His organs of hearing and
the revealed Vedas are his voice, air is His breath, the universe is His heart,
Earth lies at His feet. He is the inner Self in all beings.

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From Him
is fire, of which the Sun is the fuel, then rain from the Soma, herbs upon the
earth, and the male casts his seed into woman: thus are these many peoples born
from the Spirit.

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From Him are the
hymns of the Rig-veda, the Sama and the Yajur, initiation, and all sacrifices
and works of sacrifice, and dues given, the year and the giver of the sacrifice
and the worlds, on which the moon shines and the sun.

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And from Him have
issued many gods, and demi-gods and men and beasts and birds, the main breath
and downward breath, and rice and barley, and askesis and faith and Truth, and
chastity and rule of right practice.

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The seven breaths
are born from Him and the seven lights and kinds of fuel and the seven oblations
and these seven worlds in which move the life-breaths set within with the secret
heart for their dwelling-place, seven and seven.

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From Him are the
oceans and all these mountains and from Him flow rivers of all forms, and from
Him are all plants, and sensible delight which makes the soul to abide with the
material elements.
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The Spirit is
all this universe; he is works and askesis and the Brahman, supreme and
immortal. O fair son, he who knows this hidden in the secret heart, scatters
even here in this world the knot of the Ignorance.
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CHAPTER
TWO : SECTION
II

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Manifested, it is
here set close within, moving in the secret heart, this is the mighty foundation
and into it is consigned all that moves and breathes and sees. This that is that
great foundation here, know, as the Is and Is-not, the supremely desirable,
greatest and the Most High, beyond the knowledge of creatures.

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That which
is the Luminous, that which is smaller than the atoms, that in which are set the
worlds and their peoples, That is This, — it is Brahman immutable: life is That,
it is speech and mind. That is This, the True and Real, it is That which is
immortal: it is into That that thou must pierce, O fair son, into That
penetrate.

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Take up the bow
of the Upanishad, that mighty weapon, set to it an arrow sharpened by adoration,
draw the bow with a heart wholly devoted to the contemplation of That, and O
fair son, penetrate into That as thy target, even into the Immutable.

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OM is the bow and
the soul is the arrow, and That, even the Brahman, is spoken of as the target.
That must be pierced with an unfaltering aim; one must be absorbed into That as
an arrow is lost in its target.

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He in whom are inwoven heaven and earth and the mid-region, and mind with all the
life-currents, Him know to be the one Self; other words put away from you: this
is the bridge to immortality.

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Where the nerves
are brought close together like the spokes in the nave of a chariot-wheel, this
is He that moves within, — there is He manifoldly born. Meditate on the
Self as OM and happy be your passage to the other shore beyond the darkness.

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The Omniscient,
the All-wise, whose is this might and majesty upon the earth, is this self
enthroned in the Divine city of the Brahman, in his ethereal heaven.

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A mental being,
leader of the life and the body, has set a heart in matter, in matter he has
taken his firm foundation.
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By its knowing the wise see everywhere
around them That which shines in its effulgence, a shape of Bliss and Immortal.

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The knot of the
heart strings is rent, cut away are all doubts, and a manʼs works are spent and
perish, when is seen That which is at once the being below and the Supreme.

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In a supreme
golden sheath the Brahman lies, stainless, without parts. A Splendour is That,
It is the Light of Lights, It is That which the self-knowers know.

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There the sun
shines not and the moon has no splendour and the stars are blind; there these
lightnings flash not, how then shall burn this earthly fire? All that shines is
but the shadow of his shining; all this universe is effulgent with his light.

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All this is
Brahman immortal, naught else; Brahman is in front of us. Brahman behind us, and
to the south of us and to the north of us¹ and below us and above us; it
stretches everywhere. All this is Brahman alone, all this magnificent universe.
¹Or,
to the right and the left of us
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CHAPTER
THREE : SECTION
I

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Two birds,
beautiful of wing, close companions, cling to one common tree: of the two one
eats the sweet fruit of the tree, the other eats not but watches his fellow.

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The soul is the
bird that sits immersed on the one common tree; but because he is not lord he is
bewildered and has sorrow. But when he sees that other who is the Lord and
beloved, he knows that all is His greatness and his sorrow passes away from him.

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When, a seer, he
sees the Golden-hued, the maker, the Lord, the Spirit who is the source of
Brahman¹, then he becomes the knower and shakes from his wings sin and virtue;
pure of all stain he reaches the supreme identity.²

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This is the life
in things that shines manifested by all these beings; a man of knowledge coming
wholly to know this, draws back from creeds and too much disputings. In the
¹ Or,
whose source is Brahman; Shankara admits the other meaning as an alternative,
but explains it as ʻthe source of the lower Brahmanʼ.
² Or,
pure of all staining tinge he reaches to a supreme equality.
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Self his delight, at
play in the Self, doing works, — the best is he among the knowers of the
Eternal.

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The Self can
always be won by truth, by self-discipline, by integral knowledge, by a life of
purity, — this Self that is in the inner body, radiant, made all of light whom,
by the perishing of their blemishes, the doers of askesis behold.

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It is Truth that
conquers and not falsehood; by Truth was stretched out the path of the journey
of the gods, by which the sages winning their desire ascend there where Truth
has its Supreme abode.

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Vast is That,
divine, its form unthinkable; it shines out subtler than the subtle,1 very far
and farther than farness, it is here close to us, for those who have vision it
is even here in this world; it is here, hidden in the secret heart.

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Eye cannot seize,
speech cannot grasp Him, nor these other godheads; not by austerity can he be
held nor by works: only when the inner being is purified by a glad serenity of
1 Or, minuter than the minute,
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knowledge, then indeed, meditating, one
beholds the Spirit indivisible.

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This self is
subtle and has to be known by a thought-mind into which the life-force has made
its fivefold entry: all the conscious heart of creatures is shot through and inwoven with the currents of the life-force and only when it is purified can
this Self manifest its power
1.

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Whatever world
the man whose inner being is purified sheds the light of his mind upon, and
whatsoever desires he cherishes, that world he takes by conquest, and those
desires. Then, let whosoever seeks for success and well-being approach with
homage a self-knower.
¹The verb vibhavati seems
here to have a complex sense and to mean, ʻto manifest its full power and
pervading presenceʼ.
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Chapter
Three
: section
II

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He knows this supreme Brahman as the highest abiding place in which
shines out, inset, the radiant world. The wise who
are without desire and worship the Spirit pass beyond this sperm
1.

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He who cherishes desires and his mind dwells with his longings, is by
his desires born again wherever they lead him, but the man who has won all his
desire ² and has found his soul, for him even here, in
this world vanish away all desires.

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This Self is not won by exegesis, nor by
brain-power, nor by much learning of Scripture. Only by him whom
It chooses can it be won; to him this Self unveils
its own body.

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This Self cannot be won by any who is without
strength, nor with error in the seeking, nor by an askesis without the true mark: but when a man of
knowledge strives by these means his Self enters into Brahman, his abiding
place.
¹Shankara
takes it so in the sense of semen virile, which is the cause of birth into the
cosmos. But it is possible that it means rather ʻpass beyond this brilliant
universeʼ, the radiant world which has just been spoken of, to the greater Light
which is its abiding place and source, the supreme Brahman.
²Or,
finished with desires
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Attaining
to him, seers glad with fullness of knowledge, perfected in the self, all
passions cast from them, tranquillised, — these, the wise, come to the
all-pervading from every side, and, uniting themselves
with him enter utterly the All.

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Doers of askesis who have made sure of the aim
1 of
the whole-knowledge of Vedanta, the inner being purified by the Yoga of
renunciation, all in the hour of their last end passing beyond death are
released into the worlds of the Brahman.

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The fifteen
parts return into their foundations, and all the gods pass into their proper
godheads, works and the Self ofKnowledge, — all
become one in the Supreme and Imperishable.

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As rivers in
their flowing reach their home 2 in the ocean and cast off their names
and forms, even so one who knows isdelivered from
name and form and reaches the Supreme beyond the Most High, even the Divine
Person.

¹ Or,
meaning ² Or,
come to their end
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He, verily,
who knows that Supreme Brahman becomes himself Brahman; in his lineage none is
born who knows not the Brahman. He crosses beyond sorrow, he crosses beyond sin,
he is delivered from the knotted cord of the secret
heart and becomes immortal.

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This is That declared by the Rig-veda.
Doers of works, versed in the Veda, men absorbed in the Brahman, who putting
their faith in the sole-seer offer themselves to him
sacrifice, — to them one should speak this Brahman-Knowledge, men by whom the
Vow of the Head has been done according to the rite.

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This is That, the Truth of things which the seer
Angiras spoke of old. This none learns who has not
performed the Vow of the Head. Salutation to the seers supreme! Salutation to
the seers supreme!
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