1508
results found in
55 ms
Page 79
of 151
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Upanishad_Volume-12/Ishavasyam.htm
Ishavasyam
THE
Isha Upanishad in its very inception goes straight
to the root of the problem the Seer has set out to resolve; he starts at once
with the two supreme terms of which our existence seems to be composed and in a
monumental phrase, cast with the bronze of eight brief but sufficient words, he
confronts them and sets them in their right and eternal relation.
Īśāvāsyamidam sarvaṁ yat kiñca jagatyāṁ jagat. Isha and Jagat, God and
Nature, Spirit and World, are the two poles of being between which our
consciousness revolves. This double or biune reality is existence, is life, is
man. The Eternal seated sole in all His creations occupies the ever-shifting
universe a
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Upanishad_Volume-12/Post Content.htm
THE UPANISHADS
Rendered into simple and rhythmic
English
(Comprising six Upanishads namely
the Isha, Kena, Katha,
Mundaka, Prashna and Mandukya)
Svalpamapyasya dharmasya trāyate mahato bhayāt
Bhagavadgita
Even a little of this Law delivereth one out of great fear.
Quel
chʼella par quando un poco sorride,
Non si pò
dicer né tenere a mente,
Si
è novo miracolo e gentile.
Dante
What she
appears when she smiles a little,
Cannot be
spoken of, neither can the mind lay hold on it,
It is so
sweet and strange and sublime a miracle.
First page, typewritten by Sri
Aurobindo of the manuscript containing
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Upanishad_Volume-12/The Upanishad in Aphorisms.htm
The Upanishad in
Aphorisms
THE ISHA UPANISHAD
FOR
the Lord all this is a habitation whatsoever is
moving thing in her that moves.
Why dost thou say there is a world? There is no world, only
One who moves.
What thou callest world is the movement of Kali; as such
embrace thy world-existence. In thy all-embracing stillness of vision thou art
Purusha and inhabitest; in thy outward motion and action thou art Prakriti and
the builder of the habitation. Thus envisage thy being.
There are many knots of this movement and each knot thy eyes
look upon as an object; many currents and each current thy mind sees as force
and tendency. Forces and objec
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Upanishad_Volume-12/Mundaka Upanishad.htm
MUNDAKA UPANISHAD
MUNDAKA UPANISHAD
CHAPTER
ONE : SECTION
I
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.
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.
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 th
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Upanishad_Volume-12/Parabrahman.htm
THREE
Parabrahman
SO
FAR the great Transcendent Reality has been viewed
from the standpoint of the human spirit as it travels on the upward curve of
evolution to culminate in the Supreme. It will now be more convenient to view
the Absolute from the other end of the cycle of manifestation where, in a sense,
evolution begins and the great Cause of phenomena stands with His face towards
the Universe He will soon create. At first of course there is the Absolute,
unconditioned, unmanifested, unimaginable, of Whom nothing can be predicated
except negatives. But as the first step towards manifestation the Absolute —
produces, shall we say? let the word serve for
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Upanishad_Volume-12/Bibliographical Note.htm
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL
NOTE
Sri Aurobindo translated a number of
Upanishads and wrote commentaries and articles on them at various times. Some of
these were revised, a few more than once, and were published as stated below.
For the purposes of the Centenary Edition the last revised version is included
wherever it is available. In other cases the edition follows the available
manuscripts.
The series of six articles, comprising
Philosophy of the Upanishads and one On Translating the Upanishads,
are early writings and belong to the Baroda period. The first six articles
appeared in the Advent in 1953. On Translating the Upanishads was
used as Introduction to EIGHT
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Upanishad_Volume-12/Kena Upanishad.htm
Kena Upanishad
FOREWORD
AS
THE Isha Upanishad is concerned with the problem
of God and the world and consequently with the harmonising of spirituality and
ordinary human action, so the Kena is occupied with the problem of God and the
Soul, and the harmonising of our personal activity with the movement of infinite
energy and the supremacy of the universal Will. We are not here in this universe
as independent existences. It is evident that we are limited beings clashing
with other limited beings, clashing with the forces of material Nature, clashing
too with forces of immaterial Nature of which we are aware not with the senses
but by the mind. The Upanishad ta
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Upanishad_Volume-12/Kaivalya Upanishad.htm
KAIVALYA UPANISHAD
THE FIRST MANTRA
KAIVALYA UPANISHAD
Om. Ashwalayana to the Lord
Parameshthi came and said, “Teach me, Lord, the highest knowledge of Brahman,
the secret knowledge ever followed by the saints, how the wise man swiftly
putting from him all evil goeth to the Purusha who is higher than the highest.ˮ
Page – 415
Commentary
THE
Lord Parameshthi is Brahma — not the creator
Hiranyagarbha, but the soul who in this Kalpa has climbed up to be the
instrument of creation, the first in time of the Gods, the Pitamaha or original
and general Prajapati; the Pitamaha, because all the fathers or special
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Upanishad_Volume-12/Chhandogya Upanishad.htm
CHHANDOGYA UPANISHAD
CHHANDOGYA UPANISHAD
chapter one
:
section 1
Worship ye OM, the eternal syllable, OM is Udgitha,
the chant of Sama-veda; for with OM they begin the chant of Sama. And this
is the exposition of
OM.
Earth is the substantial essence of all these
creatures and the waters are the essence of earth; herbs of the field are
the essence of the waters, man is the essence of the herbs. Speech is the
essence of man, Rig-veda the essence of Speech, Sama the essence of Rik. Of Sama OM is the essence.
Thi
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/The Upanishad_Volume-12/Isha Upanishad.htm
ISHA UPANISHAD
ISHA UPANISHAD
All this is for habitation¹ by the Lord,
whatsoever is individual universe of movement in the universal motion. By that
renounced thou shouldst enjoy; lust not after any manʼs possession.
Doing verily² works in this world one should
wish to live a hundred years. Thus it is in thee and not otherwise than this;
action cleaves not to a man.³
¹There
are three possible senses of vasyam, “to be clothedˮ, “to be worn as a
garmentˮ and “to be inhabitedˮ. The first is the ordinarily accepted meaning. Shankara explain