Translation" by Swami Nikhilananda
Invocation
Om.
May we, O gods, hear with our ears what is auspicious! May we, O
worshipful gods, see with our eyes what is good! May we, strong in limbs
and body, sing your praise and enjoy the life allotted to us by
Prajapati!
Om.
Peace! Peace! Peace!
First Mundaka
Chapter I
1 Om.
Brahma, the Maker of the universe and the Preserver of the world, was
the first among the devas. He told His eldest son Atharva about the
Knowledge of Brahman, the foundation of all knowledge.
2
The Knowledge of Brahman about which Brahma told Atharva, Atharva, in
olden times, told Angir. Angir taught it to Satyavaha, belonging to the
clan of Bharadvaja and the latter taught it, in succession, to Angiras
3
Saunaka, the great householder, approached Angiras in the proper manner
and said: Revered sir, what is that by the knowing of which all this
becomes known?
4 To
him he said: Two kinds of knowledge must be known—that is what the
knowers of Brahman tell us. They are the Higher Knowledge and the lower
knowledge.
5 Of
these two, the lower knowledge is the Rig—Veda, the Yagur—Veda, the
Sama—Veda, the Atharva—Veda, siksha (phonetics), kalpa (rituals),
vyakaranam (grammar), nirukta (etymology), chhandas (metre) and jyotis
(astronomy); and the Higher Knowledge is that by which the Imperishable
Brahman is attained.
6 By
means of the Higher Knowledge the wise behold everywhere Brahman, which
otherwise cannot be seen or seized, which has no root or attributes, no
eyes or ears, no hands or feet; which is eternal and omnipresent,
all—pervading and extremely subtle; which is imperishable and the source
of all beings.
7 As
the spider sends forth and draws in its thread, as plants grow on the
earth, as hair grows on the head and the body of a living man—so does
everything in the universe arise from the Imperishable.
8
Brahman expands by means of austerity and from It primal matter is
produced; from matter, Prana; from Prana, mind; from mind, the elements;
from the elements, the worlds; thence works and from the works, their
immortal fruits.
9
For him who knows all and understands everything, whose austerity
consists of knowledge—from Him, the Imperishable Brahman, are born
Brahma, name, form and food.
Chapter II
1
This is the Truth: The sacrificial works which were revealed to the
rishis in the hymns have been described in many ways in the three Vedas.
Practise them, being desirous to attain their true results. This is your
path leading to the fruits of your works.
2
When the fire is well lighted and the flames flicker, let a man offer
his oblations in the space between the two portions of melted butter.
3 If
a man’s Agnihotra sacrifice is not accompanied by the Darsa and the
Paurnamasa sacrifice, by the Four Months’ sacrifice and the Autumnal
sacrifice; if it is unattended by hospitality to guests or if the
oblations are not offered at the right time; or if the sacrifice is
unaccompanied by the Vaisvadeva ceremony or is improperly performed—then
it destroys his seven worlds.
4
Kali (the Black), Karali (the Terrific), Manojava (the Swift as
thought), Sulohita (the Very red), Sudhumravarna (of the colour of
bright smoke; purple), Splulingini (the Scintillating) and the luminous
Visvaruchi (the All—gleaming, all— formed)—these seven, flickering
about, form the seven tongues of the fire.
5 A
man who performs the sacrifices when these flames are shining and offers
oblations at the right time, is carried by these oblations on the rays
of the sun to where dwells the sole sovereign of the gods.
6
The luminous oblations say to the sacrifiers: Come hither! Come hither!
And lead him on the rays of the sun, worshipping him all the while and
greeting him with the pleasant words: This is the holy heaven of Brahma,
earned by your good deeds.
7
But frail indeed are those rafts of sacrifices, conducted by eighteen
persons, upon whom rests the inferior work; therefore they are
destructible. Fools who rejoice in them as the Highest Good fall victims
again and again to old age and death.
8
Fools, dwelling in darkness, but wise in their own conceit and puffed up
with vain scholarship, wander about, being afflicted by many ills, like
blind men led by the blind.
9
Children, immersed in ignorance in various ways, flatter themselves,
saying: We have accomplished life's purpose. Because these performers of
karma do not know the Truth owing to their attachment, they fall from
heaven, misery— stricken, when the fruit of their work is exhausted.
10
Ignorant fools, regarding sacrifices and humanitarian works as the
highest, do not know any higher good. Having enjoyed their reward on the
heights of heaven, gained by good works, they enter again this world or
a lower one.
11
But those wise men of tranquil minds who lives in the forest on alms,
practising penances appropriate to their stations of life and
contemplating such deities as Hiranyagarbha, depart, freed from
impurities, by the Path of the Sun, to the place where that immortal
Person dwells whose nature is imperishable.
12
Let a brahmin, after having examined all these worlds that are gained by
works, acquire freedom from desires: nothing that is eternal can be
produced by what is not eternal. In order that he may understand that
Eternal, let him, fuel in hand, approach a guru who is well versed in
the Vedas and always devoted to Brahman.
13
To that pupil who has duly approached him, whose mind is completely
serene and whose senses are controlled, the wise teacher should indeed
rightly impart the Knowledge of Brahman, through which one knows the
immutable and the true Purusha.
Second Mundaka
Chapter I
1
This is the Truth: As from a blazing fire, sparks essentially akin to it
fly forth by the thousand, so also, my good friend, do various beings
come forth from the imperishable Brahman and unto Him again return.
2 He
is the self—luminous and formless Purusha, uncreated and existing both
within and without. He is devoid of prana, devoid of mind, pure and
higher than the supreme Imperishable.
3
From Him are born prana, mind, all the sense—organs, Akasa, air, fire,
water and earth, which supports all.
4
The heavens are His head; the sun and moon, His eyes; the quarters, His
ears; the revealed Vedas, His speech; the wind is His breath; the
universe, His heart. From his feet is produced the earth. He is, indeed,
the inner Self of all beings
5
From Him comes the Fire whose fuel is the sun; from the moon comes rain;
from rain, the herbs that grow on the earth; from the herbs, the seminal
fluid which a man pours into a woman. Thus many living beings are born
of the Purusha.
6
From Him have come the Rik, the Saman, the Yajus, the Diksha, all
sacrifices, the Kratus, gifts, the year, the sacrificer and the worlds
which the moon sanctifies and the sun illumines.
7 By
Him are begotten the various devas, the sadhyas, men, cattle, birds and
also prana and apana, rice and corn, penance, faith, truth, continence
and law.
8
From Him have sprung the seven pranas, the seven flames, the seven kinds
of fuel, the seven oblations and also the seven planes where move the
pranas, lying in the cave, which are seven in each living being.
9
From Him come all the oceans and the mountains; from Him flow rivers of
every kind; from Him have come, as well, all plants and flavours, by
which the inner self subsists surrounded by the elements.
10
The Purusha alone is verily the universe, which consists of work and
austerity. O my good friend, he who knows this Brahman—the Supreme and
the Immortal, hidden in the cave of the heart—cuts asunder even here the
knot of ignorance.
Chapter II
1
The Luminous Brahman dwells in the cave of the heart and is known to
move there. It is the great support of all; for in It is centred
everything that moves, breathes and blinks. O disciples, know that to be
your Self—that which is both gross and subtle, which is adorable,
supreme and beyond the understanding of creatures.
2
That which is radiant, subtler than the subtle, That by which all the
worlds and their inhabitants are supported—That, verily, is the
indestructible Brahman; That is the prana, speech and the mind; That is
the True and That is the Immortal. That alone is to be struck. Strike
It, my good friend.
3
Take the Upanishad as the bow, the great weapon and place upon it the
arrow sharpened by meditation. Then, having drawn it back with a mind
directed to the thought of Brahman, strike that mark, O my good
friend—that which is the Imperishable
4 Om
is the bow; the atman is the arrow; Brahman is said to be the mark. It
is to be struck by an undistracted mind. Then the atman becomes one with
Brahman, as the arrow with the target.
5 In
Him are woven heaven, earth and the space between and the mind with all
the sense—organs. Know that non—dual Atman alone and give up all other
talk. He is the bridge to Immortality.
6 He
moves about, becoming manifold, within the heart, where the arteries
meet, like the spokes fastened in the nave of a chariot wheel. Meditate
on Atman as Om. Hail to you! May you cross beyond the sea of darkness!
7 He
who knows all and understands all and to whom belongs all the glory in
the world—He, Atman, is placed in the space in the effulgent abode of
Brahman. He assumes the forms of the mind and leads the body and the
senses. He dwells in the body, inside the heart. By the knowledge of
That which shines as the blissful and immortal Atman, the wise behold
Him fully in all things.
8
The fetters of the heart are broken, all doubts are resolved and all
works cease to bear fruit, when He is beheld who is both high and low.
9
There the stainless and indivisible Brahman shines in the highest,
golden sheath. It is pure; It is the Light of lights; It is That which
they know who know the Self.
10
The sun does not shine there, nor the moon and the stars, nor these
lightnings, not to speak of this fire. When He shines, everything shines
after Him; by His light everything is lighted.
11
That immortal Brahman alone is before, that Brahman is behind, that
Brahman is to the right and left. Brahman alone pervades everything
above and below; this universe is that Supreme Brahman alone.
Third Mundaka
Chapter I
1
Two birds, united always and known by the same name, closely cling to
the same tree. One of them eats the sweet fruit; the other looks on
without eating.
2
Seated on the same tree, the jiva moans, bewildered by his impotence.
But when he beholds the other, the Lord worshipped by all and His glory,
he then becomes free from grief.
3
When the seer beholds the self—luminous Creator, the Lord, the Purusha,
the progenitor of Brahma, then he, the wise seer, shakes off good and
evil, becomes stainless and reaches the supreme unity.
4 He
indeed is Prana; He shines forth variously in all beings. The wise man
who knows Him does not babble. Revelling in the Self, delighting in the
Self, performing actions, he is the foremost among the knowers of
Brahman.
5
This Atman, resplendent and pure, whom the sinless sannyasins behold
residing within the body, is attained by unceasing practice of
truthfulness, austerity, right knowledge and continence
6
Truth alone prevails, not falsehood. By truth the path is laid out, the
Way of the Gods, on which the seers, whose every desire is satisfied,
proceed to the Highest Abode of the True.
7
That Brahman shines forth, vast, self—luminous, inconceivable, subtler
than the subtle. He is far beyond what is far and yet here very near at
hand. Verily, He is seen here, dwelling in the cave of the heart of
conscious beings.
8
Brahman is not grasped by the eye, nor by speech, nor by the other
senses, nor by penance or good works. A man becomes pure through
serenity of intellect; thereupon, in meditation, he beholds Him who is
without parts.
9
That subtle Atman is to be known by the intellect here in the body where
the prana has entered fivefold. By Atman the intellects of men are
pervaded, together with the senses. When the intellect is purified,
Atman shines forth.
10
Whatever world a man of pure understanding envisages in his mind and
whatever desires he cherishes, that world he conquers and those desires
he obtains, Therefore let everyone who wants prosperity worship the man
who knows the Self.
Chapter II
1
He, the Knower of the Self, knows that Supreme Abode of Brahman, which
shines brightly and in which the universe rests. Those wise men who,
free from desires, worship such a person transcend the seed of birth.
2 He
who, cherishing objects, desires them, is born again here or there
through his desires, But for him whose desires are satisfied and who is
established in the Self, all desires vanish even here on earth.
3
This Atman cannot be attained through study of the Vedas, nor through
intelligence, nor through much learning. He who chooses Atman—by him
alone is Atman attained. It is Atman that reveals to the seeker Its true
nature.
4
This Atman cannot be attained by one who is without strength or
earnestness or who is without knowledge accompanied by renunciation. But
if a wise man strives by means of these aids, his soul enters the Abode
of Brahman.
5
Having realized Atman, the seers become satisfied with that Knowledge.
Their souls are established in the Supreme Self, they are free from
passions and they are tranquil in mind. Such calm souls ever devoted to
the Self, behold everywhere the omnipresent Brahman and in the end enter
into It, which is all this.
6
Having well ascertained the Self, the goal of the Vedantic knowledge and
having purified their minds through the practice of sannyasa, the seers,
never relaxing their efforts, enjoy here supreme Immortality and at the
time of the great end attain complete freedom in Brahman.
7
The fifteen parts go back to their causes and all the senses to their
deities; the actions and the Atman reflected in the buddhi, become one
with the highest imperishable Brahman, which is the Self of all.
8 As
flowing rivers disappear in the sea, losing their names and forms, so a
wise man, freed from name and form, attains the Purusha, who is greater
than the Great.
9 He
who knows the Supreme Brahman verily becomes Brahman. In his family no
one is born ignorant of Brahman. He overcomes grief; he overcomes evil;
free from the fetters of the heart, he becomes immortal.
10 A
Rik—verse declares: This Knowledge of Brahman should he told to those
only who have performed the necessary duties, who are versed in the
Vedas and devoted to Brahman and who, full of faith, have offered
oblations in the Ekarshi Fire and performed, according to rule, the rite
of carrying fire on the head.
11
Thus the seer Angiras declared this truth in olden times. A man who has
not performed the vow should not read it. Salutation to the great seers!
Salutation to the great seers!
End of Mundaka Upanishad
The Peace Chant
Om.
May we, O gods, hear with our ears what is auspicious! May we, O
worshipful gods, see with our eyes what is good! May we, strong in limbs
and body, sing your praise and enjoy the life allotted to us by
Prajapati! Om. Peace! Peace! Peace!
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