FIRST ADHYAYA.
FIRST VALLI.
1. Vagasravasa, desirous (of heavenly rewards), surrendered
(at a sacrifice) all that he possessed. He had a son of the name
of Nakiketas.
2. When the (promised) presents were being given (to the
priests), faith entered into the heart of Nakiketas, who was
still a boy, and he thought:
3. 'Unblessed, surely, are the worlds to which a man goes by
giving (as his promised present at a sacrifice) cows which have
drunk water, eaten hay, given their milk, and are barren.'
4. He (knowing that his father had promised to give up all
that he possessed, and therefore his son also) said to his
father: 'Dear father, to whom wilt thou give me?'
He said it a second and a third time. Then the father replied
(angrily):
'I shall give thee unto Death.'
(The father, having once said so, though in haste, had to be
true to his word and to sacrifice his son.)
5. The son said: 'I go as the first, at the head of many (who
have still to die); I go in the midst of many (who are now
dying). What will be the work of Yama (the ruler of the departed)
which to-day he has to do unto Me?
6. 'Look back how it was with those who came before, look
forward how it will be with those who come hereafter. A mortal
ripens like corn, like corn he springs up again.'
(Nakiketas enters into the abode of Yama Vaivasvata, and there
is no one to receive him. Thereupon one of the attendants of Yama
is supposed to say :)
7. 'Fire enters into the houses, when a Brahmana enters as a
guest . That fire is quenched by this peace-offering ;-bring
water, O Vaivasvata!
8. 'A Brahmana that dwells in the house of a foolish man
without receiving food to eat, destroys his hopes and
expectations, his possessions, his righteousness, his sacred and
his good deeds, and all his sons and cattle.'
(Yama, returning to his house after an absence of three
nights, during which time Nakiketas had received no hospitality
from him, says:)
9. 'O Brahmana, as thou, a venerable guest, hast dwelt in my
house three nights without eating, therefore choose now three
boons. Hail to thee! and welfare to me!'
10. Nakiketas said: 'O Death, as the first of the three boons
I choose that Gautama, my father, be pacified, kind, and free
from anger towards me; and that he may know me and greet me, when
I shall have been dismissed by thee.'
11. Yama said: 'Through my favour Auddalaki Aruni, thy father,
will know thee, and be again towards thee as he was before. He
shall sleep peacefully through the night, and free from anger,
after having seen thee freed from the mouth of death.'
12. Nakiketas said: 'In the heaven-world there is no fear;
thou art not there, O Death, and no one is afraid on account of
old age. Leaving behind both hunger and thirst, and out of the
reach of sorrow, all rejoice in the world of heaven.'
13. 'Thou knowest, O Death, the fire-sacrifice which leads us
to heaven; tell it to me, for I am full of faith. Those who live
in the heaven-world reach immortality,-this I ask as my second
boon.'
14. Yama said: 'I tell it thee, learn it from me, and when
thou understandest that fire-sacrifice which leads to heaven,
know, O Nakiketas, that it is the attainment of the endless
worlds, and their firm support, hidden in darkness.'
15. Yama then told him that fire-sacrifice, the beginning of
all the worldS , and what bricks are required for the altar, and
how many, and how they are to be placed. And Nakiketas repeated
all as it had been told to him. Then Mrityu, being pleased with
him, said again:
16. The generous, being satisfied, said to him:
I give thee now another boon; that fire-sacrifice shall be
named after thee, take also this many coloured chain.'
17. 'He who has three times performed this Nakiketa rite, and
has been united with the three (father, mother, and teacher), and
has performed the three duties (study, sacrifice, almsgiving)
overcomes birth and death. When he has learnt and understood this
fire, which knows (or makes us know) all that is born of Brahman,
which is venerable and divine, then he obtains everlasting
peace.'
18. 'He who knows the three Nakiketa fires, and knowing the
three, piles up the Nakiketa sacrifice, he, having first thrown
off the chains of death, rejoices in the world of heaven, beyond
the reach of grief.'
19. 'This, O Nakiketas, is thy fire which leads to heaven, and
which thou hast chosen as thy second boon. That fire all men will
proclaim . Choose now, O Nakiketas, thy third boon.'
20. Nakiketas said: 'There is that doubt, when a man is
dead,-some saying, he is; others, he is not. This I should like
to know, taught by thee; this is the third of my boons.'
21. Death said: 'On this point even the gods have doubted
formerly; it is not easy to understand. That subject is subtle.
Choose another boon, O Nakiketas, do not press me, and let me off
that boon.'
22. Nakiketas said: 'On this point even the gods have doubted
indeed, and thou, Death, hast declared it to be not easy to
understand, and another teacher like thee is not to be
found:-surely no other boon is like unto this.'
23. Death said: 'Choose sons and grandsons who shall live a
hundred years, herds of cattle, elephants, gold, and horses.
Choose the wide abode of the earth, and live thyself as many
harvests as thou desirest.'
24. 'If you can think of any boon equal to that, choose
wealth, and long life. Be (king), Nakiketas, on the wide earth'.
I make thee the enjoyer of all desires.'
25. 'Whatever desires are difficult to attain among mortals,
ask for them according to thy wish;-these fair maidens with their
chariots and musical instruments,-such are indeed not to be
obtained by men,-be waited on by them whom I give to thee, but do
not ask me about dying.'
26. Nakiketas said: 'These things last till tomorrow, O Death,
for they wear out this vigour of all the senses. Even the whole
of life is short. Keep thou thy horses, keep dance and song for
thyself.'
2 7. 'No man can be made happy by wealth. Shall we possess
wealth, when we see thee? Shall we live, as long as thou rulest?
Only that boon (which I have chosen) is to be chosen by me.'
28. 'What mortal, slowly decaying here below, and knowing,
after having approached them, the freedom from decay enjoyed by
the immortals, would delight in a long life, after he has
pondered on the pleasures which arise from beauty and love?'
29. 'No, that on which there is this doubt, O Death, tell us
what there is in that great Hereafter. Nakiketas does not choose
another boon but that which enters into the hidden world.'
SECOND VALLI
1. Death said: 'The good is one thing, the pleasant another;
these two, having different objects, chain a man. It is well with
him who clings to the good; he who chooses the pleasant, misses
his end.'
2. 'The good and the pleasant approach man: the wise goes
round about them and distinguishes them. Yea, the wise prefers
the good to the pleasant, but the fool chooses the pleasant
through greed and avarice.'
3. 'Thou, O Nakiketas, after pondering all pleasures that are
or seem delightful, hast dismissed them all. Thou hast not gone
into the road' that leadeth to wealth, in which many men perish.'
4. 'Wide apart and leading to different points are these two,
ignorance, and what is known as wisdom. I believe Nakiketas to be
one who desires knowledge, for even many pleasures did not tear
thee away.'
5. 'Fools dwelling in darkness, wise in their own conceit, and
puffed up with vain knowledge, go round and round, staggering to
and fro, like blind men led by the blind
6. 'The Hereafter never rises before the eyes of the careless
child, deluded by the delusion of wealth. "This is the
world," he thinks," there is no other; thus he falls
again and again under my sway.'
7. 'He (the Self) of whom many are not even able to hear, whom
many, even when they hear of him, do not comprehend; wonderful is
a man, when found, who is able to teach him (the Self); wonderful
is he who comprehends him, when taught by an able teacher'.'
8. 'That (Self), when taught by an inferior man, is not easy
to be known, even though often thought upon; unless it be taught
by another, there is no way to it, for it is inconceivably
smaller than what is small.'
9. 'That doctrine is not to be obtained by argument, but when
it is declared by another, then, O dearest, it is easy to
understand. Thou hast obtained it now; thou art truly a man of
true resolve. May we have always an inquirer like thee!'
10. Nakiketas said: 'I know that what is called a treasure is
transient, for that eternal is not obtained by things which are
not eternal. Hence the Nakiketa fire(-sacrifice) has been laid by
me (first); then, by means of transient things, I have obtained
what is not transient (the teaching of Yama)'.'
11. Yama said: 'Though thou hadst seen the fulfilment of all
desires, the foundation of the world, the endless rewards of good
deeds, the shore where there is no fear, that which is magnified
by praise, the wide abode, the rest, yet being wise thou hast
with firm resolve dismissed it all.'
12. 'The wise who, by means of meditation on his Self,
recognises the Ancient, who is difficult to be seen, who has
entered into the dark, who is hidden in the cave, who dwells in
the abyss, as God, he indeed leaves joy and sorrow far behind.'
13. 'A mortal who has heard this and embraced it, who has
separated from it all qualities, and has thus reached the subtle
Being, rejoices, because he has obtained what is a cause for
rejoicing. The house (of Brahman) is open, I believe, O
Nakiketas.'
14. Nakiketas said: 'That which thou seest as neither this nor
that, as neither effect nor cause, as neither past nor future,
tell me that.'
15. Yama said: 'That word (or place) which all the Vedas
record, which all penances proclaim, which men desire when they
live as religious students, that word I tell thee briefly, it is
OM.'
16. 'That (imperishable) syllable means Brahman, that syllable
means the highest (Brahman); he who knows that syllable, whatever
he desires, is his.'
17. 'This is the best support, this is the highest support; he
who knows that support is magnified in the world of Brahma.'
18. 'The knowing (Self is not born, it dies not; it sprang
from nothing, nothing sprang from it. The Ancient is unborn,
eternal, everlasting; he is not killed, though the body is
killed.'
19. 'If the killer thinks that he kills, if the killed thinks
that he is killed, they do not understand; for this one does not
kill, nor is that one killed.'
20. 'The Self, smaller than small, greater than great, is
hidden in the heart of that creature. A man who is free from
desires and free from grief, sees the majesty of the Self by the
grace of the Creator .'
21. 'Though sitting still, he walks far; though lying down, he
goes everywhere. Who, save myself, is able to know that God who
rejoices and rejoices not?'
22. 'The wise who knows the Self as bodiless within the
bodies, as unchanging among changing things, as great and
omnipresent, does never grieve.'
23. 'That Self, cannot be gained by the Veda, nor by
understanding, nor by much learning. He whom the Self chooses, by
him the Self can be gained. The Self chooses him (his body) as
his own.'
24. 'But he who has not first turned away from his wickedness,
who is not tranquil, and subdued, or whose mind is not at rest,
he can never obtain the Self (even) by knowledge.'
25. 'Who then knows where He is, He to whom the Brahmans and
Kshatriyas are (as it were) but food , and death itself a
condiment?'
THIRD VALLI
1. 'There are the two, drinking their reward in the world of
their own works, entered into the cave (of the heart), dwelling
on the highest summit (the ether in the heart). Those who know
Brahman call them shade and light; likewise, those householders
who perform the Trinakiketa sacrifice.'
2. 'May we be able to master that Nakiketa rite which is a
bridge for sacrificers; also that which is the highest,
imperishable Brahman for those who wish to cross over to the
fearless shore.'
3. 'Know the Self to be sitting in the chariot, the body to be
the chariot, the intellect (buddhi) the charioteer, and the mind
the reins.'
4. 'The senses they call the horses, the objects of the senses
their roads. When he (the Highest Self) is in union with the
body, the senses, and the mind, then wise people call him the
Enjoyer.'
5. 'He who has no understanding and whose mind (the reins) is
never firmly held, his senses (horses) are unmanageable, like
vicious horses of a charioteer.'
6. 'But he who has understanding and whose mind is always
firmly held, his senses are under control, like good horses of a
charioteer.'
7. 'He who has no understanding, who is unmindful and always
impure, never reaches that place, but enters into the round of
births.'
8. 'But he who has understanding, who is mindful and always
pure, reaches indeed that place, from whence he is not born
again.'
9. 'But he who has understanding for his charioteer, and who
holds the reins of the mind, he reaches the end of his journey,
and that is the highest place of Vishnu.'
10. 'Beyond the senses there are the objects, beyond the
objects there is the mind, beyond the mind there is the
intellect, the Great Self is beyond the intellect.'
11. 'Beyond the Great there is the Undeveloped, beyond the
Undeveloped there is the Person (purusha). Beyond the Person
there is nothing this is the goal, the highest road.'
12. 'That Self is hidden in all beings and does not shine
forth, but it is seen by subtle seers through their sharp and
subtle intellect.'
13. 'A wise man should keep down speech and mind; he should
keep them within the Self which is knowledge; he should keep
knowledge within the Self which is the Great; and he should keep
that (the Great) within the Self which is the Quiet.'
14. 'Rise, awake! having obtained your boons', understand
them! The sharp edge of a razor is difficult to pass over; thus
the wise say the path (to the Self) is hard.'
15. 'He who has perceived that which is without sound, without
touch, without form, without decay, without taste, eternal,
without smell, without beginning, without end, beyond the Great,
and unchangeable, is freed from the jaws of death.'
16. 'A wise man who has repeated or heard the ancient story of
Nakiketas told by Death, is magnified in the world of Brahman.'
17. 'And he who repeats this greatest mystery in an assembly
of Brahmans, or full of devotion at the time of the Sraddha
sacrifice, obtains thereby infinite rewards.'
SECOND ADHYAYA.
FOURTH VALLI.
1. Death said: 'The Self-existent pierced the openings (of the
senses) so that they turn forward: therefore man looks forward,
not backward into himself. Some wise man, however,with his eyes
closed and wishing for immortality, saw the Self behind!
2. 'Children follow after outward pleasures, and fall into the
snare of wide-spread death. Wise men only, knowing the nature of
what is immortal, do not look for anything stable here among
things unstable!
3. 'That by which we know form, taste, smell, sounds, and
loving touches, by that also we know what exists besides. This is
that (which thou hast asked for).'
4. 'The wise, when he knows that that by which he perceives
all objects in sleep or in waking is the great omnipresent Self,
grieves no more.'
5. 'He who knows this living soul which eats honey (perceives
objects) as being the Self, always near, the Lord of the past and
the future, henceforward fears no more. This is that!
6. 'He who (knows) him' who was born first from the brooding
heat, (for he was born before the water), who, entering into the
heart, abides therein, and was perceived from the elements. This
is that.'
7. '(He who knows) Aditi also, who is one with all deities,
who arises with Prana (breath or Hiranyagarbha), who, entering
into the heart, abides therein, and was born from the elements.
This is that.'
8. 'There is Agni (fire), the all-seeing, hidden in the two
fire-sticks, well-guarded like a child (in the womb) by the
mother, day after day to be adored by men when they awake and
bring oblations. This is that.'
9. 'And that whence the sun rises, and whither it goes to set,
there all the Devas are contained, and no one goes beyond. This
is that.'
10. 'What is here (visible in the world), the same is there
(invisible in Brahman); and what is there, the same is here. He
who sees any difference here (between Brahman and the world),
goes from death to death.'
11. 'Even by the mind this (Brahman) is to be obtained, and
then there is no difference whatsoever. He goes from death to
death who sees any difference here.'
12. 'The person (purusha), of the size of a thumb, stands in
the middle of the Self (body?), as lord of the past and the
future, and henceforward fears no more. This is that.'
13. 'That person, of the size of a thumb, is like a light
without smoke, lord of the past and the future, he is the same
to-day and to-morrow. This is that.'
14. 'As rain-water that has fallen on a mountain ridge runs
down the rocks on all sides, thus does he, who sees a difference
between qualities, run after them on all sides.'
15. 'As pure water poured into pure water remains the same,
thus, O Gautama, is the Self of a thinker who knows.'
FIFTH VALLI
1. 'There is a town with eleven gates belonging to the Unborn
(Brahman), whose thoughts are never crooked. He who approaches
it, grieves no more, and liberated (from all bonds of ignorance)
becomes free. This is that.'
2. 'He (Brahman) is the swan (sun), dwelling in the bright
heaven; he is the Vasu (air), dwelling in the sky; he is the
sacrificer (fire), dwelling on the hearth; he is the guest
(Soma), dwelling in the sacrificial jar; he dwells in men, in
gods (vara), in the sacrifice (rita), in heaven; he is born in
the water, on earth, in the sacrifice (rita), on the mountains;
he is the True and the Great.'
3. 'He (Brahman) it is who sends up the breath (prana), and
who throws back the breath (apgma)All the Devas (senses) worship
him, the adorable (or the dwarf), who sits in the centre.'
4. 'When that incorporated (Brahman), who dwells in the body,
is torn away and freed from the body, what remains then? This is
that!
5. 'No mortal lives by the breath that goes up and by the
breath that goes down. We live by another, in whom these two
repose.'
6. 'Well then, O Gautama, I shall tell thee this mystery, the
old Brahman, and what happens to the Self, after reaching death.'
7. 'Some enter the womb in order to have a body, as organic
beings, others go into inorganic matter, according to their work
and according to their knowledge.'
8. 'He, the highest Person, who is awake in us while we are
asleep, shaping one lovely sight after another, that indeed is
the Bright, that is Brahman, that alone is called the Immortal.
All worlds are contained in it, and no one goes beyond. This is
that.'
9. 'As the one fire, after it has entered the world, though
one, becomes different according to whatever it burns, thus the
one Self within all things becomes different, according to
whatever it enters, and exists also without.'
10. 'As the one air, after it has entered the world, though
one, becomes different according to whatever it enters, thus the
one Self within all things becomes different, according to
whatever it enters', and exists also without.'
11. 'As the sun, the eye of the whole world, is not
contaminated by the external impurities seen by the eyes, thus
the one Self within all things is never contaminated by the
misery of the world, being himself without.'
12. 'There is one ruler, the Self within all things, who makes
the one form manifold. The wise who perceive him within their
Self, to them belongs eternal happiness, not to others.'
13. 'There is one eternal thinker, thinking non-eternal
thoughts, who, though one, fulfils the desires of many. The wise
who perceive him within their Self, to them belongs eternal
peace, not to others.'
14. 'They perceive that highest indescribable pleasure,
saying, This is that. How then can I understand it? Has it its
own light, or does it reflect light?'
15. 'The sun does not shine there, nor the moon and the stars,
nor these lightnings, and much less this fire. When he shines,
everything shines after him; by his light all this is lighted.'
SIXTH VALLI
1. 'There is that ancient tree, whose roots grow upward and
whose branches grow downward;-that indeed is called the Bright,
that is called Brahman, that alone is called the Immortal . All
worlds are contained in it, and no one goes beyond. This is
that.'
2. 'Whatever there is, the whole world, when gone forth (from
the Brahman), trembles in its breath. That Brahman is a great
terror, like a drawn sword. Those who know it become immortal.'
3. 'From terror of Brahman fire burns, from terror the sun
burns, from terror Indra and Vayu, and Death, as the fifth, run
away.'
4. 'If a man could not understand it before the falling
asunder of his body, then he has to take body again in the worlds
of creation.'
5. 'As in a mirror, so (Brahman may be seen clearly) here in
this body; as in a dream, in the world of the Fathers; as in the
water, he is seen about in the world of the Gandharvas; as in
light and shade, in the world of Brahma.'
6. 'Having understood that the senses are distinct (from the
Atman), and that their rising and setting (their waking and
sleeping) belongs to them in their distinct existence (and not to
the Atman), a wise man grieves no more.'
7. 'Beyond the senses is the mind, beyond the mind is the
highest (created) Being, higher than that Being is the Great
Self, higher than the Great, the highest Undeveloped.'
8. 'Beyond the Undeveloped is the Person, the all-pervading
and entirely imperceptible. Every creature that knows him is
liberated, and obtains immortality.'
9. 'His form is not to be seen, no one beholds him with the
eye. He is imagined by the heart, by wisdom, by the mind. Those
who know this, are immortal.'
10. 'When the five instruments of knowledge stand still
together with the mind, and when the intellect does not move,
that is called the highest state.'
11. 'This, the firm holding back of the senses, is what is
called Yoga. He must be free from thoughtlessness then, for Yoga
comes and goes.'
12. 'He (the Self) cannot be reached by speech, by mind, or by
the eye. How can it be apprehended except by him who says:
"He is?"'
13. 'By the words "He is," is he to be apprehended,
and by (admitting) the reality of both (the invisible Brahman and
the visible world, as coming from Brahman). When he has been
apprehended by the words "He is," then his reality
reveals itself.'
14. 'When all desires that dwell in his heart cease, then the
mortal becomes immortal, and obtains Brahman.'
15. 'When all the ties of the heart are severed here on earth,
then the mortal becomes immortal here ends the teaching.'
16. 'There are a hundred and one arteries of the heart, one of
them penetrates the crown of the head. Moving upwards by it, a
man (at his death) reaches the Immortal; the other arteries serve
for departing in different directions.'
17. 'The Person not larger than a thumb, the inner Self, is
always settled in the heart of men. Let a man draw that Self
forth from his body with steadiness, as one draws the pith from a
reed. Let him know that Self as the Bright, as the Immortal; yes,
as the Bright, as the Immortal.'
18. Having received this knowledge taught by Death and the
whole rule of Yoga (meditation), Nakiketa became free from
passion and death, and obtained Brahman. Thus it will be with
another also who knows thus what relates to the Self.
19. May He protect us both! May He enjoy us both! May we
acquire strength together! May our knowledge become bright! May
we never quarre1! Om! Peace! peace! peace! Harih, Om!