Philosophy and Religion / Yoga Vāsistha / Yoga-Vāsistha (6.2): Nirvāna-Prakarana

    Válmiki

    Yoga-Vāsistha, Book 6: Nirvāna-Prakarana (On ultimate extinction) - part 2. Chapter 209 - On the Consciousness or Intuitive Knowledge of Extraneous Existence

    Vasistha continued saying: The life of a person is dear and useful to him, as long as he lives and not afterwards; but hear me tell you the good of a man's dying in some holy place, with a wish for future reward in his next life.

    God has ordained certain virtues and merits to certain places, even from the beginning of his imaginary city of this world, 1.

    Whatever merit is assigned to any place, the same awaits on the soul of the person, after its release from bondage, by his performance of the acts of piety enjoined by the śāstras.

    Hence any great sin that is committed by any body anywhere, is either partly or wholly effaced by the good act of the person, according to comparative merit of the holy place, or the degree of absolution in the mind of the penitent sinner.

    In any case of the insignificance of the sin, with regard to the greater sacerdotalness of the place; there the sinner is quite absolved from his guilt, and attains the object of his wish 2.

    But in case of the equality of the merits of penitence, with the holiness of the place; the penitent man receives two bodies in his next life, that is both a physical body and spiritual soul.

    Such is the effect of the primeval guilt and merit of mankind, that they are endowed with double bodies, consisting of their physical frames and spiritual souls; 3 and such the divine soul even from before.

    The principle is called Brahma in its sense of the whole, and as Brahma-the totality of the living soul jīva; and also as tham or the ego, meaning any living soul in particular; and as he remains in any manner of the whole or part, so he manifests himself in his semblance of the world.

    The reflexion of purity acquired in some holy place, appears to the penitent soul in the same manner; as it appears in its contrary light to the guilty soul, which is not so absolved from its sin in any holy place. 4

    The one sees the visions of his own death, and the weeping of his living relatives; and deems himself as a departed ghost to the next world, all alone and without a single soul beside him.

    He sees also the deaths of his friends there, and thinks also that he hears the wailing's of their relations at that place; he sees the chimeras of all these in his phrensy, as a man of deranged humours sees the spectres of bug-bears in his delirium.

    So it happens with great souls also, to see the sights both of good grace and affright, according to the measure of their merit or guilt in this life; and thus thousands of hopeful and hideous shapes, flout about in the imaginations of men, owing to the purity and depravity of their natures.

    The friends of the dying man, lying insensible as a dead body; weep and wail over his corpse, and then take him to the funeral ground for his cremation.

    But the guiltless man being accompanied by his self-conscious and righteous soul; sees the approach of his decrepitude and death, with firmness and without any feeling of sorrow 5.

    With his present body he sees himself to be a living being; and with his invisible part or inward soul, he sees his conquest over death by the merit of his holy pilgrimage, 6.

    The guiltless man is in fear of his death for a moment only, but is conscious of the indestructibility of his inward soul, as a man clad in mail, is dauntless of the shafts of his unarmoured antagonist. 7

    In this manner the relatives of the deceased, find his pure soul, to obtain its immortality after his death; and that life and death are indifferent to the virtuous and purified person.

    The sights of all the three worlds, are equally fallacious both in their tangible and intangible forms; as the vision of one object in a dream, is as false as another in their visionary nature. 8

    We have clear conceptions of the fallacies, arising in our minds, both in our dreams and imagination; but the fallacies of our waking dreams by broad daylight, are more obvious and never less conspicuous to our apprehension than either of them: 9.

    The king said: But tell me sir, how virtue and vice, both of which are bodiless things, 10, assume to themselves the bodily forms of living beings, in the course of the transmigration of our souls. 11

    Vasistha replied: There is nothing impossible to the creative power of Brahma, to be produced in the imaginary fabric of this world of his mind; nor is it impracticable to the substantive divine will to give substantial forms to understand things. 12

    There is nothing which is unimaginable, and cannot be produced by the mind of Brahma; as it is with us to have no idea of anything and nothing in being, of which we have no imagi­nation in our finite minds. 13

    A visionary city in the dream and an imaginary castle of fancy, do both present the like ideal form to the mind; and yet both of them are composed of a train of ideas, which appear as real objects for the time being. 14

    All the numerous thoughts, which lie as a dead and dormant mass, in the states of our deep and sound sleep; appear to us in endless forms in the vision of our dream and waking our imagina­tion and leave their traces in the memory.

    Who is there that has not had the notion, of the aerial castles of his dream and imagination; and found them not to be composed of our concepts only, in the airy world of our vacuous consciousness.

    Therefore what thing is there, that is not capable of being produced in this aerial world, which is the production of the airy imagination of the vacuous intellect; and what thing also which is substantially produced therefrom. 15

    Therefore it is this fallacy only, which appears in the form of the visible universe; where there is nothing in real existence or in-existence; but all things appear to be inesse and nonesse, in the Nabhas and in the Nubibus of the divine mind.

    Anything that is perceived in any manner, the same is thought as a manifestation of its Āker in the same manner; and the enlightened seekers of truth, find no impropriety in their belief as such. 16

    Hence when a man is taught by the tenets of his religion, to hope for the enjoyment of flowery banks 17, and streams flowing with nectar in paradise 18; it is very probable that he will meet with the same things, in his future life in the next world. 19

    Hence the acts that are done in this world by any body, are attended with their like rewards unto him in the next; and there is no inconsistency in this belief, though it appear so to the unbeliever. 20

    Should there be anything, which may be said to be permanent in this world, it must be over present in the view of its viewer; let then any man say upon this criterion, which he does not lose the sight of all other things before his eye sight, except the ideas of things in his mind, which are ever present in his knowledge, and never lost sight of in his consciousness.

    I have given you the analogy of our dreams and thoughts, to prove the essentiality of our notions and ideas; and whereas the worlds appertain to the will and subsists in the mind of omniscience, they are not otherwise than the essence of the Great Brahma Himself.

    As there is nothing wanting or impossible to be produced, in the aerial castle of your imagination; so there is nothing which does not and cannot exist in the will and mind of the almighty.

    Whatsoever is thought of in any form, in the Divine Mind, the same remains fixed therein in the very form; and the same appears to be situated in the same nature before our views in its photo or in a scenograph.

    Hence this semblance of the Divine Mind, is perceived only by our internal senses, and not perceptible to the external organs, or to both of these at once; because it is for our minds only to perceive the impressions of the eternal mind, and to impel the internal organs 21, to receive those reflexions.

    As the lord has willed everything at first, so it lasts with him to the very last of his creation 22; when his will of creating the world anew, gives another form to the state of things in future.

    The Lord manifests himself as he wills, in the manner of his will, and in the form of another world in every kalpa duration of creation; as the minds of men come to see another world and another state of things in their each successive dream.

    There is nothing which does not exist, in this worldly city of Divine will, and all that exists therein is naught but the production of the Divine Intellect; therefore this world is to be known, as full of the forms of the productive mind of God.

    Footnotes

    1. as to all other things at their very beginning

    2. in his future life

    3. the one maculate and the other immaculate

    4. These different reflexions, present the appearance of heavenly bliss to the soul of one, and that of hell torments to the other, as in their visions of paradise and styx in dream

    5. as if he had no decay nor death

    6. and the immor­tality of his soul in the future world

    7. The pure soul is invulnerable by the shafts of death

    8. The gloss says that, one error succeeds another, in the same way as one lye is followed by another

    9. the latter being more general and lasting than the former ones

    10. as being the abstract qualities of our actions

    11. Virtuous souls being blessed with human bodies, while vicious spirits are doomed to suffer in various brutish forms

    12. The substantive will is called satyasankalpa which brings the in-existent to real existence

    13. Brahma has given forms to all the imaginary ideas of his mind, which we cannot do to our, formless and abstract idea of any

    14. So the ideal seems as real for a time

    15. The creatures of the mind, have mental forms only

    16. These as they change, are the varied God. Thomson's seasons

    17. lit. hills

    18. lit. heaven

    19. So the Moslem is taught to expect the gratification of all his carnal desire in heaven, as the promised rewards of his holy Koran. The Hindus likewise have bodily delights to expect in their different heavens

    20. The adage-as you sow, so shall you reap, holds equally true in every religion with regard to future retribution, as in every case here below

    21. by their inward efforts

    22. from the very beginning of his Sankalpa, to the end of the kalpa epoch




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