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

    Válmiki

    Yoga-Vāsistha, Book 6: Nirvāna-Prakarana (On ultimate extinction) - part 2. Chapter 40 - On the Quiescence of the Soul

    Vasistha continued: The sight of things, actions of the mind the internal faculties and perceptions of the senses, being all of a super physical nature, the true states of these categories are far removed from our knowledge, and present but a faint appearance of theirs unto us.

    The minuteness of the superphysical or in totals, is out-stretched in the forms of external or physical objects; but this extended appearances of the outer world, is a mere error: 1.

    But when this external nature disappears and subsides in the inner soul; it is then that this phenomenal world is absorbed like a dream in the sound sleeping state of the soul.

    Our enjoyments and our greatest ailments on earth, and our kindred and relations are our strongest bondages here; our wealth is for our bale and woe, therefore hold yourself to yourself alone, 2.

    Know your felicity to consist, in your communion with yourself; and that you lose yourself, by your familiarity with the world. Participate with the supreme vacuum, be calm and quiet like it, and do not disturb yourself like the turbulent air or wind. 3

    I know not myself, nor do I understand what this visible and mistaken world may mean; I am absorbed in the calm and quiet Brahma, and feel myself as the sound Brahma himself.

    You behold me as another person, and address me with words you etc. in the second person; but I find myself as calm and quiet as the transcendent vacuum itself.

    It is in the vacuous sphere of the divine soul, that you view the false appearances 4, as are produced therein by the misconceptions of your mind; and these errors are continually rising in your mind, in the manner of the erratic trepidations in the mind.

    The tranquil soul of Brahma, knows 5 no effort of creation in it; nor does the nature of creation, know the quiescent nature of Brahma. It is as the soundly sleeping soul knows no dream, nor does the dreaming man know the state of sound sleep. 6

    Brahma is ever wakeful, and the world is no other than a waking dream, and the living liberated man knows, the phenomenon as a reflexion of the noumenon in his tranquil understanding.

    The intelligent man well knows the true state of things in the world, and holy men are as quiet in their souls as the autumnal sky with a moving cloud.

    The erroneous conception of one's egoism or personality, and that of the existence of the world; is like the impression of the relation of a battle, preserved in one's memory or as pictured in his imaginations; in both cases truth and falsehood are found to be blended together.

    The phenomena of the world, which is neither exhibited in the divine spirit, as an intrinsic or subjective part of itself nor has it a viewer 7 for itself; which is neither a vacuity nor even a solidity of its nature; cannot be otherwise than an erroneous conception of the mind.

    Footnotes

    1. and creation of our false imagination

    2. and mind not about all others

    3. So hafiz and the Persian mystics. If you seekest yourself, then seek not forsake all others

    4. of things

    5. has

    6. The nature of Brahma is one of profound sleep, and that of creation is no other than a dream

    7. or subjective framer




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