Mundaka Upanishad
One of the ancient Sanskrit scriptures of Hinduism
The Mundaka Upanishad is one of the principal Upanishads. It consists of three sections.
Quotes
edit- Olivelle, Patrick (1998). The Early Upanishads. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-512435-9.
- As a spider spins out threads, then draws them into itself;
- As plants sprout out from the earth;
- As head and body hair grows from a living man;
- So from the imperishable all things here spring.
- 1.1.7
- What cannot be seen, what cannot be grasped,
- without color, without sight or hearing,
- without hands or feet;
- What is eternal and all-pervading,
- extremely minute, present everywhere—
- That is the immutable,
- which the wise fully perceive.
- 1.6
- which the wise fully perceive.
- Two birds, companions and friends,
- nestle on the very same tree.
- One of them eats a tasty fig;
- the other, not eating, looks on.
- Stuck on the very same tree,
- one person grieves, deluded
- by her who is not the Lord;
- But when he sees the other,
- the contented Lord—and his majesty—
- his grief disappears.
- 3.1.1-2
- his grief disappears.
- Not by sight, not by speech, nor by any other sense;
- nor by austerities or rites is he grasped.
- Rather the partless one is seen by a man, as he meditates,
- when his being has become pure,
- through the lucidity of knowledge.
- 3.1.8
- As the rivers flow on and enter into the ocean
- giving up their names and appearances;
- So the knower, freed from name and appearance,
- reaches the heavenly Person, beyond the very highest.
- 3.2.8
- reaches the heavenly Person, beyond the very highest.
External links
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Upanishads | ||
Principal | Isha • Kena • Katha • Prashna • Mundaka • Mandukya • Taittiriya • Aitareya • Chandogya • Brihadaranyaka | |
Other | Shvetashvatara |