Chapter
13
The
Yoga of the Distinction Between the Field and the Knower of the Field
(Contd…)
Verse 21
Kaaryakaaranakartrutwe
Hetuh prakritiruchyate;
Purushah sukhaduhkhaanaam
Bhoktritwe heturuchyate.
In the production of the effect and the cause, Nature
(matter) is said to be the cause; in the experience of pleasure and pain, the
soul is said to be the cause.
Verse 22
Purushah prakritistho hi
Bhungkte prakritijaan gunaan;
Kaaranam gunasango’sya
Sadasadyoni janmasu.
The soul seated in Nature experiences the qualities
born of Nature; attachment to the qualities is the cause of his birth in good
and evil wombs.
Verse 23
Upadrashtaanumantaa cha
Bhartaa bhoktaa maheshwarah;
Paramaatmeti chaapyukto
Dehe’smin purushah parah.
The Supreme Soul in this body is also called the
spectator, the permitter, the supporter, the enjoyer, the great Lord and the
Supreme Self.
Verse 24
Ya evam vetti purusham
Prakritim cha gunaih saha;
Sarvathaa vartamaano’pi
Na sa bhooyo’bhijaayate.
He who thus knows Spirit and Matter, together with the
qualities, in whatever condition he may be, he is not reborn.
Verse 25
Dhyaanenaatmani pashyanti
Kechidaatmaanamaatmanaa;
Anye saankhyena yogena
Karmayogena chaapare.
Some by meditation behold the Self in the Self by the
Self, others by the Yoga of knowledge, and others by the Yoga of action.
Verse 26
Anye twevamajaanantah
Shrutwaanyebhya upaasate;
Te’pi chaatitarantyeva
Mrityum shrutiparaayanaah.
Others also, not knowing thus, worship, having heard
of it from others; they, too, cross beyond death, regarding what they have
heard as the supreme refuge.
Verse 27
Yaavat sanjaayate kinchit
Sattwam sthaavarajangamam;
Kshetrakshetrajnasamyogaat
Tadviddhi bharatarshabha.
Wherever a being is born, whether it be unmoving or
moving, know thou, O best of the Bharatas (Arjuna), that it is from the union
between the Field and its Knower.
Verse 28
Samam sarveshu bhooteshu
Tishthantam parameshwaram;
Vinashyatswavinashyantam
Yah pashyati sa pashyati.
He sees, who sees the Supreme Lord, existing equally
in all beings, the unperishing within the perishing.
Verse 29
Samam pashyan hi sarvatra
Samavasthitameeshwaram;
Na hinastyaatmanaa’tmaanam
Tato yaati paraam gatim.
Because he who sees the same Lord dwelling equally
everywhere does not destroy the Self by the self, he goes to the highest goal.
Verse 30
Prakrityaiva cha karmaani
Kriyamaanaani sarvashah;
Yah pashyati tathaa’tmaanam
Akartaaram sa pashyati.
He sees, who sees that all actions are performed by
Nature alone and that the Self is actionless.
Verse 31
Yadaa bhootaprithagbhaavam
Ekastham anupashyati;
Tata eva cha vistaaram
Brahma sampadyate tadaa.
When a man sees the whole variety of beings as resting
in the One, and spreading forth
from That alone, he then becomes Brahman.
Verse 32
Anaaditwaan nirgunatwaat
Paramaatmaayam avyayah;
Shareerastho’pi kaunteya
Na karoti na lipyate.
Being without beginning and devoid of (any) qualities,
the Supreme Self, imperishable, though dwelling in the body, O Arjuna, neither
acts nor is tainted!
Verse 33
Yathaa sarvagatam
Saukshmyaadaakaasham nopalipyate;
Sarvatraavasthito dehe
Tathaatmaa nopalipyate.
As the all-pervading ether is not tainted because of
its subtlety, so the Self seated everywhere in the body, is not tainted.
Verse 34
Yathaa prakaashayatyekah
Kritsnam lokamimam ravih;
Kshetram kshetree tathaa
Kritsnam prakaashayati bhaarata.
Just as the one sun illumines the whole world, so also
the Lord of the Field (the Supreme Self) illumines the whole Field, O Arjuna!
Verse 35
Kshetrakshetrajnayor evam
Antaram jnaanachakshushaa;
Bhootaprakritimoksham cha ye
Vidur yaanti te param.
They who, through the eye of knowledge, perceive the
distinction between the Field and its Knower, and also the liberation from the
Nature of being, they go to the Supreme.
Iti
Srimad Bhagavadgeetaasoopanishatsu Brahmavidyaayaam
Yogashaastre
Sri Krishnaarjunasamvaade
Kshetrakshetrajnavibhaagayogo
Naama Trayodasho’dhyaayah
Thus, in the Upanishads of the glorious Bhagavad Gita,
the science of the Eternal, the scripture of Yoga, the dialogue between Sri
Krishna and Arjuna, ends the thirteenth discourse entitled: “The Yoga of the
Distinction Between the Field and the Knower of the Field”
Love.