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Sāṅkhya Yoga

The Yoga of Knowledge

72 verses · Primary theme: jnana

  1. 1

    Sanjaya said: To him who was thus overwhelmed with pity, whose eyes were filled with tears and who was despondent, Madhusudana (Krishna) spoke these words.

    Sanjaya·dutysurrender
  2. 2

    The Supreme Lord said: From where has this weakness come upon you at this critical hour?

    Krishna·dutydharma
  3. 3

    Do not yield to unmanliness, O Partha.

    Krishna·dutykarma
  4. 4

    Arjuna said: How can I fight with arrows in battle against Bhishma and Drona, who are worthy of my worship, O Madhusudana?

    Arjuna·dharmaduty
  5. 5

    It would be better to live in this world by begging than to slay these great-souled teachers.

    Arjuna·dharmadutykarma
  6. 6

    We do not know which is better for us - to conquer them or to be conquered by them.

    Arjuna·dharmaduty
  7. 7

    My nature is afflicted by the weakness of pity.

    Arjuna·surrenderdharmajnana
  8. 8

    I do not see what could remove this grief that is drying up my senses, even if I were to obtain an unrivaled and prosperous kingdom on earth, or even sovereignty over the gods.

    Arjuna·jnanamoksha
  9. 9

    Sanjaya said: Having spoken thus to Hrishikesha (Krishna), Gudakesha (Arjuna), the scorcher of foes, said to Govinda, 'I shall not fight,' and became silent.

    Sanjaya·surrenderduty
  10. 10

    O descendant of Bharata, to him who was grieving between the two armies, Hrishikesha, as if smiling, spoke these words.

    Sanjaya·jnanaduty
  11. 11

    The Supreme Lord said: You grieve for those who should not be grieved for, yet you speak words of wisdom.

    Krishna·jnanaatman
  12. 12

    There was never a time when I did not exist, nor you, nor all these kings; nor in the future shall any of us cease to be.

    Krishna·atmanjnana
  13. 13

    Just as the embodied soul continuously passes from childhood to youth to old age in this body, so too does it pass into another body at death.

    Krishna·atmanjnanamoksha
  14. 14

    The contacts of the senses with their objects, O son of Kunti, give rise to cold and heat, pleasure and pain.

    Krishna·yogajnanaatman
  15. 15

    That person whom these do not disturb, O best among men, who is equal in pleasure and pain and is steady - that one is fit for immortality.

    Krishna·mokshayogaatman
  16. 16

    The unreal has no existence, and the real never ceases to be.

    Krishna·jnanaatman
  17. 17

    Know that to be indestructible by which all this is pervaded.

    Krishna·atmanjnana
  18. 18

    These bodies of the eternal, indestructible, and immeasurable embodied soul are said to have an end.

    Krishna·atmandutykarma
  19. 19

    One who thinks that the Self kills and one who thinks it is killed - both are ignorant.

    Krishna·atmanjnana
  20. 20

    The Self is never born, nor does it ever die.

    Krishna·atmanjnanamoksha
  21. 21

    One who knows the Self to be indestructible, eternal, unborn, and immutable - how can that person kill anyone or cause anyone to be killed, O Partha?

    Krishna·atmanjnanakarma
  22. 22

    Just as a person casts off worn-out garments and puts on new ones, so does the embodied soul cast off worn-out bodies and enter new ones.

    Krishna·atmanjnanamoksha
  23. 23

    Weapons cannot cut the Self, fire cannot burn it, water cannot wet it, and wind cannot dry it.

    Krishna·atmanjnana
  24. 24

    This Self is unbreakable, incombustible, cannot be wetted or dried.

    Krishna·atmanjnana
  25. 25

    This Self is said to be unmanifest, inconceivable, and unchangeable.

    Krishna·atmanjnana
  26. 26

    But even if you think the Self is perpetually born and perpetually dies, even then, O mighty-armed one, you should not grieve.

    Krishna·jnanaduty
  27. 27

    For one who is born, death is certain; and for one who has died, birth is certain.

    Krishna·jnanakarmaatman
  28. 28

    All beings are unmanifest before birth, manifest between birth and death, and unmanifest again after death.

    Krishna·jnanaatmantime
  29. 29

    Some look upon the Self as a wonder, some speak of it as a wonder, some hear of it as a wonder, and yet others, even after hearing, do not understand it at all.

    Krishna·jnanaatman
  30. 30

    The Self dwelling in the body of every being is eternally indestructible, O Bharata.

    Krishna·atmanjnanaduty
  31. 31

    Considering your own duty as a warrior, you should not waver.

    Krishna·dharmadutykarma
  32. 32

    Happy are the warriors, O Partha, who find such a war coming unsought to them, opening the gates of heaven.

    Krishna·dharmadutykarma
  33. 33

    But if you do not fight this righteous war, then having abandoned your own duty and reputation, you will incur sin.

    Krishna·dharmadutykarma
  34. 34

    People will speak of your everlasting dishonor, and for one who has been honored, dishonor is worse than death.

    Krishna·dharmaduty
  35. 35

    The great warriors will think you have withdrawn from battle out of fear, and those who held you in high esteem will consider you insignificant.

    Krishna·dharmaduty
  36. 36

    Your enemies will speak many unspeakable words, slandering your prowess.

    Krishna·dharmaduty
  37. 37

    If slain, you will attain heaven; if victorious, you will enjoy the earth.

    Krishna·dharmadutykarma
  38. 38

    Treating alike pleasure and pain, gain and loss, victory and defeat, engage in battle.

    Krishna·karmayogaduty
  39. 39

    This wisdom has been taught to you from the standpoint of Sankhya.

    Krishna·jnanakarmayoga
  40. 40

    In this path there is no loss of effort, nor is there any adverse result.

    Krishna·yogakarmamoksha
  41. 41

    In this path, the resolute understanding is single-pointed, O joy of the Kurus.

    Krishna·yogajnana
  42. 42

    The undiscerning ones who delight in the flowery words of the Vedas, O Partha, say that there is nothing else.

    Krishna·jnanakarma
  43. 43

    Full of desires, with heaven as their goal, they prescribe various rituals for the attainment of pleasure and power, which lead to rebirth as the fruit of actions.

    Krishna·karmamoksha
  44. 44

    For those who are deeply attached to pleasure and power, whose minds are carried away by such talk, the resolute determination for meditation does not arise.

    Krishna·yogajnanamoksha
  45. 45

    The Vedas deal with the three gunas.

    Krishna·jnanamokshayoga
  46. 46

    As much use as there is in a well when water floods everywhere, so much use is there in all the Vedas for a knower of Brahman.

    Krishna·jnanamoksha
  47. 47

    Your right is to action alone, never to its fruits.

    Krishna·karmayogaduty
  48. 48

    Perform actions established in yoga, abandoning attachment, O Dhananjaya.

    Krishna·yogakarmaduty
  49. 49

    Action performed with selfish motive is far inferior to action performed with equanimity of mind, O Dhananjaya.

    Krishna·karmajnanayoga
  50. 50

    One endowed with wisdom transcends both good and bad deeds in this very life.

    Krishna·yogakarmamoksha
  51. 51

    The wise, endowed with equanimity of mind, renouncing the fruits born of action, are freed from the bondage of birth and reach the state beyond all suffering.

    Krishna·karmamokshayoga
  52. 52

    When your intellect crosses beyond the mire of delusion, then you will attain indifference to what has been heard and what is yet to be heard.

    Krishna·jnanamoksha
  53. 53

    When your intellect, which is now confused by various scriptural interpretations, becomes steady and immovable in meditation, then you will attain yoga.

    Krishna·yogajnana
  54. 54

    Arjuna said: What is the description of one of steady wisdom who is established in meditation, O Keshava?

    Arjuna·jnanayoga
  55. 55

    The Supreme Lord said: When one completely abandons all desires of the mind, O Partha, and is satisfied in the Self by the Self alone, then one is said to be of steady wisdom.

    Krishna·jnanayogamoksha
  56. 56

    One whose mind is undisturbed by sorrow, who has no craving for pleasure, and who is free from passion, fear, and anger - such a sage is called one of steady wisdom.

    Krishna·jnanayoga
  57. 57

    One who is unattached everywhere, who neither rejoices on obtaining good nor is disturbed by evil - that person's wisdom is firmly established.

    Krishna·jnanayoga
  58. 58

    When one withdraws the senses from sense objects on all sides, as a tortoise draws its limbs into its shell, that person's wisdom is firmly established.

    Krishna·yogajnana
  59. 59

    The sense objects turn away from one who abstains from feeding them, but the taste for them remains.

    Krishna·yogajnanamoksha
  60. 60

    The turbulent senses, O son of Kunti, forcibly carry away the mind of even a discerning person who strives for self-control.

    Krishna·yogakarma
  61. 61

    Having restrained all the senses, one should sit in meditation, devoted to Me.

    Krishna·yogabhaktijnana
  62. 62

    When a person contemplates sense objects, attachment to them arises.

    Krishna·yogajnanakarma
  63. 63

    From anger arises delusion; from delusion, confusion of memory; from confusion of memory, destruction of intelligence; and from destruction of intelligence, one perishes.

    Krishna·yogajnanakarma
  64. 64

    But one who moves among sense objects with senses free from attachment and aversion, under self-control, attains serenity of mind.

    Krishna·yogajnana
  65. 65

    In that serenity, all sorrows are destroyed.

    Krishna·yogajnanamoksha
  66. 66

    There is no wisdom for the undisciplined, nor is there meditation for the undisciplined.

    Krishna·yogajnana
  67. 67

    When the mind follows the roaming senses, it carries away one's wisdom, as the wind carries away a boat on the water.

    Krishna·yogajnana
  68. 68

    Therefore, O mighty-armed one, one whose senses are completely restrained from their objects - that person's wisdom is firmly established.

    Krishna·yogajnana
  69. 69

    What is night for all beings is the time of awakening for the self-controlled.

    Krishna·jnanayogamoksha
  70. 70

    Just as the ocean remains unmoved though waters flow into it from all sides, so the person into whom all desires enter without causing disturbance attains peace - not the one who craves desires.

    Krishna·yogajnanamoksha
  71. 71

    One who abandons all desires and moves about free from longing, without possessiveness and without ego - that person attains peace.

    Krishna·mokshajnanayoga
  72. 72

    This is the state of Brahman, O Partha.

    Krishna·mokshajnanaatman