Sāṅkhya Yoga
The Yoga of Knowledge
72 verses · Primary theme: jnana
- 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
The Supreme Lord said: From where has this weakness come upon you at this critical hour?
Krishna·dutydharma - 3
Do not yield to unmanliness, O Partha.
Krishna·dutykarma - 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
It would be better to live in this world by begging than to slay these great-souled teachers.
Arjuna·dharmadutykarma - 6
We do not know which is better for us - to conquer them or to be conquered by them.
Arjuna·dharmaduty - 7
My nature is afflicted by the weakness of pity.
Arjuna·surrenderdharmajnana - 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
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
O descendant of Bharata, to him who was grieving between the two armies, Hrishikesha, as if smiling, spoke these words.
Sanjaya·jnanaduty - 11
The Supreme Lord said: You grieve for those who should not be grieved for, yet you speak words of wisdom.
Krishna·jnanaatman - 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
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
The contacts of the senses with their objects, O son of Kunti, give rise to cold and heat, pleasure and pain.
Krishna·yogajnanaatman - 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
The unreal has no existence, and the real never ceases to be.
Krishna·jnanaatman - 17
Know that to be indestructible by which all this is pervaded.
Krishna·atmanjnana - 18
These bodies of the eternal, indestructible, and immeasurable embodied soul are said to have an end.
Krishna·atmandutykarma - 19
One who thinks that the Self kills and one who thinks it is killed - both are ignorant.
Krishna·atmanjnana - 20
The Self is never born, nor does it ever die.
Krishna·atmanjnanamoksha - 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
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
Weapons cannot cut the Self, fire cannot burn it, water cannot wet it, and wind cannot dry it.
Krishna·atmanjnana - 24
This Self is unbreakable, incombustible, cannot be wetted or dried.
Krishna·atmanjnana - 25
This Self is said to be unmanifest, inconceivable, and unchangeable.
Krishna·atmanjnana - 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
For one who is born, death is certain; and for one who has died, birth is certain.
Krishna·jnanakarmaatman - 28
All beings are unmanifest before birth, manifest between birth and death, and unmanifest again after death.
Krishna·jnanaatmantime - 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
The Self dwelling in the body of every being is eternally indestructible, O Bharata.
Krishna·atmanjnanaduty - 31
Considering your own duty as a warrior, you should not waver.
Krishna·dharmadutykarma - 32
Happy are the warriors, O Partha, who find such a war coming unsought to them, opening the gates of heaven.
Krishna·dharmadutykarma - 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
People will speak of your everlasting dishonor, and for one who has been honored, dishonor is worse than death.
Krishna·dharmaduty - 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
Your enemies will speak many unspeakable words, slandering your prowess.
Krishna·dharmaduty - 37
If slain, you will attain heaven; if victorious, you will enjoy the earth.
Krishna·dharmadutykarma - 38
Treating alike pleasure and pain, gain and loss, victory and defeat, engage in battle.
Krishna·karmayogaduty - 39
This wisdom has been taught to you from the standpoint of Sankhya.
Krishna·jnanakarmayoga - 40
In this path there is no loss of effort, nor is there any adverse result.
Krishna·yogakarmamoksha - 41
In this path, the resolute understanding is single-pointed, O joy of the Kurus.
Krishna·yogajnana - 42
The undiscerning ones who delight in the flowery words of the Vedas, O Partha, say that there is nothing else.
Krishna·jnanakarma - 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
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
The Vedas deal with the three gunas.
Krishna·jnanamokshayoga - 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
Your right is to action alone, never to its fruits.
Krishna·karmayogaduty - 48
Perform actions established in yoga, abandoning attachment, O Dhananjaya.
Krishna·yogakarmaduty - 49
Action performed with selfish motive is far inferior to action performed with equanimity of mind, O Dhananjaya.
Krishna·karmajnanayoga - 50
One endowed with wisdom transcends both good and bad deeds in this very life.
Krishna·yogakarmamoksha - 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
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
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
Arjuna said: What is the description of one of steady wisdom who is established in meditation, O Keshava?
Arjuna·jnanayoga - 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
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
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
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
The sense objects turn away from one who abstains from feeding them, but the taste for them remains.
Krishna·yogajnanamoksha - 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
Having restrained all the senses, one should sit in meditation, devoted to Me.
Krishna·yogabhaktijnana - 62
When a person contemplates sense objects, attachment to them arises.
Krishna·yogajnanakarma - 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
But one who moves among sense objects with senses free from attachment and aversion, under self-control, attains serenity of mind.
Krishna·yogajnana - 65
In that serenity, all sorrows are destroyed.
Krishna·yogajnanamoksha - 66
There is no wisdom for the undisciplined, nor is there meditation for the undisciplined.
Krishna·yogajnana - 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
Therefore, O mighty-armed one, one whose senses are completely restrained from their objects - that person's wisdom is firmly established.
Krishna·yogajnana - 69
What is night for all beings is the time of awakening for the self-controlled.
Krishna·jnanayogamoksha - 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
One who abandons all desires and moves about free from longing, without possessiveness and without ego - that person attains peace.
Krishna·mokshajnanayoga - 72
This is the state of Brahman, O Partha.
Krishna·mokshajnanaatman