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________________ II ĀRANYAKA, 4 ADHYAYA, I KHANDA, 4. 237 doctrine is laid down in all its simplicity. Our true self, it is said, has its true being in the Highest Self only. In other passages, however, and nearly in the whole of this Upanishad, this simple doctrine is mixed up with much that is mythological, fanciful, and absurd, arthavada, as the commentators call it, but as it might often be more truly called, anarthavâda, and it is only towards the end that the identity of the self-conscious self with the Highest Self or Brahman is clearly enuntiated. Adoration to the Highest Self. Hari, Om! 1. Verily, in the beginning 1 all this was Self, one only; there was nothing else blinking whatsoever. 2. He thought: ‘Shall I send forth worlds ?' (1) He sent forth these worlds, 3. Ambhas (water), Mariki (light), Mara (mortal), and Ap (water). 4. That Ambhas (water) is above the heaven, and it is heaven, the support. The Marikis (the lights) are the sky. The Mara (mortal) is the earth, and the waters under the earth are the Ap world 3. (2) 1 Before the creation. Comm. • Blinking, mishat, i. e. living ; cf. Rv. X, 190, 2, visvasya mishato vasî, the lord of all living. Såyana seems to take mishat as a 3rd pers. sing. The names of the four worlds are peculiar. Ambhas means water, and is the name given to the highest world, the waters above the heaven, and heaven itself. Marîkis are rays, here used as a name of the sky, antariksha. Mara means dying, and the earth is called so, because all creatures living there must die. Ap is water, here explained as the waters under the earth. The usual division of the world is threefold, earth, sky, and heaven. Here it is fourfold, the fourth division being the water round the earth, or, as the commentator says, under the earth. Ambhas was probably intended for the highest heaven (dyaus), and was then explained both as what is above the heaven and as heaven itself, the support. If we translate, like Sankara and Colebrooke, 'the water is the region above the heaven which heaven upholds,' we should lose heaven altogether, yet heaven, as the third with sky and earth, is essential in the Indian view of the world. Digitized by Google Digitized by
SR No.007670
Book TitleUpnishad
Original Sutra AuthorN/A
AuthorMax Muller
PublisherOxford
Publication Year1879
Total Pages1835
LanguageEnglish
ClassificationBook_English
File Size35 MB
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