Vakya Sudha
Vakya Sudha of Adi Sankara
The Essence of the Teaching
Translated by Charles Johnston
E-Text Source: Advaita Vedanta Library
Seer and Seen
1. The form is seen, the eye is seer; the mind is both seen and seer. The
changing moods of mind are seen, but the witnessing Self, the seer, is never
seen.
2. The eye, remaining one, beholds varying forms; as, blue and yellow, coarse
and fine, short and long; and differences such as these.
3. The mind, remaining one, forms definite intentions, even while the character
of the eye varies, as in blindness, dullness, or keen-sightedness; and this
holds also of hearing and touch.
4. The conscious Self, remaining one, shines on all the moods of mind: on
desire, determination, doubt, faith, unfaith, firmness and the lack of it,
shame, insight, fear, and such as these.
5. This conscious Self rises not, nor has its setting, nor does it come to wax
or wane; unhelped, it shines itself, and illumines others also.
The Personal Idea
6. This illumining comes when the ray of consciousness enters the thinking mind;
and the thinking mind itself is of twofold nature. The one part of it is the
personal idea; the other part is mental action.
7. The ray of consciousness and the personal idea are blended together, like the
heat and the hot iron ball. As the personal idea identifies itself with the
body, it brings that also a sense of consciousness.
8. The personal idea is blended with the ray of consciousness, the body, and the
witnessing Self, respectively -- through the action of innate necessity, of
works, and of delusion.
9. Since the two are bound up together, the innate blending of the personal idea
with the ray of consciousness never ceases; but its blending with the body
ceases, when the works wear out; and with the witnessing Self, through
illumination.
10. When the personal idea melts away in deep sleep, the body also loses its
sense of consciousness. The personal idea is only half expanded in dream, while
in waking it is complete.
11. The power of mental action, when the ray of consciousness has entered into
union with it, builds up mind-images in the dream-state; and external objects,
in the waking state.
12. The personal form, thus brought into being by the personal idea and mental
action, is of itself quite lifeless. It appears in the three modes of
consciousness; it is born, and so also dies.
The Power of Glamor
13. For the world-glamor has two powers -- extension and limitation, or
enveloping. The power of extension brings into manifestation the whole world,
from the personal form to the universal cosmos.
14. This manifesting is an attributing of name and form to the Reality -- which
is Being, Consciousness, Bliss, the Eternal; it is like foam on the water.
15. The inner division between the seer and the seen, and the outer division
between the Eternal and the world, are concealed by the other power, limitation;
and this also is the cause of the cycle of birth and death.
16. The light of the witnessing Self is united with the personal form; from this
entering in of the ray of consciousness arises the habitual life -- the ordinary
self.
17. The isolated existence of the ordinary self is attributed to the witnessing
Self, and appears to belong to it; but when the power of limitation is
destroyed, and the difference appears, the sense of isolation in the Self
vanishes away.
18. It is the same power which conceals the difference between the Eternal and
the visible world; and, by its power, the Eternal appears subject to change.
19. But when this power of limitation is destroyed, the difference between the
Eternal and the visible world becomes clear; change belongs to the visible
world, and by no means to the Eternal.
20. The five elements of existence are these: being, shining, enjoying, form and
name; the three first belong to the nature of the Eternal; the last two, to the
nature of the visible world.
21. In the elements -- ether, air, fire, water, earth; in creatures -- gods,
animals, and men, Being, Consciousness, Bliss are undivided; the division is
only of name and form.
Six Steps of Soul Vision
22. Therefore setting aside this division through name and form, and
concentrating himself on Being, Consciousness, Bliss, which are undivided, let
him follow after soul-vision perpetually, first inwardly in the heart, and then
in outward things also.
23. Soul-vision is either fluctuating or unwavering; this is its two-fold
division in the heart. Fluctuating soul-vision is again two-fold; it may consist
either in things seen or heard.
24. This is the fluctuating soul-vision which consists in things seen: a
meditating on consciousness as being merely the witness of the desires and
passions that fill the mind.
25. This is the fluctuating soul-vision which consists in things heard: the
constant thought that "I am the self, which is unattached, Being, Consciousness,
Bliss, self-shining, secondless."
26. The forgetting of all images and words, through entering into the bliss of
direct experience -- this is unwavering soul-vision, like a lamp set in a
windless place.
27. Then, corresponding to the first, there is the soul-vision which strips off
name and form from the element of pure Being, in everything whatever; now
accomplished outwardly, as it was before, in the heart.
28. And, corresponding to the second is the soul-vision which consists in the
unbroken thought, that the Real is a single undivided Essence, whose character
is Being, Consciousness, Bliss.
29. Corresponding to the former third, is that steady being, is the tasting of
this Essence for oneself. Let him fill the time by following out these, the six
stages of soul-vision.
30. When the false conceit, that the body is the Self, falls away; when the Self
supreme is known; then, whithersoever the mind is directed, there will the
powers of soul-vision arise.
31. The knot of the heart is loosed; all doubts are cut; all bondage to works
wither away -- when That is known, which is the first and the last.
The Three Selves
32. The individual self appears in three degrees: as a limitation of the Self;
as a ray of the conscious Self; and, thirdly, as the self imagined in dreams.
The first alone is real.
33. For the limitation in the individual self is a mere imagination; and that
which is supposed to be limited is the Reality. The idea of isolation in the
individual self is only an error; but its identity with the Eternal is its real
nature.
34. And that song they sang of "That thou art" is for the first of these three
selves alone; it only is one with the perfect Eternal, not the other selves.
35. The power of world-glamor, existing in the Eternal, has two potencies:
extension and limitation. Through the power of limitation, Glamor hides the
undivided nature of the Eternal, and so builds up the images of the individual
self and the world.
36. The individual self which comes into being when the ray of consciousness
enters the thinking mind, is the self that gains experience and performs works.
The whole world, with all its elements and beings, is the object of its
experience.
37. These two, the individual self and its world, were before time began; they
last till Freedom comes, making up our habitual life. Hence they are called the
habitual self and world.
38. In this ray of consciousness, the dream-power exists, with its two potencies
of extension and limitation. Through the power of limitation, it hides the
former self and world, and so builds up a new self and a new world.
39. As this new self and world are real only so long as their appearance lasts,
they are called the imaginary self and the imaginary world. For, when one has
awakened from the dream, the dream existence never comes back again.
40. The imaginary self believes its imaginary world to be real; but the habitual
self knows that world to be only mythical, as also is the imaginary self.
41. The habitual self looks on its habitual world as real; but the real Self
knows that the habitual world is only mythical, as also is the habitual self.
42. The real Self knows its real oneness with the Eternal; it sees nothing but
the Eternal, yet sees that what seemed the unreal is also the Self.
Freedom and Final Peace
43. As the sweetness, the flowing, and the coldness, that are the
characteristics of the water, reappear in the wave, and so in the foam that
crests the wave;
44. So, verily, the Being, Consciousness, and Bliss of the witnessing Self enter
into the habitual self that is bound up with it; and, by the door of the
habitual self, enter into the imaginary self also.
45. But when the foam melts away, its flowing, sweetness, coldness, all sink
back into the wave; and when the wave itself comes to rest, they sink back to
the sea.
46. When the imaginary self melts away, its Being, Consciousness, Bliss sink
back into the habitual self; and, when the habitual self comes to rest, they
return to the Self supreme, the witness of all.