IV. THE BRIHADARANYAKA-UPANISHAD.
THIS Upanishad has been so often edited and discussed
that it calls for no special remarks. It forms part of the Satapatha-brâhmana.
In the Mâdhyandina-sâkhâ of that Brâhmana, which has been edited by Professor
Weber, the Upanishad, consisting of six adhyâyas, begins with the fourth
adhyâya (or third prapâthaka) of the fourteenth book.
There is a commentary on the Brihadâranyaka-upanishad by
Dvivedasrînârâyanasûnu Dvivedaganga, which has been carefully edited by Weber
in his great editi.on of the Satapatha-brâhmana from a MS. in the Bodleian
Library, formerly belonging to Dr. Mill, in which the Upanishad is called
Mâdliyandiniya-brâhmana-upanishad.
In the Kânva-sâkhâ the Brihadâranyaka-upanishad forms the
seventeenth book of the Satapatha-brâhmana, consisting of six adhyâyas.
As Sankara's commentary and the gloss of Anandatirtha,
edited by Dr. Roer in the Bibliotheca Indica, follow the Kânva-sâkhâ, I have
followed the same text in my translation.
Besides Dr. Roer's edition of the text, commentary and gloss
of this Upanishad, there is Poley's edition of the text. There is also a
translation of it by Dr. Roer, with large extracts from Sankara's
commentary.
|