THIRD PRAPATHAKA.
1. The Valakhilyas said to Pragapati Kratu: O Saint, if thou
thus showest the greatness of that Self, then who is that other different one,
also called Self, who really overcome by bright and dark fruits of action,
enters on a good or bad birth? Downward or upward is his course, and overcome
by the pairs (distinction between hot and cold, pleasure and pain, &c.) he
roams about.'
2. Pragapati Kratu replied: 'There is indeed that others
different one, called the elemental Self (Bhutatma), who, overcome by bright
and dark fruits of action, enters on a good or bad birth: downward or upward is
his course, and overcome by the pairs he roams about. And this is his
explanation: The five Tanmatras (sound, touch, form, taste, smell) are called
Bhuta; also the five Mahabhutas (gross elements) are called Bhuta. Then the
aggregate of all these is called sarira, body. And lastly he of whom it was
said that he dwelt in the body, he is called Bhutatma, the elemental Self. Thus
his immortal Self is like a drop of water on a lotus leaf, and he himself is
overcome by the qualities of nature. Then, because he is thus overcome, he
becomes bewildered, and because he is bewildered, he saw not the creator, the
holy Lord, abiding within himself. Carried along by the waves of the qualities,
darkened in his imaginations, unstable, fickle, crippled, full of desires,
vacillating, he enters into belief, believing "I am he," "this
is mine;" he binds his Self by his Self, as a bird with a net, and
overcome afterwards by the fruits of what he has done, he enters on a good and
bad birth; downward or upward is his course, and overcome by the pairs he roams
about.'
They asked: 'Which is it?' And he answered them:
3. 'This also has elsewhere been said: He who acts, is the
elemental Self; he who causes to act by means of the organs, is the inner man
(antahpurusha). Now as even a ball of iron, pervaded (overcome) by fire, and
hammered by smiths, becomes manifold (assumes different forms, such as crooked,
round, large, small), thus the elemental Self, pervaded (overcome) by the inner
man, and hammered by the qualities, becomes manifold. And the four tribes
(mammals, birds, &c.), the fourteen worlds (Bhur, &c.), with all the
number of beings, multiplied eighty-four times, all this appears as
manifoldness. And those multiplied things are impelled by man (purusha) as the
wheel by the potter. And as when the ball of iron is hammered, the fire is not
overcome, so the (inner) man is not overcome, but the elemental Self is
overcome, because it has united itself (with the elements).
4. And it has been said elsewhere: This body produced from
marriage, and endowed with growth in darkness, came forth by the urinary
passage, was built up with bones, bedaubed with flesh, thatched with skin,
filled with ordure, urine, bile, slime, marrow, fat, oil, and many impurities
besides, like a treasury full of treasures.
5. And it has been said elsewhere: Bewilderment, fear,
grief, sleep, sloth, carelessness, decay, sorrow, hunger, thirst,
niggardliness, wrath, infidelity, ignorance, envy, cruelty, folly,
shamelessness, meanness, pride, changeability, these are the results of the
quality of darkness (tamah).
Inward thirst fondness, passion, covetousness, unkindness,
love, hatred, deceit, jealousy, vain restlessness, fickleness, unstableness,
emulation, greed, patronising of friends, family pride, aversion to
disagreeable objects, devotion to agreeable objects, whispering, prodigality,
these are the results of the quality of passion (ragas).
By these he is filled, by these he is overcome, and therefore
this elemental Self assumes manifold forms, yes, manifold forms.'
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