Vairagyasatakamo 025367 MBP
Vairagyasatakamo 025367 MBP
Vairagyasatakamo 025367 MBP
3SG
THE
VAIRAGYA-SATAKAM
OR
THE HUNDRED VERSES ON
RENUNCIATION
TRANSLATED INTO ENGLISH
I9l6
RIGHTS RESERVED ]
roil JO no:
.
in EG
Lohaghat P. 0.
PREFACE,
original number.
practised austerities,
A book called the Natha-
lilamrita recording from hearsay stories about the
celebrities of the Nathi sect of Yogis contains
THE EDITORS, .
ERRATA.
8, text, f
10,
36, text,
40^ jj
ear, ear,
7> text,
88, text,
,
rnament
the heart
ea mass at
All gl ory to Sh]-
h
residing in the t emple of
2 THE VAIRAGYA-SATAKAM
th<
heart, who smites away (like
front of the endles
son) the massive
of ignorance overcasting
human mi]
whose wake follow all auspiciousne
prosperity,
who burnt up gay I
a moth, as if in sport, and who
beaming with the lambent rays of the
adorning his forehead, rays that loot
buds.
Ing like soft half-blooming
srra
2. iJHchj4fi^4'
rendered difficult of acces
evil deeds.
STTH *
* This forms a
part of the mysterious rites to be
gone through by. those who invoke supernatural
agencies for obtaining riches.
*rrac
wrar
arm
jJrfiT
and flHT, the former being used both in the
" and "eaten and the
sense of enjoyed" up", latter
both in the sense of "(austerities) performed" and
" heated."
Similarly the participle ^faji means
1
" "
both reduced in force" and stricken down with
age." The effect of course cannot be preserved
in translation.]
to senility (
9. my compeers, dear to n
Though
life, have taken
all such a speedy fligi
hea^ea (.Le. before being overtaken b)
age ), though the impulse, for enjoyjne
wearied out and the respect commanded
allpersons lost* though my sight is obstn
by deep blindness ( or cataract ) and the
C.Q taise itself but slowly on the staff
alas for its silliness; this body startles at
of bi
^^roip; t
w *R^:
^^^wi^ni^ft^^
leave us stttotinti
W are sure
THE HUNDRED VERSES ON RENUNCIATION
it
2
10 THE VAIRAGYA-SATAKAM
srsrer
TRTT3
OR THE HUNDEED VERSES ON RENUNCIATION II
:
n^vsil
tsr ^wrenr
: Hf tft
19. When
the mouth is parched with
thifetfj
man some cold refreshing (or sweetened)
takes
drink when suffering from hunger he
;
STITCH
great modesty.
^ ^
I
tudes, cooled
by the liquid spray of Ganges
waves and abounding in beautiful rocky flats
such as are the haunts of Vidyadharas, are
all engulfed in destruction that men in dis-
r:
ST^RTg'FTciT
1 6 THE VAIRAGYA-SATAKAM
26.
Therefore, now, accepting fruits
roots, ordained as sacred, for the most ei
able means of maintenance, and (so also
earth (laid on) with verdant leafy twigs for
scrft
r *r r^ranr
29. The
those, felicity of whom cot
11
<Ab\Qj^**-rt
mentjLmceasnigly makes nappy,
-
is not
rnpted, while the" cravings of those of ff
and confounded minds are nevernjuen
Such being the case, for whom did
Creator create the Meru, representing i
ceivable wealth, but confining to itsel
30. The
great Yogis describe food which
begging brings as follows it does not humi-:
fear ( about
i. e.one's expenditure, or food-
stores etc. ) it destroys wicked pride, egotism
;
evils of
worldly existence ; it is easily avail-
able anywhere any day without efforts ; it is
the beloved of the holy men ; it is a purifica-
tion by itself; it is as the inexhaustible feed-
ing-house of Shiva, access to which none can
prevent.
R
^&
33. H?altJLomenl^ (I
out) by various hundreds of ailments
OR THE HUNDRED VERSES ON RENUNCIATION Zl
34. -
Enjoyments are unstable like the
breaking of high billows, life is liable to
35- Enjoyments of
embodied beings are
fleeting like the quick play of
lightning within
a mass of clouds life is as
; insecure as a
of water attached to the
drop
edge of a lotus-leaf
and dispersed by the wind
the desires
:
of
youth-are unsteady ;
realising these quickly
let the wise
firmly fix their
minds in Yoga'
.easily attainable by patience and
equanimity.'
: I
36. Life is
changing like a huge wave,
.beauty of youth abides for a few
days. Earth-
X possessions are as transient as
he whole senes of thought ;
our enjoyments are
like
( occasmnal ) flashes of
autumnal
The embrace round lightning.
the
neck given
beloveds hngers by our
only for a while. To cross the
OR THE HUNDRED VERSES ON RENUNCIATION 23
*
\
wicked deeds.
wrt
OR THE HUNBRED VERSES ON RENUNCIATION 25
tion !
is, here
26 THU VAIRAGYA-SATAKAM
'
Mdlfildl
28 THE VAIRAUYA-SATAKAM
rer
snrorr
bouse.
OR THE HUNDRED VERSES OX RENUNCIATION 2g
if ifr
fwTRfsrcfr*
32 ,
THE VAIRAGYA-SATAKAM
,
[ This Sloka is addressed by a Yati, (c
or scriptures )
in all their senses. Th
a hero ( in battle ), while we have ,
well, oh 5
king, L^have absolutely none
:hee.
ft fi: 3
kings iri
gaining that earth which has
sr for st moment been left tmenjoyed by
dreds of rulers! The
stupid owners of
i a shred of the limb of a fraction of its
tion (i.e. of themost minute particle)
delighted whefeas, on the contrary, they
ht to grieve !
c
36 Tit* VAIRAGYArSATAKAM
59, .
It ( the earth ) is but a lump of clay
circled by a trace of water ! Even the whole
of it is but a particle. Hosts of kings having
partitioned it after fighting hundreds of
battles enjoy it These very poor insigni*
ficant persons might give while giving, or
otherwise. But downright shame on those
mean fellows who would beg bits of coin from
them even I
Wfc
OR THE HUNDRED VERSES ON RENUNCIATION" 37
(
of the eight Yogic powers, %fixi' ftfar&: we prefer
[
Wt
38 THE :VAIRA(?VA-SATAKAM
about
:
in vain? Rest ( thyself ) some
Whatever happens in whatever way, he
so by itself, and not otherwise* So not
Ing over the past nor resolving abo
future* I realise enjoyments that come
but engaging my thoughts,
*rrlw
r The
deepest concentration
losing all separate consciousness of the knower
the known and the knowing. ^nTO is the bushy
tail of the yak used as a fan being an insignia of
royalty.
fiw*. ^Ewraratw^n^Rn f%
s*
*raf??r 11^5.11
mm *nr
42 THE VAIRAGYA-SATAKAM
supreme bliss !
gprTFrrrra*-
The cosmic conflagration at the end
of the present cycle.
be taken to qualify
or
^T^. be taken as qualifying the
If it
**""
77. These rulers of the world having?
ipinds restless like a horse and (therefore) diffi-
4
cult to please, and ambitious as we are with
minds pitched on vast gain, and as age steals
THE VAIRAGYA-SATAk'ABt
ranrart
side. ]
crier
: ^rarren
company of holy
men, the cultivation of \
tion of Vedic wisdom of which ( unlike Vedic
vows )
the only fruit is
spiritual peace, the
mind also restrained in its movements to-
wards external things, ---to such a cons urn-
)R THE HUNDRED VERSKS ON RENUNCIATION 49
srra **
THM VAIRAGYA-SATAKAM
(2)
*
One who is the knower of all inner
things in
the universe/ (3)
i
Due who is the Self of all in
k
the universe, or it
may mean, (4) in whose
is the whole universe.'
: f
during
nights when all sounds are stilled into' silence
OR THE HUNDRED VERSES ON RENUNCIATION" 51
'
'
$
; 86. Giving away all possessions witlr a
Jieart filled with tender compassion, remem-
bering the course of Destiny which ends so
ruefully in this world and, as the* only refuge
.for us, meditating on the feet of Hara ( i. e.
.Shiva ),
oh we shall spend, in the holy forest,
!
(
a -strip -of cloth-) and with folded hands
.raised to the forehead,crying out Oh Lord t(
of prosperity. >
v
*
92. Can this universe which is but a* mere
Reflection,engender greed in wise men? The
"ocean surely does not become agitated by the
movement of a little fish.
'*
[Just as a fish cannot set up a swaying of tbe
*
'icean, so this universe, a mere imagfe in pure
consciousness, cannbt move the latter, with which
wise: men become identified, to any -sentiment of
covetousness. , .
. ,
]
OR THE HUNDRED VERSES ON RENUNCIATION 55
'93. O
mother Lakshmi (Goddess of wealth*^
serve ( ) some one else, do not be
thou
longing for me. Those who desire enjoyment
are subject to thee, but what art thou to us who
are free from desires? Now we wish to live
upon food articles obtained from begging and
placed, (conformably to its) being; sanctified,
in a receptacle of Palasha leaves pieced to-
pursuing
what to give up or what to take his worn- ;
96. When
accosted by people who loqua^
ciotrsly express doubt and surmise, such as
"
Is he a Chand^la, or a twice-born one, or a
near
Will those happy days come tcTnSe
1
98.
when on the bank of the Ganges, sitting in
g .j-THE YAlRAGYAr SATAKAM
stone in the
thel0tws.posture.oiT
a piece of
I shall fall into the yo ?a-mdrd
Himalayas,
all consciousness in Samadhi or
e. lose
(i.
from a
concentration) resulting
perfect
the contemplation of
reoular of
practice
Brahman, and when old antelopes having
will rub their limbs against
nothing to fear,
my body !
so
lotus-seat; .sitting cross-legged
[qSTW*Mit.
above along the
that the soles of the feet protrude
thighs. ]
f'cT 118-S.U
:
With the hand serving as sacred cupl
99.
with begged food tliat comes, through wander-
in^
i>
and never runs short, with the ten
their ample garment and the
quarters as
earth as a fixed, spacious bed, blessed are
&*
ioo. Oh Earth, my Oh Wind, mother!
my father Oh Fire, my friend Oh Water,
! !
[
The terms of familiarity and endearment used
of the live elements are appropriate in view of the
finalpoint of blissful parting to which the Yogin