Devi Upanishad
Devi Upanishad
Devi Upanishad
1. All the gods waited upon the Goddess (and asked): ‘Great Goddess, who art Thou ?’
2. She replied: I am essentially Brahman. From Me (has proceeded) the world comprising
Prakriti and Purusha, the void and the Plenum. I am (all forms of) bliss and non-bliss.
Knowledge and ignorance are Myself. Brahman and non-Brahman are to be known – says the
scripture of the Atharvans.
3. I am the five elements as also what is different from them. I am the entire world. I am the
Veda as well as what is different from it. I am the unborn; I am the born. Below and above and
around am I.
Mitra and Varuna, Indra and Agni, I support, and the two Asvins.
We render obeisance.
Friends of deathlessness.
15. This is the power of Self, enchanting all, armed with the noose, the hook, the bow and the
arrow. This is the great and holy Science.
18. She, here, is the eight Vasus, the eleven Rudras, the twelve Adityas, She is the all-gods,
(those) who drink Soma and (those) who do not; she is the goblins, the demons, the evil beings,
the ghosts; she also, beings super-human, the semi-divine. She is Sattva, Rajas and Tamas. She is
Prajapati, Indra and Manu. She is the planets, stars and luminous spheres. She is the divisions of
time, and the form of primeval Tme. I salute Her ever:
Supremely blissful;
Thee I adore.
Vanquisher of obstacles;
26. Brahma and others know not Her essence; so is she called the Unknowable. She has no end;
so is she called the Endless. She is not grasped and so is she called the Incomprehensible. Her
birth is not known and so is she called the Unborn. She alone is present everywhere, and so is
she called the One. She alone wears all forms, and so is she called the Many. For these reasons is
she called the Unknowable, the Endless, the Incomprehensible, the Unknown, the One and the
Many.
29. He who studies this Atharva Upanishad gains the fruit of repeating five (other) Atharva
Upanishads; he who, having mastered this Atharva Upanishad, persists in worship.
32. Reading it in the morning one destroys the sins of the night; reading it in the evening one
destroys the sins committed by day. Thus, reading both in the evening and morning, the sinner
becomes sinless. Reading it midnight, too, the fourth ‘junction’, there results perfection of
speech. Its recitation before a new image brings to it the presence of the deity. Its recitation at the
time of consecration (of an image) makes it a centre of energy. Reciting it on Tuesday under the
asterism Ashvini, in the presence of the great Goddess, one overcomes fell death – one who
knows thus. This is the secret.