Bhagvad Gita Chapter 10

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CHAPTER X

DEVOTION BY MEANS OF THE UNIVERSAL DIVINE PERFECTIONS

KRISHNA:

"Hear again, O thou of mighty arms, my supreme words, which unto thee who art well pleased I will declare
because I am anxious for thy welfare.

"Neither the assemblage of the Gods nor the Adept Kings know my origin, because I am the origin of all the Gods
and of the Adepts. Whosoever knoweth me to be the mighty Ruler of the universe and without birth or beginning, he
among men, undeluded, shall be liberated from all his sins. Subtle perception, spiritual knowledge, right judgment,
patience, truth, self-mastery; pleasure and pain, prosperity and adversity; birth and death, danger and security, fear
and equanimity, satisfaction, restraint of body and mind, alms-giving, inoffensiveness, zeal and glory and ignominy,
all these the various dispositions of creatures come from me. So in former days the seven great Sages and the four
Manus who are of my nature were born of my mind, and from them sprang this world. He who knoweth perfectly
this permanence and mystic faculty of mine becometh without doubt possessed of unshaken faith. I am the origin of
all; all things proceed from me; believing me to be thus, the wise gifted with spiritual wisdom worship me; their
very hearts and minds are in me; enlightening one another and constantly speaking of me, they are full of enjoyment
and satisfaction. To them thus always devoted to me, who worship me with love, I give that mental devotion by
which they come to me. For them do I out of my compassion, standing within their hearts, destroy the darkness
which springs from ignorance by the brilliant lamp of spiritual discernment."

ARJUNA:

"Thou art Parabrahman! (1) the supreme abode, the great Purification; thou art the Eternal Presence, the Divine
Being, before all other Gods, holy, primeval, all-pervading, without beginning! Thus thou art declared by all the
Sages -- by Narada, Asita, Devala, Vyasa, and thou thyself now dost say the same. I firmly believe all that thou, O
Kesava, sayest unto me; for neither Gods nor demons comprehend thy manifestations. Thou alone knowest thyself
by thy Self, Supreme Spirit, Creator and Master of all that lives, God of Gods, and Lord of all the universe! Thou
alone canst fully declare thy divine powers by which thou hast pervaded and continuest to pervade these worlds.
How shall 1, constantly thinking of thee, be able to know thee, O mysterious Lord? In what particular forms shall I
meditate on thee? O Janardana -- besought by mortals -- tell me therefore in full thine own powers and forms of
manifestation, for I am never sated of drinking of the life-giving water of thy words."

KRISHNA:

"O best of Kurus, blessings be upon thee. (2) I will make thee acquainted with the chief of my divine manifestations,
for the extent of my nature is infinite.

"I am the Ego which is seated in the hearts of all beings; I am the beginning, the middle, and the end of all existing
things. Among Adityas (3) I am Vishnu, and among luminous bodies I am the sun. I am Marichi among the
Maruts (4), and among heavenly mansions I am the moon. Among the Vedas I am the Samaveda (5),and Indra (6)
among the Gods; among the senses and organs I am the Manas (7), and of creatures the existence. I am Sankara
among the Rudras; and Vittesa, the lord of wealth among the Yakshas (8) and Rakshasas. (9) I am Pavaka among the
Vasus (10), and Meru (11) among high-aspiring mountains. And know, O son of Pritha, that I am Brihaspati (12), the
chief of teachers; among leaders of celestial armies Skanda, and of floods I am the ocean. I am Bhrigu among the
Adept Kings; of words I am the monosyllable OM; of forms of worship, the silent repetition of sacred texts, and of
immovable things I am the Himalaya. Of all the trees of the forest I am Asvattha the Pippala tree; and of the celestial
Sages, Narada; among Gandharvas (13) I am Chitraratha, and of perfect saints, Kapila. Know that among horses I
am Uchchaisrava, who arose with the Amrita out of the ocean; among elephants, Airavata, and among men their
sovereigns. Of weapons I am the thunderbolt; among cows, Kamadhuk, the cow of plenty; of procreators, the God of
love, and of serpents, Vasuki (14), their chief. I am Ananta among the Nagas(15), Varuna among things of the
waters; among the ancestors, Aryarman, and of all who judge I am Yama. (16) Among the Daityas I am Prahlada,
and among computations I am Time itself; the lion among beasts, and Garuda (17) among the feathered tribe.
Among purifiers I am Pavana, the air; Rama among those who carry arms, Makara among the fishes, and the Ganges
among rivers. Among that which is evolved, O Arjuna, I am the beginning, the middle, and the end; of all sciences I
am the knowledge of the Adhyatma (18), and of uttered sounds the human speech. Among letters I am the vowel A,
and of all compound words I am the Dvandva (19); I am endless time itself, and the Preserver whose face is turned
on all sides. I am all-grasping death, and the birth of those who are to be; among feminine things I am fame, fortune,
speech, memory, intelligence, patience, and forgiveness. Among the hymns of the Samaveda I am Brihat-
Saman, and the Gayatri among metres; among months I am the month Margasirsha (20), and of seasons spring
called Kusumakara, the time of flowers. Of those things which deceive I am the dice, and splendor itself among
splendid things. I am victory, I am perseverance, and the goodness of the good. Of the race of Vrishni I am
Vasudeva; of the Pandava I am Arjuna the conqueror of wealth; of perfect saints I am Vyasa (21), and of prophet-
seers I am the bard Usana. Among rulers I am the rod of punishment, among those desiring conquest I am policy;
and among the wise of secret knowledge I am their silence. I am, O Arjuna, the seed of all existing things, and there
is not anything, whether animate or inanimate which is without me. My divine manifestations, O harasser of thy
foes, are without end, the many which I have mentioned are by way of example. Whatever creature is permanent, of
good fortune or mighty, also know it to be sprung from a portion of my energy. But what, O Arjuna, hast thou to do
with so much knowledge as this? I established this whole universe with a single portion of myself, and remain
separate."

Thus in the Upanishads, called the holy Bhagavad-Gita, in the science of the Supreme Spirit, in the book of
devotion, in the colloquy between the Holy Krishna and Arjuna, stands the Tenth Chapter, by name --

DEVOTION BY MEANS OF THE UNIVERSAL DIVINE PERFECTIONS.

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