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The four mantra-samhita books, characterized by their
appellations Rik, Yajus, Sāma and Atharva are made up of mantrās.
These are poetic verses, some of which are metrical and the
remaining are not. There are three types of mantrās in the four
collections namely rik or ŗk, yajus and sāma.
An ancient authority characterizes the three types as follows:
rik is a verse in one of the standard metres like gāyatri,
anustup etc. The number of syllables in a verse defines its
metre; a verse in gāyatri has 24 syllables divided into 3
pādās, lines. Sāman is a metrical verse chanted in
an elaborate manner according to specific rules. The remaining
verses are yajus. It is inappropriate to characterize the
yajus mantrās as prose. The famous litany Shatarudrīya to
the deity Rudra occurring in the chapters 16 and 18 of the shukla
yajur veda or that in kānda 4, adhyāya 5,
prapātţhaka 1, (4.5.1) of Taittirīya Samhita of the
Krişhņa yajur veda is one such non-metrical poem. Rigveda Samhita is a collection made up of only
rik mantrās; Sāmaveda Samhita is made up of only Sāma
mantrās. Both the Yajurveda Samhita and Atharvaveda Samhita
contains both Rik mantrās and Yajur mantrās.
There is substantial overlap among the four Veda Samhitās.
Ninety-five percent of the text of the entire Sāmaveda Samhita is
in Rigveda Samhita. About 50 percent of the mantrās in
Shukla Yajurveda Samhita and thirty percent of the mantrās in
Atharvaveda Samhita are in Rigveda Samhita. Thus it is
absurd to state that Atharvaveda Samhita is not sacred.
The total number of mantrās in the four Samhitās,
Rig, Shukla-Yajur, Sāma and
Atharva is roughly twenty thousand including repetitions.
We stated earlier that all the mantrās of the four
collections are perceptions of deep spiritual truths and occult
phenomena revealed to the rişhis. These verses couched
their knowledge in heavy symbolism. Some moderns who do not care
to understand the language of symbols label these verses as
simplistic or childish.
The symbols used in these verses are of many types as will
be clarified later. A majority of these symbols deal with yajna
which is a Sanskrit word having several different connotations.
This word is translated as rite or sacrifice. The outward ritual
is only one aspect of yajna. In the vedic times,
there was widespread performance of these rituals, which are
fairly elaborate ranging in time over several days or even months.
A typical ritual involves four types of priests, the fire-altar,
the recitations from the mantra-samhita books and the
physical offerings like the juice of the creeper Soma, the melted
and clarified butter, ghŗta etc. Every outward ritual has a
corresponding internal yajna occurring in the subtle body
of the human performer of the yajna. The symbolism of the
yajna will be clarified in the next two chapters. Since the
Veda Samhitās frequently use the terms occurring in
the yajna like the names of the four priests, the
fire-altar etc., the entire Veda Samhitās are dubbed as
ritualistic by persons who do not understand its symbolism. Some
verses or whole hymns are recited at appropriate times in the
ritual; but no one can point to the presence of the details of any
ritual in a single hymn of the four Veda Samhitās. Many
mantrās of the Veda Samhitās such as RV (1.1.1) explicitly declare
that the priests in the yajna are not human beings, but the
cosmic forces or deities like Agni, Indra; It is the deities like
Mitra and Varuņa who Light the fire in the fire-altar, RV (1.36.4)
etc.
Thus every verse of the Samhitās has a double meaning, the
so called esoteric meaning or the deep meaning understood in these
days by the rişhis and their disciples, and the external or
exoteric or gross meaning understood by the commoners who attended
the rituals. The commoners believed that by adoring the Gods such
as Agni, Indra etc., by means of mantrās and rituals, their
desires would be satisfied. The device of double meaning of the
Mantra was necessary for preserving the secret knowledge from
being misused by unqualified persons.
The mention of the double meaning of the Veda Mantra
has a long history going back to the earliest known vedic
commentator Yāska. In modern times it was Sri Aurobindo who
championed the spiritual interpretation of the Veda.
Rigveda Samhita
Yajurveda Sanhita
Sāmaveda Samhita
Atharvaveda Samhita
Rigveda Samhita
It is a book of more than ten thousand mantrās, each in a specific
metre, arranged in ten manalās. They were revealed to
several sages or seers called as rişhis, more than one
thousand in number. Some of them are women too like Vāk Ambŗņi,
Lopamudrā, Sūryā, Apāla etc. Thus Hinduism is the only
religion in which some of the earliest prophets were women also.
The spiritual meaning of some of the mantrās are
transparent; the meaning of others becomes clear after
understanding the underlying symbolism. We will discuss the
details of symbolism in the
next several chapters.
Yajurveda Samhita
It has two major recensions, Shukla and Krişhņa. They have both
metrical and non-metrical poems. The Shukla Yajurveda has about
sixteen hundred mantrās; about fifty percent of it is in Rigveda
Samhita. It is made up of forty adhyāyās or chapters, the
last one being the famous Işha Upanishad. It includes
several famous hymns such as Shatarudrīya, Puruşha,
Shivasankalpa etc.
We will mention here its verse (26.2), second verse in 26th
chapter, which declares that all the mantrās of all the Vedās have
to be taught to all persons, women or men, belonging to a high or
low caste, or a stranger to the community.
Careless reading and translation have lead to the impression that
Yajurveda Samhita is merely a book of physical rituals. As
mentioned earlier, verses from this Samhita are recited
systematically at various points in the physical ritual. At this
point, we should make a clear distinction between the text of the
Yajurveda Samhita and the commentaries on it by the brāhmaņa
books and the sūtra books like āpastambha sūtra.
Western translators like Keith or Griffith had no clue to the
symbolism of the yajur veda samhita and hence they gave a
ritualistic meaning for each verse based on the commentary in the
brāhmaņa.
Sāmaveda Samhita
It is a book of about 2000 metrical verses, all of which are
in Rigveda Samhita except for 75 of them. These verses are chanted
in an elaborate way labelled udgīta. The text used for
chanting is an expanded version of the basic text found in Sāma
and Rigveda Samhitās, obtained by adding several syllables. The
chanting notation in the written text Sāmaveda involves seven
symbols, unlike the three in Rigveda Samhita. Sāmaveda Samhita is
the foundation for Indian music with its basic seven notes. One of
the brāhmaņa book associated with this Samhita is called
Talavakāra, i.e., one who provides the beat or rhyme in the music.
Atharvaveda Samhita
It has also names like brahma Veda suggesting its
spiritual importance and bhishag Veda alluding to the many
hymns in it dealing with healing in general. It has verses both
metrical and non-metrical. It has about 6000 metrical verses of
which about 1200 are in rig Veda Samhita also. It has a
total of 731 sūktās, 80 of which have non-metrical verses
or prose.
It has several interesting hymns dealing with different branches
of knowledge. It gives the foundation of decimal notation for
integers stating that the relation of one and ten, that of two and
twenty etc., are all identical, AV (6.25.1, 2, 3; 7.4.1). It has
the first definition of mathematical infinity stating that
infinity is that which is left after subtracting infinity out of
it, AV (10.8.29).
It has several interesting hymns dealing with society at large. It
explicitly states that that society was ‘multi cultural’, i.e., it
had people who belonged to different religions nānā dharmānām,
and also people who spoke different languages. It calls upon
people to make concord with strangers, AV (7.52.1).
It has the famous hymn to earth, bhūmi sūkta, AV(12.1),
dealing with ecology. Its ideas on ecology go much beyond what the
moderns have to say. It specifically notices the self-renewing
nature of earth in its many aspects and calls upon human beings to
act in ways which is in harmony with the general principles of
earth.
It has several interesting hymns of spiritual importance such as
the viewing the divine principle as a pillar skambha,
AV(10.7) which supports the universe with its many planes
dhāmāni, AV(10.7).
All Indian languages are full of epigrams or subhāşhitās
(good-sayings) which reflect the many sided wisdom handed down by
tradition. Many of these epigrams can be traced to the Atharvaveda.
For instance the list of six psychological enemies ari shad
varga such as lust kāma, anger krodha, greed
lobha, delusion moha, arrogance mada and
jealously mātsarya occurs in all languages. The Atharvaveda
(8.4.22), also RV (7.104.22), explicitly refers to this list
describing each quality by its associated animal or bird, the
association itself being ancient. For instance the chakravāka
birds denote lust, delusion by owl, jealousy by dog, destructive
anger by wolf, greed by vulture and arrogance by eagle.
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