Position of the Upanishads in Vedic Literature
If now we ask what has been thought of the Upanishads by Sanskrit
scholars or by Oriental scholars in general, it must be confessed that
hitherto they have not received at their hands that treatment which in
the eyes of philosophers and theologians they seem so fully to deserve.
When the first enthusiasm for such works as Sakuntalâ and Gîta-Govinda
had somewhat subsided, and Sanskrit scholars had recognised that a
truly scholarlike study of Indian literature must begin with the
beginning, the exclusively historical interest prevailed to so large an
extent that the hymns of the Veda, the Brâhmanas, and the Sûtras
absorbed all interest, while the Upanishads were put aside for a time
as of doubtful antiquity, and therefore of minor importance.
My real love for Sanskrit literature was first kindled by the
Upanishads. It was in the year 1844, when attending Schelling's
lectures at Berlin, that my attention was drawn to those ancient
theosophic treatises, and I still possess my collations of the Sanskrit
MSS. which had then just arrived at Berlin, the Chambers collection,
and my copies of commentaries, and commentaries on commentaries, which
I made at that time. Some of my translations which I left with
Schelling, I have never been able to recover, though to judge from
others which I still possess, the loss of them is of small consequence.
Soon after leaving Berlin, when continuing my Sanskrit studies at Paris
under Burnouf, I put aside the Upanishads, convinced that for a true
appreciation of them it was necessary to study, first of all, the
earlier periods of Vedic literature, as represented by the hymns and
the Brâhmanas of the Vedas.
In returning, after more than thirty years, to these favourite
studies, I find that my interest in them, though it has changed in
character, has by no means diminished.
It is true, no doubt, that the stratum of literature which contains
the Upanishads is later than the Samhitâs, and later than the
Brâhmanas, but the first germs of Upanishad doctrines go back at least
as far as the Mantra period, which provisionally has been fixed between
1000 and 800 B.C. Conceptions corresponding to the general teaching of
the Upanishads occur in certain hymns of the Rig-veda-samhitâ, they
must have existed therefore before that collection was finally closed.
One hymn in the Samhitâ of the Rig-veda (I, 191) was designated by
Kâtyâyana, the author of the Sarvânukramanikâ, as an Upanishad. Here,
however, upanishad means rather a secret charm than a philosophical
doctrine. Verses of the hymns have often been incorporated in the
Upanishads, and among the Oupnekhats translated into Persian by Dârâ
Shukoh we actually find the Purusha-sûkta, the 90th hymn of the tenth
book of the Rig-veda[29], forming the greater portion of the Bark'heh
Soukt. In the Samhitâ of the Yagur-veda, however, in the
Vâgasaneyisâkhâ, we meet with a real Upanishad, the famous Îsâ or
Îsâvâsya-upanishad, while the Sivasamkalpa, too, forms part of its
thirty-fourth book[30]. In the Brâhmanas several Upanishads occur, even
in portions which are not classed as Âranyakas, as, for instance, the
well-known Kena or Talavakâra upanishad. The recognised place, however,
for the ancient Upanishads is in the Âranyakas, or forest-books, which,
as a rule, form an appendix to the Brâhmanas, but are sometimes
included also under the general name of Brâhmana. Brâhmana, in fact,
meaning originally the sayings of Brahmans, whether in the general
sense of priests, or in the more special of Brahman-priest, is a name
applicable not only to the books, properly so called, but to all old
prose traditions, whether contained in the Samhitâs, such as the
Taittirîya-samhitâ, the Brâhmanas, the Âranyakas, the Upanishads, and
even, in certain cases, in the Sûtras. We shall see in the introduction
to the Aitareya-âranyaka, that that Âranyaka is in the beginning
a Brâhmana, a mere continuation of the Aitareya-brâhmana, explaining
the Mahâvrata ceremony, while its last book contains the Sûtras or
short technical rules explaining the same ceremony which in the first
book had been treated in the style peculiar to the Brâhmanas. In the
same Aitareya-âranyaka, III, 2, 6, 6, a passage of the Upanishad is
spoken of as a Brâhmana, possibly as something like a Brâhmana, while
something very like an Upanishad occurs in the Âpastamba-sûtras, and
might be quoted therefore as a Sûtra[31]. At all events the Upanishads,
like the Âranyakas, belong to what Hindu theologians call Sruti, or
revealed literature, in opposition to Smriti, or traditional
literature, which is supposed to be founded on the former, and allowed
to claim a secondary authority only; and the earliest of these
philosophical treatises will always, I believe, maintain a place in the
literature of the world, among the most astounding productions of the
human mind in any age and in any country.