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Showing posts with label Public Domain Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Public Domain Books. Show all posts

The Garuda Purana in English FULL TEXT

The Garuda Purana

This is a translation of an abridged version of the Garuda Purana. The Garuda Purana is one of the Vishnu Puranas. It is in the form of a dialog between Vishnu and Garuda, the
King of Birds. The second section of this Purana (given here) deals with issues connected with death, particularly funeral rites and the metaphysics of reincarnation. Portions of the
Garuda Purana are used by some Hindus as funeral liturgy. Indeed, some consider it unlucky to read this text except during funerals.

Of interest are the intermediate states between birth and rebirth, which roughly correspond to the western concepts of Hell and Heaven. Since this was written during the
medieval era, it is possible that the writer of this text had contact with Christianity. Earlier Hindu texts do not elaborate about 'hell' and 'heaven,' at least not to this extent,
and the subject is completely absent in the oldest texts. Here, the torments of Hell are described in terms that would not be out of place in a Baptist revival tent (or Dante, for
that matter). In addition, the four-square city of Yama, the God of Death, is reminiscent
of the heavenly city in Revelation. However, these are way stations between incarnations
(or, as termed in the Tibetan Book of the Dead, Bardos), not a permanent destination.

The Garuda Purana starts with the details of the afterlife. Following this is an account of
funeral procedures, including rituals, the astrological timing of the post-death
observances, and ritual gifts. Balancing the extended vision of Hell in the earlier part of
the document is a shorter account of the City of Yama. After that is an enumeration of
correspondences between the macrocosmos and the human body. The final part of this
text is an appeal to self-knowledge as the key to liberation, going beyond austerities and
study of the texts. "The fool, not knowing that the truth is seated in himself, is bewildered
by the Shastras,--a foolish goatherd, with the young goat under his arm, peers into the
well."