निर्$वाते हि यथा दीप्यन् दीपस्तद्वत् प्रकाशते । निर्लिड्रोडविचलश्नोर्ध्व न तिर्यग् गतिमाप्रुयात्,उस अवस्थामें वह वायुरहित स्थानमें रखे हुए निश्चलभावसे प्रज्वलित दीपककी भाँति प्रकाशित होता है। लिंग शरीरसे उसका कोई सम्बन्ध नहीं रहता। वह ऐसा निश्चल हो जाता है कि उसकी ऊपर-नीचे अथवा मध्यमें कहीं भी गति नहीं होती
nirvāte hi yathā dīpyan dīpas tadvat prakāśate | nirlīḍo 'vicalaś cordhvaṁ na tiryag gatim āpnuyāt ||
Vasiṣṭha said: Just as a lamp, when kindled in a windless place, shines steadily, so too does the self shine forth in stillness. It no longer clings to the subtle body (liṅga-śarīra) and becomes unmoving—without any tendency to rise, sink, or drift sideways. The ethical point is that true freedom is not a new action in the world but the cessation of inner agitation: when desire and restlessness are stilled, clarity and self-luminosity manifest naturally.
वसिष्ठ उवाच
The verse teaches that when the mind is free from disturbance (like a lamp in a windless place), the self’s clarity shines naturally. Liberation is marked by non-clinging to the subtle body and the ending of restless tendencies—no upward, downward, or sideways ‘movement’ of craving and fluctuation.
Vasiṣṭha is instructing on the state of inner steadiness associated with liberation. He uses the image of a steady lamp to describe a consciousness that has become unattached and motionless, no longer driven by subtle impulses or identifications.