अव्यक्तादीनि भूतानि व्यक्तमध्यानि भारत। अव्यक्तनिधनान्येव तत्र का परिदेवना॥

avyaktādīni bhūtāni vyakta-madhyāni bhārata / avyakta-nidhanāny eva tatra kā paridevanā

Before birth: unmanifest. After death: unmanifest. The life between is the brief visible part — what is there to grieve?

Word by word (4)
avyakta-ādīni bhūtāni
— beings are unmanifest in their beginning · Before birth: unmanifest, unknown, not perceptible. The before-birth state is 'avyakta' (unmanifest) — just as the after-death state is.
vyakta-madhyāni bhārata
— manifest in their middle (during life)
avyakta-nidhanāni eva
— and unmanifest in their end (at death)
tatra kā paridevanā
— wherefore then the lamentation? / where is the cause for grief?

'All beings are unmanifest before they are born, O Bharata. They are manifest in between — during life. And they are unmanifest again at the end. What, then, is there to grieve about?'

A modern analogy

Where were you before you were born? You didn't exist in manifest form. Where will you be after death? The same place you came from — the unmanifest. The visible life is a brief interruption of that non-manifest state. To grieve the return to the unmanifest is to grieve what is both natural and structurally built into the nature of existence itself.

Take with you

  • The three-phase structure (unmanifest → manifest → unmanifest) places life in a cosmic perspective.
  • 'Tatra kā paridevanā' — where is the cause for grief? A direct rhetorical question. It expects the answer: nowhere.
  • This argument works even for materialists: before birth there was no suffering; what returns to the unmanifest is released from the possibility of suffering.

Verse 28 offers the most cosmic framing of death in the chapter. Existence is described as a three-phase process: avyakta (unmanifest) → vyakta (manifest) → avyakta (unmanifest). The manifest life is the middle phase. This framing dissolves the 'tragedy of death' in a different way than V12-25: not by affirming the soul's immortality but by recognizing that the pre-birth state and post-death state are both unmanifest. Death is a return to the original condition, not a departure from it.

Public-domain translations (3) compare all →

Beings are unmanifest in their beginning, manifest in their middle state, O Bharata, and unmanifest again in their end. What is there to grieve about? [4]

Invisible before birth are all beings — and after death invisible again — they are seen between two unseen states. Why grieve for what is usual? [7]

Beings are not manifested before their birth, and are not manifested after their death; they are manifested between the two. What occasion is there for grief? [9]

This verse speaks to

Where this thread continues