The opening verse
विश्वं दर्पणदृश्यमाननगरीतुल्यं निजान्तर्गतं पश्यन्नात्मनि मायया बहिरिवोद्भूतं यथा निद्रया। यः साक्षात्कुरुते प्रबोधसमये स्वात्मानमेवाद्वयं तस्मै श्रीगुरुमूर्तये नम इदं श्रीदक्षिणामूर्तये॥
In IAST:
Viśvaṃ darpaṇa-dṛśyamāna-nagarī-tulyaṃ nijāntar-gataṃ paśyann-ātmani māyayā bahir-ivod-bhūtaṃ yathā nidrayā, yaḥ sākṣāt-kurute prabodha-samaye svātmānam-evādvayaṃ tasmai śrī-guru-mūrtaye nama idaṃ śrī-Dakṣiṇāmūrtaye.
In English:
The universe is like a city seen in a mirror — present within one’s own self, appearing outside through maya, the way a dream-world appears outside through sleep. To the one who, at the moment of awakening, sees directly that the Self is non-dual — to that revered form of the guru, to that revered Dakshinamurti, this salutation.
What the hymn does
The Dakshinamurti Stotram is Shankara at full philosophical power. It is not a praise-hymn in the ordinary sense. It is a compressed Advaita treatise structured as ten salutations, each verse advancing the philosophical exposition by one step while ending in the same reverent bow: tasmai śrī-guru-mūrtaye nama idaṃ śrī-Dakṣiṇāmūrtaye — “to that revered form of the guru, to that revered Dakshinamurti, this salutation.”
The hymn proceeds through the major Advaita topics:
| Verse | Advaita topic |
|---|---|
| 1 | The universe as reflection in the mirror of consciousness |
| 2 | The Self as the basis of all knowing, like the lamp that illumines the dark |
| 3 | The Self as the witness who illuminates even the absence of objects (deep sleep) |
| 4 | The Self as the substrate of the body-mind apparatus, not its product |
| 5 | The Self as the inner controller who watches all activity unmodified |
| 6 | The Self as the changeless witness through waking, dream, and deep sleep |
| 7 | The dispelling of the doer-enjoyer identification |
| 8 | The Self as the only reality; bondage and liberation as appearance |
| 9 | The guru’s grace as the necessary catalyst for the recognition |
| 10 | The closing benediction and dedication |
Each verse can stand alone as a chapter of Advaita philosophy. Taken together, the ten verses are arguably the densest summary of Shankara’s non-dualism in any of his devotional works.
The image of the mirror-city
The opening line — viśvaṃ darpaṇa-dṛśyamāna-nagarī — is the most quoted image in the hymn and one of the most quoted in all of Advaita literature. Shankara is doing precise philosophical work in three Sanskrit words.
A city seen in a mirror is fully visible. Every street, every building, every passing person appears in the mirror exactly as they appear outside. And yet — and this is the entire move — the city is not actually in the mirror. The mirror has no streets, no buildings, no people. It has only a smooth reflective surface, and what appears on that surface is the appearance, not the substance, of the city.
So with consciousness, Shankara says. The universe appears fully within awareness. Every object, every event, every relationship is visible there. And yet awareness itself is not composed of objects, events, or relations. Awareness is the smooth reflective surface on which the universe appears. The universe is real (as a reflection is real); it is not, however, ultimately what it appears to be (the reflection is not the city).
This is one of Shankara’s most precise formulations of vivarta-vada — the doctrine that the world is an apparent transformation of consciousness, not an actual one. Consciousness remains unchanged even as the universe appears within it.
On Dakshinamurti’s iconography
The hymn assumes the iconographic Dakshinamurti throughout. Each verse makes more sense when the chanter has the image clearly in mind:
- A young yogi (not aged — wisdom is timeless)
- Seated under a banyan tree (the tree of immortality)
- Facing south (toward death, toward liberation)
- Right hand in chin-mudra (jnana, the teaching gesture)
- Left hand holding a book (the scriptures) and a mala (the practice)
- A serpent coiled at his throat (kundalini, the inner energy)
- A small drum (damaru) sometimes shown in another hand (the rhythm of the cosmos he teaches about)
- Four aged sages seated before him in receptive silence
- His other foot on a small demon-figure (apasmara — ignorance, forgetfulness)
The iconography is the hymn’s stage. Every verse is spoken before this image, and the salutation at the end of each verse points at this specific form.
Why silence is the highest teaching
The four sages — Sanaka, Sanandana, Sanatana, Sanatkumara — are not beginners. They are the first-born sons of Brahma, foundational figures in the cosmology, supposed to have studied every scripture and mastered every practice. They have come to Dakshinamurti not for an introduction but for the final recognition.
For seekers at that level, words are an obstacle. Every additional proposition is something more to think about, when what is needed is the direct recognition that the thinker and the thought are arising in one field. Dakshinamurti does not give them more propositions. He sits in silence. The chin-mudra forms; the four sages, having spent lifetimes preparing, finally see what the mudra points at. The teaching transmits without a word.
This is mauna-vyakhya — exposition by silence — and it is the highest mode of teaching in the Indian guru-shishya tradition. A teacher who can only teach by speaking has not reached the level where silence is sufficient. A student who can only receive by hearing has not reached the level where silence is enough.
The hymn is composed for students who are not yet at that level — students who still need words to point at the silence. The ten verses are the words. The bow at the end of each verse is the gesture toward the silence the words are pointing at.
When to recite
The canonical occasions:
- Guru Purnima — the full moon of Ashadha (June-July), the day of the guru. The Dakshinamurti Stotram is one of the canonical hymns for the day.
- Thursdays — Guruvara, the weekday of the guru, in many regional traditions
- Morning meditation — the hymn is often the closing recitation after silent sitting
- Before teaching encounters — either as student about to receive teaching or as teacher about to give it. The hymn places both the teaching-act and the receiving-act under Dakshinamurti’s lineage.
On reciting it well
The metre is Shardulavikridita — nineteen syllables per line, the longest and slowest of the standard Sanskrit metres. The hymn cannot be hurried. Each line wants two full breaths.
This is not a hymn for the casual practitioner. It rewards a chanter who has done some study of Advaita Vedanta and who recognises the technical vocabulary (maya, sākṣātkāra, advayam, prabodha-samaye). Without that prior reading, the hymn can feel inert — the meaning does not land.
A practical suggestion: read the Nirvana Shatkam first, internally for several months, until the basic Advaita recognition is at least conceptually clear. Then approach the Dakshinamurti Stotram. The ten verses will open differently when read with the Nirvana Shatkam’s Shivoham in the background.
Practice
The hymn is best used as a closing text — the formal benediction at the end of a sustained period of study or sitting. It is too dense to function as a daily morning warm-up; it is well suited to the moment when the day’s practice is being sealed.
For a long-term practitioner, the Dakshinamurti Stotram becomes one of the foundational texts of the inner life. Many serious Advaita students recite it daily for decades, finding new philosophical material in each of the ten verses as their understanding matures. The hymn is, in the editorial view of this library, one of the deepest pieces of Sanskrit devotional literature that can be recited in under ten minutes.
Approach it slowly. The silence it points at is older than the words.