What do you think?
Rate this book


The Bhagavad Gita is often regarded as the Bible of India. With a gripping story and deeply compelling message, it is unquestionably one of the most popular sacred texts of Asia and, along with the Bible and the Qur'an, one of the most important holy scriptures in the world.
Part of an ancient Hindu epic poem, the dialogue of the Bhagavad Gita takes place on a battlefield, where a war for the possession of a North Indian kingdom is about to ensue between two noble families related by blood. The epic's hero, young Prince Arjuna, is torn between his duty as a warrior and his revulsion at the thought of his brothers and cousins killing each other over control of the realm. Frozen by this ethical dilemma, he debates the big questions of life and death with the supreme Hindu deity Krishna, cleverly disguised as his charioteer. By the end of the story, Eastern beliefs about mortality and reincarnation, the vision and practice of yoga, the Indian social order and its responsibilities, family loyalty, spiritual knowledge, and the loftiest pursuits of the human heart are explored in depth. Explaining the very purpose of life and existence, this classic has stood the test of twenty-three centuries. It is presented here in a thoroughly accurate, illuminating, and beautiful translation that is sure to become the standard for our day.
352 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 401
ARJUNA: I really don't want to do this.
KRISHNA: You must.
ARJUNA: But if we go ahead with this battle, loads of people will die on both sides. It all just seems so pointless. These men are my friends, my teachers, my relatives. Wouldn't it be better if we just called it all off?
KRISHNA: Don't be so selfish. It is your duty to kill them whether you feel happy about it or not.
ARJUNA: It just…it feels really wrong…
KRISHNA: Look at it this way: all these people are going to die anyway. ‘I am all-powerful Time which destroys all things, and I have come here to slay these men. Even if thou dost not fight, all the warriors facing thee shall die.’ So it might as well be now; what's another twenty or thirty years to a god?
ARJUNA: Well, nothing, probably, but I expect it means quite a lot to them…
KRISHNA: The highest moral precept of all is to do your duty. So: do it.
ARJUNA: Oh my god…this is horrible… *kills everyone*
I am the cleverness in the gambler's dice. I am the beauty in all things beautiful. I am the victory and the struggle for victory. I am the goodness of those who are good.
همچنان که آدمی دلق ژنده بر میکند و جامۀ نو میپوشد
جان نیز تنهای فرسوده را فروهلد و در تنهای تازه جای گیرد
نه حربه در آن کارگر افتد
نه آتش آن را بسوزاند
نه آب آن را تر کند
نه باد آن را بخشکاند
نه زخم پذیرد، نه بسوزد، نه تر شود، نه بخشکد
جان نه کشته شود، نه بکشد
پس ای فرزند «بهاراتا» بجنگ!
سرور بزرگ یوگا این بگفت و صورت والای الهی خویش را به «پارتا» باز نمود
صورتی بود با دهانها و چشمان بسیار
و عجایب گوناگون
و زیورهای آسمانی بی شمار
چنان که اگر هزاران خورشید یکباره در آسمان نورافشانی کنند
شاید مثالی از روشنایی آن وجود عظیم تواند بود
و آن جا، پسر «پاندو»، عالم را با همۀ کثرات آن در قالب خدای خدایان متحد و یکی دید

بر توست که کار کنى، لیکن نه براى ثمره آن
در پى ثمر عمل خود مباش
دل در ترک عمل نیز مبند
در یوگا استوار باش
عمل کن و از نتیجه چشم بپوش
و دل از قید موفقیت یا شکست فارغ دار
همین فراغ دل، «یوگا» خوانده مىشود
آن که در عمل، ترک عمل را تواند دید
و در ترک عمل، عمل را
خردمند واقعی است
("I know nothing can conduce more to letters, than to examine the writings of the ancients, and not to rest in their sole authority, or take all upon trust from them; provided the plagues of judging, and pronouncing against them, be away; such as are envy, bitterness, precipitation, impudence, and scurrile scoffing.
For to all the observations of the ancients, we have our own experience: which, if we will use, and apply, we have better means to pronounce. It is true they opened the gates, and made the way, that went before us; but as guides, not commanders."





Service to others, the innate
Attribute of the class of serfs
(18.44)
Better to do one's own duty
ineptly, than another's well.
(III.35)
This universe is strung on me
as pearls are strung upon a thread.
(VII.7)