धन-राजधर्म संवादः
Discourse on Wealth and Royal Duty
यः कृशार्थ: कृशगव: कृशभृत्य: कृशातिथि: । स वै राजन् कृशो नाम न शरीरकृश: कृश:
yaḥ kṛśārthaḥ kṛśagavaḥ kṛśabhṛtyaḥ kṛśātithiḥ | sa vai rājan kṛśo nāma na śarīrakṛśaḥ kṛśaḥ ||
أيها الملك! إن الذي يضيق ماله، وتقلّ مواشيه، ويقلّ خدمه، ويندر ورود الضيوف إلى داره—هو وحده الذي يستحق حقًّا اسم «كْرِشَ» (بائس/ضعيف). أما نحول الجسد وحده فلا يجعل المرء «كْرِشَ» بالمعنى الحقيقي.
अर्जुन उवाच
The verse redefines ‘weakness’ as social and economic diminishment rather than mere bodily thinness: true ‘kṛśatā’ is the loss of means, cattle, dependents, and the flow of guests—markers of prosperity, responsibility, and dharmic household life.
Arjuna addresses a king and clarifies a moral distinction: he argues that the term ‘kṛśa’ should be applied to one whose household and resources have withered (wealth, cattle, servants, hospitality), not simply to someone who is physically lean.