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Shloka 3

धन-राजधर्म संवादः

Discourse on Wealth and Royal Duty

अर्जुन उवाच अहो दुःखमहो कृच्छुमहो वैक्लव्यमुत्तमम्‌ । यत्‌ कृत्वामानुषं कर्म त्यजेथा: श्रियमुत्तमाम्‌

arjuna uvāca: aho duḥkham aho kṛcchram aho vaiklavyam uttamam | yat kṛtvā mānuṣaṁ karma tyajethāḥ śriyam uttamām ||

قال أرجونا: «وا أسفاه، أيها الملك! ما أعظم الحزن، وما أشدّ العناء! لقد بلغ اضطرابك الغاية. لعجيبٌ أن تُقدِم—بعد أن أنجزت أفعالاً في طوق البشر—على ترك هذه الرفعة العليا، هذه السعادة الملكية التي نلتَها ببأسٍ خارق.»

{'aho''an exclamation: alas!, indeed!, how!', 'duḥkham': 'sorrow, grief, suffering', 'kṛcchram': 'hardship, distress, difficulty', 'vaiklavyam': 'confusion, faint-heartedness, helpless agitation', 'uttamam': 'supreme, highest, most excellent', 'yat': 'that which
{'aho':
because', 'kṛtvā''having done, having accomplished', 'mānuṣam': 'human, pertaining to human capacity', 'karma': 'deed, action, undertaking', 'tyajethāḥ': 'you would abandon/renounce (2nd person, potential/optative sense)', 'śriyam': 'prosperity, fortune, splendor
because', 'kṛtvā':
royal wealth', 'uttamām''supreme, highest (feminine accusative, qualifying śriyam)'}
royal wealth', 'uttamām':

अर्जुन उवाच

A
Arjuna
R
Rājan (the king, addressed)

Educational Q&A

The verse highlights the ethical tension between renunciation and responsibility: abandoning hard-won royal prosperity out of despair is portrayed as extreme bewilderment, implying that a ruler’s duty and steadiness of mind are integral to dharma.

Arjuna addresses the king (rājan), lamenting that the king has become overwhelmed and is considering giving up the supreme royal fortune, despite having achieved it through great and extraordinary effort.