हे कृष्ण! मैं न तो विजय चाहता हूँ और न राज्य तथा सुखोंको ही। हे गोविन्द! हमें ऐसे राज्यसे क्या प्रयोजन है अथवा ऐसे भोगोंसे और जीवनसे भी क्या लाभ है? ।। येषामर्थे काड्क्षितं नो राज्यं भोगा: सुखानि च । त इमे5वस्थिता युद्धे प्राणांस्त्यक्त्वा धनानि च,हमें जिनके लिये राज्य, भोग और सुखादि अभीष्ट हैं, वे ही ये सब धन और जीवनकी आशाको त्यागकर युद्धमें खड़े हैं
arjuna uvāca | he kṛṣṇa na vijayo me na ca rājyaṁ sukhāni ca | kiṁ no rājyena govinda kiṁ bhogair jīvitena vā || yeṣām arthe kāṅkṣitaṁ no rājyaṁ bhogāḥ sukhāni ca | ta ime 'vasthitā yuddhe prāṇāṁs tyaktvā dhanāni ca ||
Arjuna said: “O Krishna, I desire neither victory nor kingdom nor pleasures. O Govinda, what use is a kingdom to us—or enjoyments, or even life itself? For those for whose sake we long for sovereignty, pleasures, and happiness are standing here in battle, having already renounced their lives and wealth.”
अजुन उवाच
Arjuna exposes the ethical collapse of pursuing victory and power when the very people for whom such gains would matter—elders, teachers, kin—stand ready to die. The verse highlights how attachment to outcomes (kingdom, pleasure, even survival) becomes morally hollow when it is purchased through the destruction of one’s own community, prompting a deeper inquiry into dharma beyond mere success.
On the battlefield, just before the war begins, Arjuna turns to Krishna and declares he no longer wants to fight for victory or rule. Seeing his relatives and revered figures arrayed for combat, he reasons that winning a kingdom is meaningless if it requires killing those very people; he notes they have come prepared to give up life and wealth, intensifying his despair and hesitation.