असंतोष ही लक्ष्मीकी प्राप्तिका मूल कारण है; अतः मैं असंतोष चाहता हूँ। राजन्! जो अपनी उन्नतिके लिये प्रयत्न करता है, उसका वह प्रयत्न ही सर्वोत्तम नीति है ।।
asaṁtoṣo hi lakṣmyāḥ prāptikā mūla-kāraṇam; ataḥ aham asaṁtoṣam icchāmi. rājan! yaḥ svasyonnatyai prayatate, tasya sa prayatna eva śreṣṭhā nītiḥ. mamatvaṁ hi na kartavyam aiśvarye vā dhane ’pi vā; pūrvāvāptaṁ haranty anye—rāja-dharma hi taṁ viduḥ.
Duryodhana says that discontent is the root cause of gaining prosperity; therefore he chooses to remain dissatisfied. O King, for one who strives for his own rise, that very striving is the best policy. One should not cling possessively to sovereignty or wealth, for what has been acquired before is seized away by others; this, he claims, is what is understood as the king’s way of rule.
दुर्योधन उवाच
The verse presents a hard-edged political ethic: prosperity is driven by persistent dissatisfaction and effort, while attachment to wealth or sovereignty is portrayed as unwise because power and property are unstable and can be seized. It contrasts ‘striving’ (prayatna) as the best nīti with the futility of possessiveness (mamatva) in royal life.
In the Sabha Parva context, Duryodhana articulates his worldview to the king he addresses: he justifies relentless ambition and frames the competitive, coercive nature of kingship as normal ‘rāja-dharma.’ The statement reveals his mindset—restless desire for increase and a readiness to accept force and dispossession as part of political order.