Nāradasya Rājadharma-praśnāḥ
Nārada’s Examination of Royal Ethics
कच्चिदात्मानमेवाग्रे विजित्य विजितेन्द्रिय: । परान् जिगीषसे पार्थ प्रमत्तानजितेन्द्रियान्,कुन्तीनन्दन! क्या तुम पहले अपनी इन्द्रियों और मनको जीतकर ही प्रमादमें पड़े हुए अजितेन्द्रिय शत्रुओंको जीतनेकी इच्छा करते हो?
kaccid ātmānam evāgre vijitya vijitendriyaḥ | parān jigīṣase pārtha pramattān ajitendriyān ||
નારદ બોલ્યા—હે પાર્થ! શું તું પહેલાં પોતાને જ જીતીને, ઇન્દ્રિયો પર વિજય મેળવીને, પછી જ પ્રમાદમાં પડેલા અજિતેન્દ્રિય શત્રુઓને જીતવાની ઇચ્છા કરે છે?
नारद उवाच
The verse teaches that the first and necessary conquest is of oneself—especially the senses and mind. Only a person who is vijitendriya (self-controlled) is fit to seek victory over others; otherwise external conquest lacks ethical grounding and stability.
Nārada addresses Pārtha (Arjuna) with a pointed question, testing and guiding his readiness for conflict and leadership. He contrasts a disciplined hero with opponents who are pramatta (careless) and ajitendriya (undisciplined), urging that Arjuna’s campaign or ambition be rooted in prior self-mastery.