यक्ष उवाच धर्मश्चार्थक्ष॒ कामश्ष॒ परस्परविरोधिन: । एषां नित्यविरुद्धानां कथमेकत्र संगम:,यक्षने पूछा--धर्म, अर्थ और काम--ये सब परस्पर विरोधी हैं। इन नित्य-विरुद्ध पुरुषार्थोका एक स्थानपर कैसे संयोग हो सकता है?
yakṣa uvāca | dharmaś cārthaś ca kāmaś ca paraspara-virodhinaḥ | eṣāṁ nitya-viruddhānāṁ katham ekatra saṅgamaḥ ||
ヤクシャは問うた。「ダルマ、アルタ、カーマは互いに相反する。これらの人の目的が常に対立しているなら、どうして一つの生き方の中で同時に成り立ち得るのか。」
यक्ष उवाच
The verse frames a classic ethical problem: the three aims—dharma (right), artha (advantage), and kāma (desire)—often pull a person in different directions. The teaching implied by the question is that wise living requires discernment and prioritization, typically subordinating artha and kāma to dharma so that pursuit of prosperity and pleasure does not violate moral order.
In the Yaksha–Prashna episode of the Vana Parva, the Yaksha tests Yudhiṣṭhira through probing questions. Here the Yaksha challenges him to explain how seemingly conflicting life-goals can be reconciled in practice.