The Bhagavad-gītāThe most widely read and probably the most important of the Hindu Sacred Books for the understanding of religious mysticism. |
Contents
INTRODUCTION I | 5 |
TRANSLITERATION TRANSLATION | 111 |
CHAPTER II | 120 |
CHAPTER III | 160 |
CHAPTER IV | 180 |
CHAPTER V | 200 |
CHAPTER VI | 218 |
CHAPTER VII | 243 |
CHAPTER XII | 321 |
CHAPTER XIII | 332 |
CHAPTER XIV | 351 |
CHAPTER XV | 359 |
CHAPTER XVI | 369 |
CHAPTER XVII | 375 |
CHAPTER XVIII | 384 |
The Four Great Classes of Society | 393 |
Common terms and phrases
abiding action aham All-Highest alms appertains Arjuna athlete ātman attachment attain become Brahman Bhagavad-Gītā bhakti Bhārata Bhishma birth Blessed Lord body born buddhi Buddhist called changeless chapter constituents of Nature contingent Darkness death deluded desire detached devilish devotion Dhritarashtra divine Duryodhana earth embodied eternal evil faith fire fruits Gītā glosses gods hate highest Brahman highest Person immortal Imperishable integrated by spiritual integration yoga jñāna karma Katha Upanishad knower Krishna liberation mām material Nature māyā means mind mode monad Nirvana objects of sense pain param Pārtha passage Passion peace penance perishable phenomenal world pleasure prakrti primeval puruşa Rāmānuja renouncing renunciation restrained sacrifice sage Samkhya samsāra seems self-in-itself soul spiritual exercise spiritual monad stand stanza subsist tathā things thought three constituents timeless transcends translation Unmanifest unmoving Upanishad uvāca Vedas verse whole universe Whoso wisdom wise womb word worship yoga yogin Yudhishthira



