Bhagavad Gita -Srila Prabhupada 105

Shrimad Bhagavad Gita As It Is -Shri Shrimad A.C Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

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Contents of the Gita Summarized
Chapter 2: Verse-54

arjuna uväca
sthita-prajnasya kä bhäsä
samädhi-sthasya kesava
sthita-dhi kim prabhäseta
kim äsita vrajeta kim[1]

TRANSLATION

Arjuna said: O Krsna, what are the symptoms of one whose consciousness is thus merged in transcendence? How does he speak, and what is his language? How does he sit, and how does he walk?

PURPORT

As there are symptoms for each and every man, in terms of his particular situation, similarly one who is krsna conscious has his particular nature—talking, walking, thinking, feeling, etc. As a rich man has his symptoms by which he is known as a rich man, as a diseased man has his symptoms by which he is known as diseased, or as a learned man has his symptoms, so a man in transcendental consciousness of krsna has specific symptoms in various dealings. One can know his specific symptoms from the Bhagavad-gita. Most important is how the man in krsna consciousness speaks; for speech is the most important quality of any man. It is said that a fool is undiscovered as long as he does not speak, and certainly a well-dressed fool cannot be identified unless he speaks, but as soon as he speaks, he reveals himself at once. The immediate symptom of a krsna conscious man is that he speaks only of krsna and of matters relating to Him. Other symptoms then automatically follow, as stated below.


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References

  1. arjunahuväca=Arjuna said; sthita-prajnasya=of one who is situated in fixed Krsna consciousness; kä=what; bhäsä=language; samädhi-sthasya=of one situated in trance; kesava=O Krsna; sthita-dhih=one fixed in krsna consciousness; kim=what; prabhäseta=speaks; kim—how; äsita=does remain still; vrajeta=walks; kim=how.

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