Bhagavad Gita 18.78
यत्र योगेश्वरः कृष्णो यत्र पार्थो धनुर्धरः । तत्र श्रीर्विजयो भूतिर्ध्रुवा नीतिर्मतिर्मम ॥
yatra yogeśvaraḥ kṛṣṇo yatra pārtho dhanur-dharaḥ / tatra śrīr vijayo bhūtir dhruvā nītir matir mama
Translation
Wherever Krishna the Lord of Yoga is, wherever Partha the bearer of the bow is, there is fortune, victory, prosperity, and steadfast right policy. This is my conviction.
Reflection
Where in your day do the inner Lord and the bow-bearing doer meet, and where do they not?
Read this verse in its chapter: Chapter Eighteen
The closing verse of the Gita, the famous yatra-yatra-tatra. Two presences are named together. Yogeshvara Krishna, the Lord of Yoga, the inner authority and the divine. Partha dhanur-dhara, the one who carries the bow, the engaged human, the actor who has not laid down his work. Where these two are found together, four results follow, shri, fortune, vijaya, victory, bhuti, prosperity, dhruva niti, unshakeable right conduct. Mati mama, my conviction. The Gita closes with the formula that has been its constant teaching. The divine and the engaged human, not separate, not opposed, joined. That is where flourishing actually arrives. Eighteen chapters, one sentence, sealed.