Bhagavad-gītā As it Is << 3 - Karma-yoga >>
<< VERSE 39 >>
आवृतं जञानम एतेन जञानिनॊ नित्यवैरिणा कामरूपेण कौन्तेय दुष्पूरेणानलेन च
āvṛtaṁ jñānam etena jñānino nitya-vairiṇā kāma-rūpeṇa kaunteya duṣpūreṇānalena ca
WORD BY WORD
āvṛtam covered; jñānam pure consciousness; etena by this; jñāninaḥ of the knower; nitya-vairiṇā by the eternal enemy; kāma-rūpeṇa in the form of lust; kaunteya O son of Kuntī; duṣpūreṇa never to be satisfied; analena by the fire; ca also;
TRANSLATION
| Thus the wise living entity’s pure consciousness becomes covered by his eternal enemy in the form of lust, which is never satisfied and which burns like fire.
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PURPORT
| It is said in the Manu-smṛti that lust cannot be satisfied by any amount of sense enjoyment, just as fire is never extinguished by a constant supply of fuel. In the material world, the center of all activities is sex, and thus this material world is called maithunya-āgāra, or the shackles of sex life. In the ordinary prison house, criminals are kept within bars; similarly, the criminals who are disobedient to the laws of the Lord are shackled by sex life. Advancement of material civilization on the basis of sense gratification means increasing the duration of the material existence of a living entity. Therefore, this lust is the symbol of ignorance by which the living entity is kept within the material world. While one enjoys sense gratification, it may be that there is some feeling of happiness, but actually that so-called feeling of happiness is the ultimate enemy of the sense enjoyer.
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