Chapter 16
Frailty of Thought  
This chapter of 24 slokas, known as daivãsura sampad vibhãga yoga, The Characteristics of Virtuous and the Vile, deals with all aspects of virtue and evil including how they affect human life.
S19 which implies that the Supreme Spirit condemns to hell those who hate Him is an obvious interpolation that contravenes Lord's affirmative statement in s29 ch.9, ‘None I favour; slight I none / But devout Mine all gain Me true’ and other such averred in many a context in this text.
Be that as it may, when He is the indweller in all beings as postulated by the Lord himself, won’t the interpolative proposition of s19 amount to self-condemnation!
1  
 Thus spoke the Lord:
 Pure in heart ’n courage to boot
 Even mind with helping hand 
 Works who hard ’n tries to grasp
 Austere, upright, and well-read –
2   
 Even tempered, loves he peace
 Liberal minded with kind heart
 Calm ’n truthful, well mannered
 Fickle he not or calumnious
 Modest natured covets he not –
3  
 Free of bias he’s fair-minded 
 Strong in will, he stalls envy
 Humble, and he forgives too
 He’s virtuous thus earmarked.
4  
 Make all vile, rude guys all
 Vainglorious ’n haughty too, 
 Besides being indignant  
 No less are they indulgent.
5  
 Gives as virtue man freedom 
 Keeps him vileness ever constrained. 
6  
 World is as of good ’n bad 
 Serves thee to know latter too.
7  
 Conduct of theirs lacks virtue
 Bear they demeanour that’s impure.
8  
 Branding beings sexual products 
 Reckon not such in God ’n truth.
9 
 These small minds, of ruined souls  
 Wreck they world with acts of wrath.
10 
 Pride ’n lust, long wish list 
 Vile in conceit live impure.
11  
 Seeing life as one to gloat
 Vile by impulse go to lengths.
12  
 Seek vile creatures ever shortcuts
On way to wants, they ill-get wealth.                                                                         
13 
 Think all vile, in like terms -
 This is mine so let me keep 
 Why not have I more of it.
14 
 Foe this mine I’ve truly floored
 Won’t I tackle the rest of them
 Sure I’m Lord of mine own world.
15  
 Note all vile, gloat as such -
 Besides wealthy, I’m well-born  
 Won’t I give and enjoy too.
16 
 To their hurt in illusion vile 
 End up slaves of joys of flesh. 
17
 In vainglory live all vile  
 And for show-off spend they well. 
18
 Blinded by pride, lustful lot
 Me they ill-treat lay in them.
20  
 Live all deluded far from Me   
 Depraved ladder they go down.
21  
 Detours, lust, wrath ’n greed  
 Self-destruct to go hell-ward.
22  
 Steer if clear, perils these men 
 See they then the path perfect.
23  
 In their impulse vile impinge
 Upon the scriptures that hold good
 And thus keep ever from Supreme.
24 
 Ordain scriptures rights ’n wrongs 
 It’s now left to choose thy course.
Ends thus:
 Frailty of Thought,
The Sixteenth Chapter   
 Of Bhagavad-Gita, Treatise of self-help.
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Bhagavad-Gita is the most beautiful, perhaps the only true philosophical song existing in any known tongue’ – so opined William von Humboldt, who wrote seven-hundred verses in its praise.