B.G 18.78
yatra yogeśvaraḥ kṛṣṇo yatra pārtho dhanurdharaḥ। tatra śrīrvijayo bhūtirdhruvā nītirmatirmama ॥78॥
In my view, wherever there is Krishna, the master of yoga, and Arjuna, the wielder of the bow, there surely lie prosperity, victory, well-being, and firm policy and opinion.
Gīta Bhāshya 18.78
I have provided a limited exposition of the Gita after taking shelter in the complete and faultless great Vishnu. May the omnipresent always be pleased with me.
pūrṇādoṣamahāviṣṇoḥ gītāmāśritya leśataḥ। nirūpaṇaṃ kṛtaṃ tena prīyatāṃ me sadā vibhuḥ॥
I have provided a limited exposition of the Gita after taking shelter in the complete and faultless great Vishnu. May the omnipresent always be pleased with me.
॥ iti śrīmadānandatīrthabhagavatpādācāryaviracite śrībhagavadgītābhāṣye aṣṭādaśādhyāyaḥ ॥
This marks the conclusion of the eighteenth chapter in the commentary on the Śrī Bhagavad Gītā, authored by the esteemed teacher Ānandatīrtha Bhagavatpāda.
॥ oṁ tatsaditi śrīmadbhagavadgītāsu upaniṣatsu brahmavidyāyāṁ yogaśāstre śrīkṛṣṇārjunasaṁvāde mokṣasannyāsayogo nāma aṣṭādaśodhyāyaḥ ॥
"Om, that is truth," thus concludes the eighteenth chapter named the Yoga of Liberation and Renunciation, found in the glorious Bhagavad Gita, which is part of the Upanishads, the science of Brahman, and the scripture of Yoga, presented as a dialogue between Sri Krishna and Arjuna.