Yasyasti Vittam Sa Narah Kulinah
यस्यास्ति वित्तं स नरः कुलीनः in English · English
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✦ Meaning
This famous Subhashita from Bhartrhari's Niti Shataka is a sharp satire on a society that measures every human worth by wealth. It declares, with deliberate sarcasm, that whoever possesses money is automatically deemed noble, learned, eloquent and even good-looking, because in the world's eyes 'all virtues cling to gold.' The verse remains startlingly relevant as a critique of judging people by their riches rather than their true character.
Origin & Story
Niti Shataka of Bhartrhari (Subhashita) · Bhartrhari · Classical Sanskrit literature (c. 5th century CE)
Bhartrhari, according to tradition a king who renounced his throne for the contemplative life, composed three Shatakas — collections of a hundred verses each — on ethics (Niti), love (Shringara) and renunciation (Vairagya). The Niti Shataka gathers his keen observations on human conduct, fate, wealth and wisdom. This verse stands among his most quoted, a withering commentary on a world that confuses gold with greatness.
✦ As told in scripture
Though a worldly observation rather than a devotional hymn, this verse has guided countless readers across the centuries to a single liberating insight — that the soul's true riches are virtue and wisdom, which no amount of gold can buy or counterfeit.
The Mantra
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yasyāsti vittaṁ sa naraḥ kulīnaḥ sa paṇḍitaḥ sa śrutavān guṇajñaḥ। sa eva vaktā sa ca darśanīyaḥ sarve guṇāḥ kāñcanam āśrayanti॥
Meaning:The man who has wealth is considered well-born; he is called learned, scripturally wise and a connoisseur of merit; he alone is the eloquent speaker and even the handsome one — for all virtues take refuge in gold. With biting irony, Bhartrhari observes how the world heaps every imagined excellence upon the rich, simply because they are rich.
Word-by-Word Meaning
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Benefits of Chanting यस्यास्ति वित्तं स नरः कुलीनः
Cultivates discernment to judge people by character rather than wealth
A powerful reminder that virtues attributed to the rich are often illusory
Sharpens awareness of social hypocrisy and flattery toward the wealthy
Encourages humility in prosperity and dignity in modest means
A memorable verse for teaching ethics, value education and critical thinking
Inspires the seeker to value true merit over outward riches
How to Chant यस्यास्ति वित्तं स नरः कुलीनः
Recite the verse slowly, savouring its irony, and reflect on how often the world's praise follows money rather than merit. Read it as a mirror for one's own attitudes — do we respect people for who they are or for what they own? It is best contemplated rather than ritually repeated, used as a daily reminder to honour genuine character over wealth.
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Read the full यस्यास्ति वित्तं स नरः कुलीनः with verse-by-verse meaning, or explore more sacred texts