The song Celestial, A Poetic Version of the Bhagavad Gita is a translation of the Bhagavad Gita, one of the famous parts of Mahabharata, from Sanskrit into English by Sir Edwin Arnold, and was published in 1885. This book describes the conversation between Lord Krishna and Prince Arjuna during the battle. At that point, Krishna, who is considered an Incarnation of the Divine Lord Vishnu, then, at that point, guides Arjuna on the journey of responsibilities and freedom in the right direction, to deal with greed and illusions. The message he gives is applicable to humans of all religions and all ages. This is the eternal conflict between good and evil, right and wrong, intelligence and ignorance, and self and not self.
Sir. Edwin Arnold (10 June 1832 - 24 March 1904), was born in the United Kingdom. He was a journalist and poet, most popular as the writer of The Light of Asia (1879), which describes the life and lessons of Buddha. Pearls of the Faith (1883), on Islam, and The Light of the World (1891), on Christianity, got less success. After leaving the University of Oxford, Arnold became a schoolteacher in Birmingham, and later became principal of the British government college in Pune, India. He came back to Britain in 1861 to join the staff of the Daily Telegraph, where he worked as a chief editor from 1873 to 1889. He published various volumes of short poems, as well as translations of the Indian section and a good deal of travel composition. The essays collected in Japonica (1892) were a popular contribution to the late nineteenth-century (cult of Japan) in Britain, similar to his variations of Japanese poetry in The Tenth Muse (1895) and his Japanese play Adzuma (1893). He was knighted in 1888.