Aṣṭāvakra’s Visit to Kubera: Hospitality, Temptation, and the Ethics of Restraint (अष्टावक्र-वैश्रवणोपाख्यानम्)
रुजा शूलकृता चैव न ते विप्र भविष्यति । आधिभिव्यधिभिश्रैव वर्जितस्त्वं भविष्यसि
rujā śūlakṛtā caiva na te vipra bhaviṣyati | ādhibhir vyādhibhiś caiva varjitas tvaṃ bhaviṣyasi ||
قال ماندافيا: «يا أيها البراهمن، إن الألم الناشئ عن الوتد لن يكون لك؛ وستبقى منزَّهًا عن آفات النفس وأمراض الجسد معًا».
माण्डव्य उवाच
The verse teaches that wrongful external suffering need not culminate in inner ruin: the promised freedom from pain, anxiety, and disease frames an ethical ideal that injustice is ultimately answerable to a higher moral order, and that spiritual merit can neutralize the effects of inflicted harm.
Māṇḍavya recounts (or cites) an assurance given to a brāhmaṇa who has been impaled on a stake: despite the execution-like punishment, he is told that the stake will not cause him pain and that he will be free from mental distress and physical illness.