Adhyāya 90: Babhruvāhana’s Reception and the Commencement of Yudhiṣṭhira’s Aśvamedha
जीर्णेन वयसा पुत्र न मां क्षुद् बाधतेडपि च । दीर्घकालं तपस्तप्तं न मे मरणतो भयम्,बेटा! जीर्ण अवस्था हो जानेके कारण मुझे भूख अधिक कष्ट नहीं देती है। इसके सिवा मैं दीर्घकालतक तपस्या कर चुका हूँ; इसलिये अब मुझे मरनेका भय नहीं है
jīrṇena vayasā putra na māṃ kṣud bādhate ’pi ca | dīrghakālaṃ tapas taptaṃ na me maraṇato bhayam ||
قال الابن: «يا بُنيّ، لأنني واهنٌ من كِبَر السنّ لا يضايقني الجوع كثيرًا. ثم إنني قد مارستُ التقشف زمنًا طويلًا؛ لذلك لا خوف لي الآن من الموت».
पुत्र उवाच
Long practice of tapas and inner discipline can lessen attachment to the body and reduce fear of death; with maturity and detachment, even basic hardships like hunger lose their power to disturb the mind.
In a dialogue, the speaker (introduced as ‘the son’) addresses someone affectionately as ‘putra’ (“my child”) and explains his condition: advanced age makes hunger less oppressive, and his long austerities have made him unafraid of dying.