युधिष्ठिरस्य अर्जुनप्रेषण-युक्तिवर्णनम् | Yudhiṣṭhira’s Rationale for Sending Arjuna and Request to Dhaumya
अश्वमेधमवाप्रोति त्रिरात्रोपोषितो नर: । गोसहस्रफलं विद्यात् कुलं चैव समुद्धरेत्
aśvamedham avāpnoti trirātro-poṣito naraḥ | go-sahasra-phalaṁ vidyāt kulaṁ caiva samuddharet, nara-pate ||
Ghūlasthya said: “O king, a man who fasts for three nights attains the merit of the Aśvamedha sacrifice. Know that he also gains the fruit of gifting a thousand cows, and he uplifts his entire lineage.”
घुलस्त्य उवाच
The verse teaches that disciplined austerity—specifically a three-night fast undertaken with religious intent—can generate merit comparable to grand public rites (Aśvamedha) and major charity (gift of a thousand cows), and that such merit is believed to benefit not only the practitioner but also their lineage.
A speaker named Ghūlastya addresses a king and prescribes/commends a three-night fast as part of a sacred observance, describing the extraordinary spiritual rewards it yields—equating it with renowned sacrifices and donations and asserting its power to uplift one’s family line.