असंतोषादिदोष-निरूपणम्
On the Faults of Discontent and the Discipline of Detachment
पत्राहारैरश्मकुट्टैदन्तोलूखलिकैस्तथा । अब्भक्षेवायुभक्षैश्न तैरयं नरको जित:
patrāhārair aśmakuṭṭair dantolūkhalikais tathā | abbhakṣair vāyubhakṣaiś ca tair ayaṃ narako jitaḥ ||
Yudhiṣṭhira dit : Ces ascètes qui vivent de feuilles, qui subsistent d’une nourriture broyée sur la pierre, qui mâchent avec leurs seules dents sans recourir à la farine du moulin ni aux aliments pilés au mortier, et ceux qui ne vivent que d’eau—voire d’air—ce sont de tels hommes qui vainquent cet « enfer ».
युधिछिर उवाच
Rigorous self-restraint (tapas) is portrayed as a force that overcomes ‘naraka’—whether understood as literal hell or as the hellish consequences of sin and uncontrolled desire—emphasizing ethical purification through disciplined living.
In the Śānti Parva’s dharma-discourse setting, Yudhiṣṭhira cites extreme ascetic practices (leaf-diet, stone-ground fare, chewing without processed food, living on water or air) to illustrate how powerful austerity is considered in conquering suffering and moral downfall.