धृतराष्ट्र–दुर्योधन संवादः
Vāraṇāvata-vivāsana-nīti: Dhṛtarāṣṭra and Duryodhana’s Policy Dialogue
तामेकवसनां दृष्टवा गौतमो5प्सरसं वने । लोके<प्रतिमसंस्थानां प्रोत्फूल्लनयनो5भवत्
tām ekavasanāṃ dṛṣṭvā gautamo ’psarasaṃ vane | loke ’pratima-saṃsthānāṃ protphullanayano ’bhavat ||
वन में एक ही वस्त्र धारण किए उस अप्सरा को देखकर—जिसके रूप की संसार में कोई उपमा न थी—गौतम के नेत्र हर्ष से खिल उठे।
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse highlights an ethical pressure-point in dharma literature: even a sage’s senses can be stirred by beauty, so self-restraint (saṃyama) is not merely assumed but continually tested—especially in solitude and liminal spaces like the forest.
Vaiśampāyana narrates that Gautama encounters an apsaras in the forest, dressed in a single garment and of incomparable beauty; on seeing her, his eyes brighten with delight, indicating the onset of attraction and the narrative’s impending conflict between ascetic discipline and desire.