Dvaipāyana-hrade Duryodhanasya Māyā — Yudhiṣṭhirasya Dharmoktiḥ (Śalya-parva, Adhyāya 30)
स नो दास्यति सुप्रीतो धनानि बहुलान्युत । कि नो मांसेन शुष्केण परिक्लिप्टेन शोषिणा
sa no dāsyati suprīto dhanāni bahulāny uta | ki no māṁsena śuṣkeṇa parikl̥iptena śoṣiṇā ||
サञ्जयは言った。「我らに満足すれば、彼は必ずや多くの財を与えるであろう。ならば、身の精血を枯らすこの干し肉を運んで、むだに苦しむ必要がどこにあろうか。」
संजय उवाच
The verse highlights how the lure of reward can make people rationalize abandoning endurance and restraint; it implicitly critiques greed-driven thinking that treats bodily strain and moral cost as expendable when profit seems assured.
Sañjaya reports a speaker’s calculation: since a benefactor is expected to be very pleased and grant abundant wealth, they question the point of continuing to carry dried meat that causes physical depletion, framing the burden as needless suffering.