Tapas-śreṣṭhatā: Anāśana as the Highest Austerity
Bhagīratha–Brahmā Saṃvāda
दशैकरात्रान् दशपज्चरात्रा- नेकादशैकादशकान क्रतूंश्न । ज्योतिष्टोमानां च शतं यदिष्ट॑ फलेन तेनापि च नागतो5हम्
Bhagīratha uvāca — daśaikarātrān daśapañcarātrān ekādaśaikādaśakān kratūṃś ca | jyotiṣṭomānāṃ ca śataṃ yad iṣṭaṃ phalena tenāpi ca nāgato 'ham ||
ພະຄີຣະຖະກ່າວວ່າ: «ຂ້າພະເຈົ້າໄດ້ປະກອບຍັດຍະສິບພິທີທີ່ສຳເລັດໃນຄືນດຽວ, ອີກສິບພິທີທີ່ສຳເລັດໃນຫ້າຄືນ, ອີກສິບເອັດພິທີທີ່ສຳເລັດໃນສິບເອັດຄືນ, ແລະຍັງໄດ້ປະກອບຍັດຍະຊື່ ໂຈຕິສຖົມ ເຖິງໜຶ່ງຮ້ອຍ. ແຕ່ຕໍ່ໃຫ້ເປັນຜົນແຫ່ງພິທີເຫຼົ່ານັ້ນ ຂ້າພະເຈົ້າກໍບໍ່ໄດ້ມາຮອດສະພາບນີ້»
भगीरथ उवाच
Ritual achievements and accumulated merit (yajña-phala) are not, by themselves, sufficient to guarantee the highest spiritual or posthumous attainment; the verse underscores humility and points toward a higher criterion beyond mere ritual quantity.
Bhagīratha speaks about his extensive performance of Vedic sacrifices—various multi-night rites and a hundred Jyotiṣṭomas—yet confesses that even the fruits of these rituals did not bring him to the present state, implying that another cause or higher principle governs the outcome.