Udyoga Parva Adhyāya 132 — Vidura’s Counsel on Udyama, Yaśas, and Kṣātra-Dharma
लोकस्य समवज्ञातं निहीनासनवाससम् । अहोलाभकरं हीनमल्पजीवनमल्पकम्
lokasya samavajñātaṁ nihīnāsanavāsasam | aholābhakaraṁ hīnam alpajīvanam alpakam ||
ଯେ ଲୋକମାନଙ୍କ ଦ୍ୱାରା ଅବମାନିତ, ଯାହାର ଆସନ ଓ ବସ୍ତ୍ର ନିମ୍ନ, ଯେ କେବଳ ଅଳ୍ପ ଲାଭ ଆଣେ, ସର୍ବଥା ହୀନ ଓ ଦୀନ—ଏପରି ଜୀବନ ଅଳ୍ପାୟୁ ଏବଂ ତୁଚ୍ଛ ମୂଲ୍ୟର।
वायुदेव उवाच
Vāyu underscores that a life marked by public contempt, degraded conditions, and paltry returns is ethically and existentially ‘small’: it neither sustains dignity nor produces enduring good. The verse functions as a warning against accepting a dishonourable, diminished mode of living as one’s settled condition.
In Udyoga Parva’s counsel-driven context, Vāyu speaks evaluatively about a certain kind of reduced existence—despised by society and materially scant—framing it as short-lived and insignificant. The statement serves as admonition and moral pressure within the broader deliberations that precede the great conflict.