Puṣkara-Śapatha Itihāsa (Agastya–Indra Dispute at the Tīrthas) | पुष्कर-शपथ-आख्यानम्
भरद्वाज उवाच उत्पन्नस्य रुरो: शंंगं वर्धमानस्य वर्धते । प्रार्थना पुरुषस्येव तस्य मात्रा न विद्यते
bharadvāja uvāca utpannasya ruroḥ śṛṅgaṃ vardhamānasya vardhate | prārthanā puruṣasyeva tasya mātrā na vidyate ||
قال بهارادفاجا: «كما أن قرن الحيّة رورو، إذا نشأ، ظلّ يزداد مع نموّها، كذلك تظلّ مناشدة الرجل (أو رغبته) تتسع بلا انقطاع؛ لا مقدار ثابت لها ولا حدّ.»
भरद्वाज उवाच
Human asking and craving tend to be unbounded: like a growing horn, desire expands unless restrained. The ethical implication is the need for moderation, contentment, and disciplined speech—knowing when to stop requesting or demanding.
Bharadvāja delivers a didactic observation using a vivid natural metaphor (Ruru’s horn) to illustrate a moral point about human behavior: petitions and wants can keep increasing without a natural limit.