Puṣkara-Śapatha Itihāsa (Agastya–Indra Dispute at the Tīrthas) | पुष्कर-शपथ-आख्यानम्
भरद्वाज उवाच भरे5सुतान् भरेडशिष्यान् भरे देवान् भरे द्विजान् । भरे भार्या भरे द्वाजं भरद्वाजोडस्मि शोभने
bharadvāja uvāca | bhare sutān bhare śiṣyān bhare devān bhare dvijān | bhare bhāryāṃ bhare dvājān bharadvājo 'smi śobhane ||
ভৰদ্বাজে ক’লে—কল্যাণী! মই মোৰ পুত্ৰসকলক পোহপাল দিওঁ, শিষ্যসকলকো; যজ্ঞাদি দ্বাৰা দেৱতাসকলক তুষ্ট কৰোঁ আৰু দানধৰ্মে দ্বিজসকলকো ধাৰণ কৰোঁ। মই মোৰ ধৰ্মপত্নীকো, আৰু ‘দ্বাজ’ (বৰ্ণসংকৰ) বুলি কোৱা লোকসকলকো পোহপাল দিওঁ; সেয়ে, হে শোভনে, মই ভৰদ্বাজ নামে প্ৰসিদ্ধ।
भरद्वाज उवाच
The verse frames dharma as active support: a righteous person sustains not only one’s own family and students but also the wider sacred and social order—gods through offerings, the twice-born through proper giving, and even socially marginal or mixed-origin people—showing inclusive responsibility rather than narrow self-interest.
Bharadvāja speaks to a woman addressed as “śobhane,” explaining why he is called Bharadvāja: he ‘bears’ (bhare) the burden of maintaining many—sons, disciples, gods, Brahmins, his wife, and others—using a wordplay/etymology to present his identity as grounded in sustained duty.