Atithi-satkāra and the Consolation of Wise Counsel (अतिथिसत्कारः प्रज्ञानवचनस्य च पराश्वासनम्)
धर्मस्य कुरुशार्टूल ततो5हं धर्मज: स्मृत: । कुरुश्रेष्ठ! कुन्तीकुमार! पूर्वकालमें किसी कारणवश मैं धर्मके पुत्ररूपसे प्रसिद्ध हुआ था। इसीलिये मुझे “धर्मज” कहा गया है
dharmasya kuruśārdūla tato 'haṃ dharmajaḥ smṛtaḥ | kuruśreṣṭha kuntīkumāra pūrvakāle meṃ kisī kāraṇavaśa maiṃ dharmake putrarūpase prasiddha huā thā | isīliye mujhe “dharmaja” kahā gayā hai |
«Oh tigre entre los Kuru: por esa razón soy recordado como “Dharmaja”, el hijo de Dharma. Oh el mejor de los Kuru, hijo de Kuntī: en tiempos antiguos, por cierta causa, llegué a ser célebre como descendiente de Dharma; por eso se me llama “Dharmaja”.»
तामिन्द्र उवाच गच्छ नहुषस्त्वया वाच्योथ<पूर्वेण मामृषियुक्तेन यानेन त्वमधिरूढ
Moral identity is grounded in dharma: the epithet “Dharmaja” signals that one’s authority and reputation should rest on righteousness and adherence to ethical order, not merely on power or birth alone.
The speaker explains why he is known as “Dharmaja,” addressing a Kuru hero as “kuruśārdūla” and “kuntīkumāra,” and links the name to an earlier circumstance in which he became famed as the son of Dharma.