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Shloka 25

जम्बूद्वीपस्य नववर्षविभागः रुद्रस्य अष्टक्षेत्रसन्निधिः नाभि-ऋषभ-भरतकथा

बभूव तस्मिंस्तद्राज्यं भरतः संन्यवेशयत् पुत्रसंक्रामितश्रीको वनं राजा विवेश सः

babhūva tasmiṃstadrājyaṃ bharataḥ saṃnyaveśayat putrasaṃkrāmitaśrīko vanaṃ rājā viveśa saḥ

Alors Bharata établit comme il se doit ce royaume. Ayant transmis à son fils la splendeur royale et le fardeau du gouvernement, le roi entra dans la forêt et embrassa le renoncement : se détournant de la souveraineté mondaine vers la voie suprême, où seul le Pati (le Seigneur Śiva) est le refuge véritable du paśu (l’âme individuelle).

बभूवbecame/occurred
बभूव:
तस्मिन्then/in that time
तस्मिन्:
तत्-राज्यम्that kingdom
तत्-राज्यम्:
भरतःBharata
भरतः:
संन्यवेशयत्established/settled/installed
संन्यवेशयत्:
पुत्र-संक्रामित-श्रीकःone whose royal fortune/majesty (śrī) was transferred to his son
पुत्र-संक्रामित-श्रीकः:
वनम्to the forest
वनम्:
राजाthe king
राजा:
विवेशentered
विवेश:
सःhe
सः:

Suta Goswami

B
Bharata

FAQs

It frames true worship as inner offering: the king relinquishes śrī (worldly sovereignty) and turns toward forest-renunciation, echoing the Shaiva ideal that devotion to the Linga is strengthened by detachment and surrender to Pati (Śiva).

By contrasting transferred royal splendor with the forest path, it implies that all external power is impermanent, while Shiva-tattva as Pati is the stable refuge beyond changing fortune—guiding the paśu toward freedom from pāśa (bondage).

The verse highlights vairāgya and vānaprastha/saṁnyāsa-oriented discipline—an inner prerequisite aligned with Pāśupata-style practice where restraint and withdrawal from possession support Shiva-centered realization.