Adhyāya 33: Antarvedī-Samāgama, Arghya-Nirṇaya, and Śiśupāla’s Objection
त॑ धनौघमपर्यन्तं रत्नसागरमक्षयम् | नादयन् रथघोषेण प्रविवेश पुरोत्तमम्
taṁ dhanaugham aparyantaṁ ratnasāgaram akṣayam | nādayan rathaghoṣeṇa praviveśa purottamam ||
Vaiśampāyana dit : « Cette masse de richesses n’avait point de borne, tel un océan inépuisable de joyaux. La portant avec eux, et faisant retentir les quatre directions du tonnerre des chars, ils entrèrent dans la cité la plus éminente, Indraprastha. »
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse highlights how immense wealth and its public display function as instruments of royal authority and reputation. Ethically, it invites reflection on prosperity as a responsibility of governance—abundance can uphold order when rightly used, but spectacle can also intensify rivalry and attachment.
A vast, seemingly limitless treasure—likened to an inexhaustible ocean of jewels—is being brought into the foremost city, Indraprastha. The arrival is dramatic, with the rumbling noise of chariots echoing through all directions as they enter the city.