राजोवाच । संन्यस्तोऽहं द्विजश्रेष्ठा न राज्यं कर्तुमुत्सहे । न सुतानां न दाराणां संग्रहं च कथंचन
rājovāca | saṃnyasto'haṃ dvijaśreṣṭhā na rājyaṃ kartumutsahe | na sutānāṃ na dārāṇāṃ saṃgrahaṃ ca kathaṃcana
Le roi dit : «Ô le meilleur des brahmanes, j’ai renoncé au monde ; je n’ai pas la volonté de gouverner un royaume. Et je ne souhaite nullement assumer la charge d’enfants ni d’épouse.»
King (Rājā)
Scene: A weary king, ornaments set aside, speaks to an assembled circle of venerable brāhmaṇas; the court atmosphere is subdued, signaling renunciation and moral conflict.
Dharma can appear as competing obligations; the verse voices the renunciant ideal even within a political crisis.
No tīrtha is named in this verse; it is part of the narrative context that frames the chapter’s tīrtha-māhātmya.
None; the verse asserts a saṃnyāsa stance—refusal of kingship and household responsibilities.