Shloka 9

सो<श्वमेधसहस्रेण राजसूयशतेन च । पुनरीजे महायज्ञै: समाप्तवरदक्षिणै:,पराक्रमी महाराज भरत जब बड़े हुए, तब उन्होंने यमुनाके तटपर सौ, सरस्वतीके तटपर तीन सौ और गंगाजीके किनारे चार सौ अश्वमेध यज्ञोंका अनुष्ठान करके पुनः उत्तम दक्षिणाओंसे सम्पन्न एक हजार अश्वमेध और सौ राजसूय महायज्ञोंद्वारा भगवानका यजन किया

so 'śvamedha-sahasreṇa rājasūya-śatena ca | punar īje mahā-yajñaiḥ samāpta-vara-dakṣiṇaiḥ ||

Narada said: “That mighty king again worshipped the Lord through great sacrifices—complete in every respect and endowed with excellent sacrificial gifts—performing a thousand Aśvamedhas and a hundred Rājasūyas.” The verse highlights royal power being ethically framed through Vedic rites, where sovereignty is presented as legitimate when coupled with generosity (dakṣiṇā) and proper completion of duty (yajña).

{'saḥ''he (that person/king)', 'aśvamedha': 'the Horse-sacrifice
{'saḥ':
a royal Vedic rite asserting sovereignty', 'sahasreṇa''with a thousand (instrumental singular)', 'rājasūya': 'the royal consecration sacrifice
a royal Vedic rite asserting sovereignty', 'sahasreṇa':
rite of imperial status', 'śatena''with a hundred (instrumental singular)', 'ca': 'and', 'punar': 'again, once more', 'īje (√yaj)': 'he worshipped/sacrificed
rite of imperial status', 'śatena':
performed sacrifice', 'mahā-yajñaiḥ''by great sacrifices (instrumental plural)', 'samāpta': 'completed, duly concluded', 'vara': 'excellent, choice, best', 'dakṣiṇā': 'sacrificial fee/gift to priests
performed sacrifice', 'mahā-yajñaiḥ':
charitable donation accompanying rites', 'samāpta-vara-dakṣiṇaiḥ''with rites furnished with excellent gifts and properly completed'}
charitable donation accompanying rites', 'samāpta-vara-dakṣiṇaiḥ':

नारद उवाच

N
Nārada
A
Aśvamedha (sacrifice)
R
Rājasūya (sacrifice)

Educational Q&A

Power and sovereignty are portrayed as dharmically grounded when expressed through properly completed yajñas and accompanied by generous dakṣiṇā—i.e., authority is linked to responsibility, ritual order, and giving.

Nārada describes a mighty king who again performs major royal sacrifices—one thousand Aśvamedhas and one hundred Rājasūyas—emphasizing both his prowess and his adherence to Vedic ritual obligations with fitting gifts.