Previous Verse
Next Verse

Shloka 76

युधिष्ठिरस्य अर्जुनप्रेषण-युक्तिवर्णनम् | Yudhiṣṭhira’s Rationale for Sending Arjuna and Request to Dhaumya

भरतकुलभूषण! वहीं शतसाहस्रकतीर्थ है। उसमें स्नान करके नियमपालनपूर्वक नियमित भोजन करते हुए मनुष्य सहस्र गोदानका पुण्यफल प्राप्त करता है ।। ततो गच्छेत राजेन्द्र भर्त॒स्थानमनुत्तमम्‌ । अश्वमेधस्य यज्ञस्य फल प्राप्रोति मानव:,राजेन्द्र! वहाँसे परम उत्तम भर्तृस्थानको जाय। वहाँ जानेसे मनुष्यको अश्वमेधयज्ञका फल प्राप्त होता है

bharatakula-bhūṣaṇa! vahāṁ śata-sāhasraka-tīrthaḥ. tatra snātvā niyama-pālana-pūrvakaṁ niyamita-bhojanaṁ kurvan manuṣyaḥ sahasra-go-dānasya puṇya-phalaṁ prāpnoti. tato gacchet rājendra bhartṛ-sthānam anuttamam. aśvamedhasya yajñasya phalaṁ prāpnoti mānavaḥ.

おお、バーラタ族の誉れよ!そこには「シャタ・サーハスラカ」と呼ばれる聖なる渡しがある。そこで沐浴し、ついで戒めを守り、身を慎み、定められた食をとって暮らす者は、牛千頭を施すに等しい功徳を得る。さらにそこから、王の中の最上よ、比類なきバルトリ・スターナへ赴くがよい。そこへ至れば、人はアシュヴァメーダ(馬祭)の果報を得る。

tataḥthen, thereafter
tataḥ:
TypeIndeclinable
Roottatas
gacchetshould go
gacchet:
TypeVerb
Rootgam
FormVidhi-linga, optative (injunctive sense), 3, singular, Parasmaipada
rājendraO best of kings
rājendra:
TypeNoun
Rootrājendra
Formmasculine, vocative, singular
bhartuḥof the lord/husband (bhartṛ)
bhartuḥ:
TypeNoun
Rootbhartṛ
Formmasculine, genitive, singular
sthānamplace, abode
sthānam:
Karma
TypeNoun
Rootsthāna
Formneuter, accusative, singular
anuttamamunsurpassed, excellent
anuttamam:
TypeAdjective
Rootanuttama
Formneuter, accusative, singular
aśvamedhasyaof the Aśvamedha
aśvamedhasya:
TypeNoun
Rootaśvamedha
Formmasculine, genitive, singular
yajñasyaof the sacrifice
yajñasya:
TypeNoun
Rootyajña
Formmasculine, genitive, singular
phalamfruit, result
phalam:
Karma
TypeNoun
Rootphala
Formneuter, accusative, singular
prāpnotiobtains, attains
prāpnoti:
TypeVerb
Rootprāp
FormLat, present, 3, singular, Parasmaipada
mānavaḥa man, human
mānavaḥ:
Karta
TypeNoun
Rootmānava
Formmasculine, nominative, singular

घुलस्त्य उवाच

Ś
Śata-sāhasraka-tīrtha
B
Bhartṛ-sthāna
A
Aśvamedha-yajña
B
Bharata lineage (addressed person)
R
Rājendra (addressed king)

Educational Q&A

Sacred places yield their promised merit when approached with ethical discipline: bathing (external purity) is paired with niyama—restraint, observances, and regulated eating (internal discipline). The verse links pilgrimage to moral self-governance rather than mere travel.

A speaker guides a king (addressed as ‘ornament of the Bharatas’ and ‘best of kings’) through a sequence of tīrthas: first Śata-sāhasraka, where bathing and disciplined living grant the merit of a thousand cow-gifts, and then Bhartṛ-sthāna, whose visit grants the fruit of the Aśvamedha sacrifice.