Pūru-vaṁśa, Duṣmanta–Śakuntalā, and the Rise of Mahārāja Bharata
चक्रं दक्षिणहस्तेऽस्य पद्मकोशोऽस्य पादयो: । ईजे महाभिषेकेण सोऽभिषिक्तोऽधिराड् विभु: ॥ २४ ॥ पञ्चपञ्चाशता मेध्यैर्गङ्गायामनु वाजिभि: । मामतेयं पुरोधाय यमुनामनु च प्रभु: ॥ २५ ॥ अष्टसप्ततिमेध्याश्वान् बबन्ध प्रददद् वसु । भरतस्य हि दौष्मन्तेरग्नि: साचीगुणे चित: । सहस्रं बद्वशो यस्मिन् ब्राह्मणा गा विभेजिरे ॥ २६ ॥
cakraṁ dakṣiṇa-haste ’sya padma-kośo ’sya pādayoḥ īje mahābhiṣekeṇa so ’bhiṣikto ’dhirāḍ vibhuḥ
ມະຫາຣາຊາ ພະຣະຕະ ບຸດຂອງດຸສມັນຕະ ມີເຄື່ອງໝາຍຈັກຣະຂອງພຣະສີກຣິດສະນະຢູ່ຝາມືຂວາ ແລະມີເຄື່ອງໝາຍດອກບົວວົນຢູ່ຝາຕີນ. ດ້ວຍພິທີມະຫາພິເສກອັນຍິ່ງໃຫຍ່ເພື່ອບູຊາພຣະບຸຣຸດສູງສຸດ ພຣະອົງໄດ້ຮັບການສະຖາປະນາເປັນອະທິຣາດເຫນືອໂລກທັງປວງ. ຕໍ່ມາ ໂດຍມີ ມາມະເຕຍ ບຸດຂອງິສີພຣຶກຸ ເປັນປຸໂຣຫິດ ພຣະອົງໄດ້ປະກອບອັດສະວະເມທ 55 ຄັ້ງທີ່ຝັ່ງຄົງຄາ ແລະ 78 ຄັ້ງທີ່ຝັ່ງຍະມຸນາ ຈາກສັງຄົມທີ່ປະຣະຍາກໄປຮອດແຫຼ່ງນ້ຳ. ພຣະອົງຕັ້ງໄຟຍັດໃນສະຖານທີ່ດີເລີດ ແລະຖວາຍທຣັບສິນຫຼາຍແກ່ພຣາຫມັນ; ພຣາຫມັນນັບພັນໄດ້ສ່ວນແບ່ງຄົນລະໜຶ່ງ ບັດວະ (13,084) ໂຄ.
As indicated here by the words dauṣmanter agniḥ sācī-guṇe citaḥ, Bharata, the son of Mahārāja Duṣmanta, arranged for many ritualistic ceremonies all over the world, especially all over India on the banks of the Ganges and Yamunā, from the mouth to the source, and all such sacrifices were performed in very distinguished places. As stated in Bhagavad-gītā (3.9) , yajñārthāt karmaṇo ’nyatra loko ’yaṁ karma-bandhanaḥ: “Work done as a sacrifice for Viṣṇu has to be performed; otherwise work binds one to this material world.” Everyone should engage in the performance of yajña, and the sacrificial fire should be ignited everywhere, the entire purpose being to make people happy, prosperous and progressive in spiritual life. Of course, these things were possible before the beginning of Kali-yuga because there were qualified brāhmaṇas who could perform such yajñas. For the present, however, the Brahma-vaivarta Purāṇa enjoins:
This verse describes auspicious emblems—like the discus and lotus-mark—appearing on the emperor, indicating divine favor and fitness to rule, followed by a formal mahābhiṣeka coronation.
Śukadeva Gosvāmī is narrating to King Parīkṣit, continuing the account of the Bharata dynasty and its royal successions.
Leadership should be grounded in sacred responsibility—public honor or authority should follow proven virtue, discipline, and service, not mere ambition.