Puṣkara-Śapatha Itihāsa (Agastya–Indra Dispute at the Tīrthas) | पुष्कर-शपथ-आख्यानम्
भरद्वाज उवाच भरे5सुतान् भरेडशिष्यान् भरे देवान् भरे द्विजान् । भरे भार्या भरे द्वाजं भरद्वाजोडस्मि शोभने,भरद्वाजने कहा--कल्याणी! जो मेरे पुत्र और शिष्य नहीं हैं, उनका भी मैं पालन करता हूँ, तथा देवता, ब्राह्मण, अपनी धर्मपत्नी तथा द्वाज (वर्णसंकर) मनुष्योंका भी भरण-पोषण करता हूँ, इसलिये भरद्वाज नामसे प्रसिद्ध हूँ
bharadvāja uvāca | bhare sutān bhare śiṣyān bhare devān bhare dvijān | bhare bhāryāṃ bhare dvājān bharadvājo 'smi śobhane ||
Bharadvāja berkata: “Wahai yang elok! Aku menanggung anak-anakku; aku menanggung murid-muridku; aku menanggung para dewa (melalui persembahan yang wajar); dan aku menanggung golongan dwija (melalui pemberian yang benar). Aku menanggung isteriku, dan aku juga menanggung mereka yang disebut ‘dvāja’ (orang berdarah campuran). Maka, wahai yang rupawan, aku dikenali sebagai Bharadvāja.”
भरद्वाज उवाच
The verse frames dharma as active support: a righteous person sustains not only one’s own family and students but also the wider sacred and social order—gods through offerings, the twice-born through proper giving, and even socially marginal or mixed-origin people—showing inclusive responsibility rather than narrow self-interest.
Bharadvāja speaks to a woman addressed as “śobhane,” explaining why he is called Bharadvāja: he ‘bears’ (bhare) the burden of maintaining many—sons, disciples, gods, Brahmins, his wife, and others—using a wordplay/etymology to present his identity as grounded in sustained duty.