Kali’s Complaint to Brahma and the Arrival of Śrī (Jayaśrī) in Bali’s Court
भूभ्यां सदा ब्राह्मणभूषितायां क्षत्रान्वितायां दृढवापितायाम् शुश्रुषणासक्तसमुद्भवाया मृद्धिं प्रयान्तीह नराधिपेन्द्राः
bhūbhyāṃ sadā brāhmaṇabhūṣitāyāṃ kṣatrānvitāyāṃ dṛḍhavāpitāyām śuśruṣaṇāsaktasamudbhavāyā mṛddhiṃ prayāntīha narādhipendrāḥ
جس سرزمین کو ہمیشہ برہمنوں کی زینت حاصل ہو، جو کشتریوں سے آراستہ، مضبوطی سے آباد اور خوب قائم ہو، اور جس کی ترقی دھرم کی خدمت اور اہلِ فضل کی شُشروشا (خدمت گزاری) سے پیدا ہو—ایسی زمین میں یہاں سرفراز بادشاہ خوشحالی پاتے ہیں۔
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It implies a realm guided by learning, ritual order, ethical counsel, and restraint—brāhmaṇas as a civilizational ‘ornament’ that legitimizes and refines royal power.
In this didactic context it points to a kingdom that is firmly founded—securely organized, well-settled, and institutionally stable (fortifications, administration, agrarian order, and law). The stress is on durability rather than transient conquest.
Purāṇic political ethics frames prosperity as a consequence of disciplined service—toward dharma, elders, teachers, and the public good. A ruler’s attentive service creates trust and order, which in turn yields mṛddhi (flourishing).