Previous Verse
Next Verse

Shloka 4

Adhyāya 90: Babhruvāhana’s Reception and the Commencement of Yudhiṣṭhira’s Aśvamedha

घुष्यमाणे महादाने दिक्षु सर्वासु भारत । पतत्सु पुष्पवर्षेषु धर्मराजस्य मूर्थनि

vaiśaṃpāyana uvāca |

ghuṣyamāṇe mahādāne dikṣu sarvāsu bhārata |

patatsu puṣpavarṣeṣu dharmarājasya mūrdhani ||

Vaiśaṃpāyana said: O Bhārata, as Dharmarāja’s great gift was being proclaimed in all directions, and showers of flowers were falling upon his head, the scene marked the public acclaim of generosity and righteousness—setting the stage for a moral test of what truly constitutes “great giving.”

घुष्यमाणेwhen (it was) being proclaimed/noised
घुष्यमाणे:
Adhikarana
TypeVerb
Rootघुष्
Formशानच् (वर्तमानकाले कर्मणि/भावे), नपुंसक, सप्तमी, एकवचन
महादानेin the great gift/charity
महादाने:
Adhikarana
TypeNoun
Rootमहादान
Formनपुंसक, सप्तमी, एकवचन
दिक्षुin the directions
दिक्षु:
Adhikarana
TypeNoun
Rootदिश्
Formस्त्री, सप्तमी, बहुवचन
सर्वासुin all
सर्वासु:
Adhikarana
TypeAdjective
Rootसर्व
Formस्त्री, सप्तमी, बहुवचन
भारतO Bharata
भारत:
TypeNoun
Rootभारत
Formपुं, सम्बोधन, एकवचन
पतत्सुwhile (they were) falling
पतत्सु:
Adhikarana
TypeVerb
Rootपत्
Formशतृ (वर्तमानकाले), नपुंसक, सप्तमी, बहुवचन
पुष्पवर्षेषुin showers of flowers
पुष्पवर्षेषु:
Adhikarana
TypeNoun
Rootपुष्पवर्ष
Formनपुंसक, सप्तमी, बहुवचन
धर्मराजस्यof Dharmaraja (Yudhishthira)
धर्मराजस्य:
TypeNoun
Rootधर्मराज
Formपुं, षष्ठी, एकवचन
मूर्धनिon (his) head
मूर्धनि:
Adhikarana
TypeNoun
Rootमूर्धन्
Formपुं, सप्तमी, एकवचन

वैशग्पायन उवाच

V
Vaiśaṃpāyana
B
Bhārata (Janamejaya)
D
Dharmarāja (Yudhiṣṭhira)
M
mahādāna (great gift/charity)
P
puṣpavarṣa (shower of flowers)

Educational Q&A

Public acclaim and ritual signs (like a rain of flowers) may celebrate generosity, but the narrative context points toward a deeper ethical inquiry: the true greatness of dāna is measured by intention, sacrifice, and the relief of suffering—not merely by scale or reputation.

During Yudhiṣṭhira’s Aśvamedha-related festivities, his immense charity is being loudly praised in every direction, and flowers are said to rain upon his head as a mark of honor; this moment introduces the ensuing episode that challenges conventional ideas of “great giving.”