Yuddha-yajña-vyākhyāna (The Battle as Sacrifice): Ambarīṣa–Indra Saṃvāda
अमग्बरीष उवाच सागरान्तां महीं कृत्स्नामनुशास्य यथाविधि । चातुर्वण्यें यथाशास्त्र प्रवृत्ती धर्मकाम्यया
ambarīṣa uvāca | sāgarāntāṃ mahīṃ kṛtsnām anuśāsya yathāvidhi | cāturvarṇye yathāśāstraṃ pravṛttiṃ dharmakāmyayā ||
安婆利沙说道:“天帝啊!我曾依正法治理并护持这四海为界的全大地;又遵循《沙斯特罗》(śāstra)之训,为求护持达摩,勤行四姓之职分。”
अमग्बरीष उवाच
A ruler’s legitimacy rests on governing the whole realm according to prescribed norms (vidhi/śāstra) and actively sustaining dharma through proper maintenance of social duties (cāturvarṇya), not merely through power or conquest.
Ambarīṣa addresses a superior (implied by the vocative “Devarāja” in the accompanying Hindi gloss) and recounts his own conduct as a king: he ruled the earth up to the ocean’s bounds in a lawful manner and remained devoted to śāstra-guided performance of duties connected with the four varṇas, driven by commitment to dharma.