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## The Twenty-Eighth Parva
Thus, the Chakravarti Bharat, praised by the assembly of people for the auspicious benefits gained from the ripening of his good deeds, arrived at the assembly hall. There, amidst the circle of kings, he sat upon a magnificent royal throne, like Indra himself. || 220 ||
**Harini**
As the wind, gently blowing, stirred the shore-side forest, breaking through the clusters of red Ashoka blossoms, the Lord, remembering the Jina, resided happily with his army, encamped along the banks of the Ganga, receiving praise and blessings for his conquest of the ocean. || 221 ||
Thus ends the Twenty-Eighth Parva, named "The Description of the Victory at the Gate of the Eastern Ocean," in the Triṣaṣṭiśalākāpuruṣacaritra, a collection of the Mahāpurāṇa, composed by the venerable Jinaseṇācārya, known as the Ārṣa. || 28 ||
**Note:** The numbers in the text refer to the verses in the original Sanskrit text.