सामोदमोदकभरैर्वरधूपदीपैर्माल्यैः सुगंधबहुलैरनुलेपनैश्च । संप्रीण्यकाशिनगरीफलदानदक्षं प्रोक्त्वाथ मां क इह सिध्यति नैव ढुंढे
sāmodamodakabharairvaradhūpadīpairmālyaiḥ sugaṃdhabahulairanulepanaiśca | saṃprīṇyakāśinagarīphaladānadakṣaṃ proktvātha māṃ ka iha sidhyati naiva ḍhuṃḍhe
بعد أن أرضيتُ مدينة كاشي (Kāśī) بأكوام من حلوى المودَكا (modaka)، وبالبخور الطيب والمصابيح، وبالأكاليل وبالمراهم الغزيرة العطر، أعلنتُها بالغة القدرة على منح الثمرات. فمَن ذا يطلب هنا إنجازًا آخر؟ إنني لا أفتّش عن شيء سواه.
Skanda (deduced from Kāśīkhaṇḍa context: Skanda speaking to Agastya)
Tirtha: Kāśī (as kṣetra itself)
Type: kshetra
Listener: Pilgrimage-inquirer (typically a ṛṣi such as Agastya in Kāśīkhaṇḍa frames; exact interlocutor not specified in the verse)
Scene: A devotee in Kāśī offers heaps of modakas, incense, lamps, garlands, and fragrant unguents before a sanctified cityscape—ghats, temples, and the luminous presence of the kṣetra personified as a boon-giver.
Kāśī is portrayed as intrinsically capable of granting spiritual fruits; once she is sincerely pleased through worship, seeking other siddhis elsewhere becomes unnecessary.
Kāśī-nagarī (Vārāṇasī), the celebrated sacred city in the Kāśīkhaṇḍa, is directly praised as a giver of results (phaladā).
Offerings and worship-items are listed: modakas (sweet offerings), incense (dhūpa), lamps (dīpa), garlands (mālya), and fragrant unguents (anulepana) used to propitiate Kāśī.