वर्षंति जलदाः कामं भवन्त्योषधयोऽखिलाः । यत्किंचिद्भूतले ज्ञानं शास्त्रं वा सुरसत्तम । तत्तत्र समभावेन न सत्यं नैव चानृतम्
varṣaṃti jaladāḥ kāmaṃ bhavantyoṣadhayo'khilāḥ | yatkiṃcidbhūtale jñānaṃ śāstraṃ vā surasattama | tattatra samabhāvena na satyaṃ naiva cānṛtam
وتمطر السحب كما يُشتهى، وتنبت جميع الأعشاب الدوائية. وأيُّ علمٍ أو كتابٍ مقدّسٍ على وجه الأرض، يا أفضل الآلهة—فهو هناك، بميزانٍ متساوٍ، ليس حقًّا خالصًا ولا باطلًا خالصًا.
Skanda (deduced)
Listener: surasattama / surādhīśa (best/lord of the gods—typically Indra in such address)
Scene: A cosmic tableau: monsoon clouds releasing measured rain over a verdant earth of medicinal herbs, while sages debate in a hall where scrolls and śāstras glow with mixed light—half luminous, half shadowed—signifying ‘neither true nor untrue’.
It characterizes Dvāpara as balanced and mixed: nature can still be favorable, yet knowledge and discourse are no longer purely aligned with truth.
No specific tīrtha is named in this verse; it supports the chapter’s broader māhātmya discourse through yuga characterization.
None explicitly; the focus is on cosmological and epistemic conditions rather than ritual action.