गोदाश्रमे त्रिसन्ध्या तु गङ्गाद्वारे रतिप्रिया । शिवचण्डे सभानन्दा नन्दिनी देविकातटे
godāśrame trisandhyā tu gaṅgādvāre ratipriyā | śivacaṇḍe sabhānandā nandinī devikātaṭe
In Godāśrama ist sie Trisandhyā, die der drei heiligen Zeitübergänge. In Gaṅgādvāra ist sie Ratipriyā, die an Hingabe und Liebe Gefallen findet. In Śivacaṇḍa ist sie Sabhānandā, Freude der göttlichen Versammlung. Und am Ufer der Devikā heißt sie Nandinī, die Erfreuende.
Skanda (deduced)
Tirtha: Gaṅgādvāra (explicit); Devikā-taṭa (explicit); Godāśrama; Śivacaṇḍa
Type: ghat
Scene: A pilgrimage-map tableau: the Goddess appears in four vignettes—at an āśrama at dawn/noon/dusk (Trisandhyā), at Haridwar’s Ganga-gate (Ratipriyā), in a divine assembly-hall near a Śiva shrine (Sabhānandā), and on a riverbank shrine of Devikā (Nandinī).
Time (sandhyā), rivers, and pilgrimage gateways become sacred when remembered as seats of the Goddess, aligning daily discipline with tīrtha merit.
Gaṅgādvāra (widely identified as Haridwar), Godāśrama, Śivacaṇḍa, and the Devikā riverbank (Devikā-nadī region).
Trisandhyā implicitly points to sandhyā-vandana and worship at the three daily junctions; river contexts imply snāna and pūjā.