स्थिरापायं कायं जननमरणक्लेशनिलयं विहायास्यां काश्यामहहपरिगृह्णीत न कुतः । वपुस्तेजोरूपं स्थिरतरपरानंदसदनं विमूढोऽसौ जंतुः स्फुटितमिवकांम्यं विनिमयन्
sthirāpāyaṃ kāyaṃ jananamaraṇakleśanilayaṃ vihāyāsyāṃ kāśyāmahahaparigṛhṇīta na kutaḥ | vapustejorūpaṃ sthirataraparānaṃdasadanaṃ vimūḍho'sau jaṃtuḥ sphuṭitamivakāṃmyaṃ vinimayan
Warum nur, ach, gibt der Mensch diesen Körper nicht auf—unsicher und vergänglich, bloß eine Stätte der Mühen von Geburt und Tod—und nimmt stattdessen Zuflucht in diesem Kāśī? Denn hier erlangt das verkörperte Wesen eine Gestalt aus göttlichem Glanz, eine weit beständigere Wohnstatt höchster Wonne; doch das verblendete Geschöpf, als tausche es einen makellosen Edelstein, vertauscht dieses unschätzbare Gut gegen bloß Begehrtes.
Skanda (deduced for Kāśī-khaṇḍa context: Skanda instructing Agastya)
Tirtha: Kāśī / Avimukta
Type: kshetra
Listener: Sages / devotees seeking Kāśī’s secret of liberation
Scene: A human figure stands between two ‘bodies’: one frail, cracked, and shadowed (saṃsāra-body), and another radiant, made of light (tejorūpa) arising in Kāśī’s luminous sacred space; a jewel-trade metaphor shown as a flawless gem being exchanged for a trivial object.
Detach from the perishable body and seek the higher, enduring state of supreme bliss promised through refuge in sacred Kāśī.
Kāśī (Vārāṇasī), praised as a liberating sacred geography where the being attains a radiant, blissful state.
No specific rite (snāna, dāna, japa) is prescribed in this verse; it emphasizes renunciation of bodily attachment and taking refuge/dwelling in Kāśī.