तत्र पादोदकं तीर्थं यत्र देवेन शार्ङ्गिणा । आदौ पादौ क्षलितौ तु मंदराच्चागतेन यत्
tatra pādodakaṃ tīrthaṃ yatra devena śārṅgiṇā | ādau pādau kṣalitau tu maṃdarāccāgatena yat
Dort ist die heilige Tīrtha namens Pādodaka, wo der Gott Śārṅgin (Viṣṇu, Träger des Śārṅga-Bogens) zu Beginn seine Füße mit Wasser wusch, das vom Berge Mandāra herbeikam.
Skanda (contextual continuation)
Tirtha: Pādodaka
Type: kund
Scene: A mythic tableau: Viṣṇu (Śārṅgin) washes his feet; the water flows from Mandāra and becomes the Pādodaka tīrtha, shimmering as it joins the sacred river landscape of Kāśī.
Purāṇic tīrthas are anchored in divine acts; sacred water becomes a vehicle of grace because it is linked to the Lord’s presence and deeds.
Pādodaka tīrtha in Kāśī, associated with Viṣṇu (Śārṅgin).
Implicitly, reverence for and use of the tīrtha-water (pādodaka); later verses specify rites performed there.