काशीभयहरो नित्यमैश्यां शालकटंकटात् । त्रिमुखो नाम विघ्नेशः कपिसिंहद्विपाननः
kāśībhayaharo nityamaiśyāṃ śālakaṭaṃkaṭāt | trimukho nāma vighneśaḥ kapisiṃhadvipānanaḥ
Im Nordosten, bei Śālakaṭaṃkaṭa, ist Vighneśa namens Trimukha — dreigesichtig: Affe, Löwe und Elefant — der in Kāśī stets die Furcht vertreibt.
Skanda
Tirtha: Śālakaṭaṃkaṭa Trimukha Vighneśa
Type: kshetra
Scene: Trimukha Vināyaka in the north-east quarter: a single body with three faces—kapi (monkey), siṃha (lion), and gaja (elephant)—radiating protective power; frightened pilgrims regain composure as a dark ‘bhaya’ mist disperses.
Kāśī’s Vināyakas are portrayed as living guardians; Trimukha is invoked as a steady remover of fear.
Śālakaṭaṃkaṭa in the north-east quarter of Kāśī’s sacred landscape.
Implicit worship/approach of Vighneśa; the verse mainly identifies the form and location rather than detailing a procedure.