शंके चित्त भुवो राज्ञो लसत्पटकुटीद्वयम् । अनर्घ्यरत्नकोशाढ्यं तम्या वक्षोरुहद्वयम्
śaṃke citta bhuvo rājño lasatpaṭakuṭīdvayam | anarghyaratnakośāḍhyaṃ tamyā vakṣoruhadvayam
I suspect that the very dwelling of the King of Love has become this pair of shining cloth-pavilions—her two breasts—rich as though filled with treasuries of priceless jewels.
Skanda (deduced: Kāśīkhaṇḍa commonly Skanda → Agastya)
Even worldly beauty, when framed within Kāśī’s sacred narrative, is presented as a poetic pointer to the extraordinary power of devotion and auspiciousness in Śiva’s city.
Kāśī (Vārāṇasī) in the Kāśīkhaṇḍa; the verse participates in the broader Kāśī-māhātmya atmosphere rather than naming a single tirtha.
No explicit ritual is prescribed in this verse; it is descriptive praise within the Kāśī-māhātmya context.