अनुपोष्य त्रिरात्राणि तीर्थान्यनभिगम्य च । अदत्त्वा कांचनं गाश्च दरिद्रो नाम जायते
anupoṣya trirātrāṇi tīrthānyanabhigamya ca | adattvā kāṃcanaṃ gāśca daridro nāma jāyate
He who does not fast for three nights, does not visit the tīrthas, and does not give gold and cows, comes to be known as ‘poor’—bereft of merit.
Skanda (deduced: Kāśīkhaṇḍa commonly Skanda → Agastya)
Tirtha: General tīrtha-dharma (Kāśī as exemplar)
Type: kshetra
Listener: null
Scene: A pilgrim observes a three-night vow with simple food abstention, then offers a cow and gold to a worthy recipient near a ghāṭa; a shadowy figure representing ‘puṇya-dāridrya’ fades away.
Neglect of austerity, pilgrimage, and charity is portrayed as real poverty—poverty of dharma and merit.
Tīrthas collectively; the verse stresses the obligation to approach pilgrimage places.
Trirātra upavāsa (three-night fast), tīrtha-abhigamana (visiting tīrthas), and dāna of gold and cows.