सत्यं वदंति नासत्यं दैवप्राधान्यवादिनः । दैवमेव फलेदेकं नोद्यमो नापरं बलम्
satyaṃ vadaṃti nāsatyaṃ daivaprādhānyavādinaḥ | daivameva phaledekaṃ nodyamo nāparaṃ balam
Those who proclaim the supremacy of destiny speak truth, not falsehood: “Destiny alone ripens into fruit; human effort is not the true force, nor is any other power.”
Narrative voices within Kāśīkhaṇḍa (contextually Skanda’s narration; here: women/conversants speaking among themselves)
Tirtha: Kāśī
Type: kshetra
Listener: Śaunaka and sages (frame) / internal interlocutors (companions)
Scene: A calm conversational setting in Kāśī: companions debating destiny and effort, with the spiritual aura of the city in the background—ghāṭas, lamps, and distant Viśvanātha spire.
It highlights a worldview where providence (daiva) is treated as the decisive factor behind outcomes, relativizing personal effort.
The broader frame is Kāśī (Vārāṇasī) in the Kāśīkhaṇḍa, though this verse itself is philosophical rather than a direct tirtha-glorification.
None explicitly; the verse focuses on causality (fate vs effort), not a rite.