यः कृशाश्वः कृशधनः कृशभृत्यः कृशातिथिः । स वै प्रोक्तः कृशोनाम न शरीरकृशः कृशऋ
yaḥ kṛśāśvaḥ kṛśadhanaḥ kṛśabhṛtyaḥ kṛśātithiḥ | sa vai proktaḥ kṛśonāma na śarīrakṛśaḥ kṛśaṛ
He whose horses are meagre, whose wealth is meagre, whose servants are meagre, and whose hospitality to guests is meagre—he alone is called ‘truly meagre’, not merely one who is thin in body.
Lomaharṣaṇa (Sūta) (deduced for Māheśvarakhaṇḍa context)
Scene: A householder’s courtyard: a weary traveler-guest arrives; the host’s ‘meagre hospitality’ is contrasted with the ideal of offering water/food/seat.
True ‘meagreness’ is not bodily thinness but inability or refusal to sustain dharmic household duties like hospitality.
No tīrtha is mentioned; the verse emphasizes gṛhastha-dharma, especially atithi-satkāra.
Atithi-dharma is implied: one should properly receive and feed guests rather than be ‘kṛśātithi’ (stingy in hospitality).