सरलैः पनसैर्वृक्षैस्तिंदुकैः करवीरकैः । मंदारैः पारिजातैश्च मलयैश्चंदनैस्तथा
saralaiḥ panasairvṛkṣaistiṃdukaiḥ karavīrakaiḥ | maṃdāraiḥ pārijātaiśca malayaiścaṃdanaistathā
That mountain was adorned with śāla-like pines (sarala), jackfruit trees, tiṃduka trees, and karavīra shrubs; and also with celestial mandāra and pārijāta blossoms, as well as fragrant Malaya sandalwood.
Narrator (contextual; within Prabhāsa Khaṇḍa Arbuda Khaṇḍa, presented as a descriptive narration of Arbuda’s glory)
Tirtha: Arbuda-parvata
Type: peak
Scene: Arbuda’s slopes with sarala pines, jackfruit and tiṃduka trees, karavīra shrubs, and an overlay of celestial mandāra and pārijāta blossoms; wafts of Malaya sandalwood fragrance suggested by curling aromatic streams.
A tīrtha’s sanctity is reflected in its divinely ordered ecology—its beauty and fragrance signify accumulated puṇya and a dharmic landscape.
Mount Arbuda (Arbuda-parvata), praised in the Arbuda Khaṇḍa of the Prabhāsa Khaṇḍa.
None in this verse; it is a māhātmya-style description of the sacred environment.
Read Skanda Purana in the Vedapath app
Scan the QR code to open this directly in the app, with audio, word-by-word meanings, and more.