अधीत्य चतुरो वेदान्कृत्वा चैवार्चनं हरेः । स्नात्वा च सर्वतीर्थेषु जागरे तत्फलं हरेः
adhītya caturo vedānkṛtvā caivārcanaṃ hareḥ | snātvā ca sarvatīrtheṣu jāgare tatphalaṃ hareḥ
The fruit that arises from studying the four Vedas, from worshiping Hari, and from bathing at all tīrthas—that very fruit is obtained through Hari’s night-vigil.
Skanda (deduced from section context)
Tirtha: Dvārakā (Hari-jāgara within Dvārakā-māhātmya)
Type: kshetra
Scene: A symbolic tableau: on one side Vedic students, on another pilgrims bathing at many rivers, and in the center a single devotee keeping Hari’s vigil—showing all merits converging into the vigil.
A single concentrated act of bhakti—Hari’s night-vigil—is praised as equivalent to vast scriptural study and universal pilgrimage.
Dvārakā is the implied tirtha-context, while the verse also universalizes merit across all tīrthas.
Observe Hari’s jāgara; it is taught to yield the same fruit as Veda-study, Hari-arcana, and bathing at all tīrthas.