अहो जना बालिशवत्किमेतां काशीं त्यजेयुः सुकृतैकराशिम् । शालूककंदः प्रतिमज्जनं किं लभेत तद्वत्सुलभा किमेषा
aho janā bāliśavatkimetāṃ kāśīṃ tyajeyuḥ sukṛtaikarāśim | śālūkakaṃdaḥ pratimajjanaṃ kiṃ labheta tadvatsulabhā kimeṣā
¡Ay! ¿Por qué la gente, como niños, abandonaría esta Kāśī, un solo cúmulo de méritos acumulados? ¿Se obtiene la raíz de loto sin sumergirse? Del mismo modo, ¿acaso es tan fácil de conseguir esta (Kāśī)?
Skanda (deduced; Kāśīkhaṇḍa frame commonly Skanda → Agastya)
Tirtha: Kāśī
Type: kshetra
Scene: A river scene: divers plunge into water to retrieve lotus-roots while a narrator points to Kāśī’s ghats, equating the dive with the effort needed to obtain Kāśī’s merit.
Kāśī is not casually attained; it is reached through deep merit—so abandoning it is a sign of spiritual childishness.
Kāśī (Vārāṇasī), portrayed as a rare fruit of accumulated sukṛta.
No explicit ritual; the lotus-root metaphor implies effort, austerity, and merit are required to reach Kāśī.