चेष्टास्त्यज दरिद्राणां धूलिधूसरिणाममूः । अभ्यस्यविद्याः सकला भोगान्निर्विश्य चोत्तमान्
ceṣṭāstyaja daridrāṇāṃ dhūlidhūsariṇāmamūḥ | abhyasyavidyāḥ sakalā bhogānnirviśya cottamān
Renonce à ces manières des indigents, poussiéreuses et basses. Exerce-toi à toutes les sciences, puis jouis des plaisirs les plus nobles.
Skanda (narrating to Agastya, context of Kāśīkhaṇḍa)
Scene: A stern father admonishes his son to abandon slovenly, dust-covered habits and to practice all branches of learning; symbols of scholarship and refined pleasures appear as temptations in the background.
The verse reflects a worldly counsel (artha–kāma) that later Purāṇic teaching typically transcends by directing one toward bhakti and liberation.
No particular tīrtha is named; the Kāśīkhaṇḍa setting remains the implicit sacred background.
None; it recommends education (vidyā-abhyāsa) and a lifestyle shift.