मखार्थं ब्रह्मणा सृष्टाः पशु द्रुम मृगौषधीः । निघ्नन्नहिंसको विप्रस्तासामपि शुभा गतिः
makhārthaṃ brahmaṇā sṛṣṭāḥ paśu druma mṛgauṣadhīḥ | nighnannahiṃsako viprastāsāmapi śubhā gatiḥ
Pour le makha (sacrifice), Brahmā créa les bêtes, les arbres, les cerfs et les plantes médicinales. On dit que le brāhmaṇa qui tue dans ce but sacrificiel est non-violent; et pour ces êtres aussi il est une destinée heureuse.
Skanda (deduced; Kāśīkhaṇḍa commonly Skanda speaking to Agastya)
Puranic dharma distinguishes ordinary harm from ritually bounded acts framed by yajña; intention and scriptural context are central.
The passage belongs to the Kāśīkhaṇḍa (Kāśī/Vārāṇasī setting), but the verse focuses on yajña-ethics rather than naming a particular tīrtha.
It references makha/yajña as the context in which certain acts are considered sanctioned within Vedic-sacrificial parameters.