सकृद्यत्राप्लुतो धीमान्दहेदघमहोदधिम् । चौरतीर्थं ततः पुण्यं कपिलेश्वर सन्निधौ
sakṛdyatrāpluto dhīmāndahedaghamahodadhim | cauratīrthaṃ tataḥ puṇyaṃ kapileśvara sannidhau
Là où le sage, fût-ce en s’immergeant une seule fois, brûle l’immense océan du péché ; ensuite se trouve le méritoire Caura Tīrtha, près de Kapileśvara.
Skanda (deduced: Kāśī-khaṇḍa commonly Skanda speaking to Agastya)
Tirtha: Caura Tīrtha
Type: ghat
Listener: Typically a sage/assembly (e.g., Agastya or other ṛṣis in Kāśīkhaṇḍa frames; exact interlocutor not provided in the excerpt)
Scene: A pilgrim descends stone steps to a small Kāśī water-spot (tīrtha-kunda/ghāṭa), with Kapileśvara’s shrine visible nearby; the water glows as if consuming darkness, symbolizing the ‘ocean of sin’ being burned.
Even a single sincere act at a sanctified place can radically purify accumulated wrongdoing.
Caura Tīrtha, located near Kapileśvara.
A single snāna/immersion is highlighted as sufficient to destroy great sin.