किं ते शंखेन खङ्गेन किं ते मंत्रास्त्रविद्यया । किं च तेन प्रयत्नेन किं प्रभावेण भूयसा
kiṃ te śaṃkhena khaṅgena kiṃ te maṃtrāstravidyayā | kiṃ ca tena prayatnena kiṃ prabhāveṇa bhūyasā
法螺と剣があなたに何の役に立ちましょう。真言と武器の術を知ることが何の役に立ちましょう。肝心の時に叶わぬなら、あらゆる努力も、まして大いなる「力」も、何の益がありましょう。
A grieving woman (queen/consort), continuing the rebuke of the king
Listener: राजा/वीर (implied)
Scene: Foreground: conch and sword placed unused; a learned warrior with mantra-scrolls looks helpless; the admonisher points to the futility of these at the crisis moment.
Skills, mantras, and power are validated by dharmic application—especially protecting the vulnerable—rather than by possession alone.
No site is referenced; the verse is ethical and didactic.
None; it critiques performative strength and unused capability.