कल्पवृक्षोंऽगणे यस्य कुलिशं यस्य चायुधम् । सिद्ध्यष्टकं हि यद्द्वारि स सिद्ध्यै प्रार्थयेद्द्विजम्
kalpavṛkṣoṃ'gaṇe yasya kuliśaṃ yasya cāyudham | siddhyaṣṭakaṃ hi yaddvāri sa siddhyai prārthayeddvijam
សម្រាប់អ្នកដែលក្នុងលានផ្ទះមានដើមកល្បវೃក្ស អាវុធជាវជ្រៈ ហើយនៅមាត់ទ្វារមានសិទ្ធិទាំងប្រាំបីឈររង់ចាំ—តើអ្នកនោះនឹងសុំជោគជ័យពីទ្វិជ (ព្រាហ្មណ៍) ដែរឬ?
Unnamed sage (context: speaking to Lopāmudrā)
Listener: Lopāmudrā
Scene: A symbolic vision: a divine courtyard with a kalpavṛkṣa, a radiant vajra-like weapon displayed, and the eight siddhis personified as attendants at the threshold; Parāśara’s rhetorical question underscores the irony of such a being requesting success from a brāhmaṇa.
One who is truly sovereign in spiritual power lacks nothing; dependence and fear arise from misperception, not from reality.
The verse is metaphorical; within Kāśīkhaṇḍa it supports the greatness and inviolability of Kāśī/Avimukta.
None; it contrasts worldly petitioning with intrinsic divine sufficiency.