येनयेन शरीरेण यद्यत्कर्म करोति यः । तेनतेनैव भूयः स प्राप्नोति सकलं फलम्
yenayena śarīreṇa yadyatkarma karoti yaḥ | tenatenaiva bhūyaḥ sa prāpnoti sakalaṃ phalam
ഏത് ഏത് ശരീരത്തിലൂടെ ഒരാൾ ഏത് ഏത് കർമ്മം ചെയ്യുന്നു, അതേ ശരീരത്തിലൂടെയേ അവൻ വീണ്ടും ആ കർമ്മത്തിന്റെ സമ്പൂർണ്ണ ഫലം നിശ്ചയമായി പ്രാപിക്കുന്നു.
Skanda (deduced: Nāgarakhaṇḍa Tīrthamāhātmya narration style)
Scene: A teacher-like figure explains that actions performed through a body return as fruits to the same embodied being; a subtle depiction of rebirth/continuity is suggested through repeated silhouettes or mirrored forms.
One must personally experience the results of one’s own deeds; karma’s fruits are not lost and return to the doer.
This verse functions as a general dharma-teaching within the Tīrthamāhātmya context rather than naming a single tīrtha in the line itself.
No specific rite is prescribed here; it establishes the principle that actions performed during pilgrimage still bear corresponding results.