यांतु क्षिप्रं नयावन्मे पंचेषु शरपीडितम् । मनोविह्वलतां गच्छेदेतत्प्राप्तेरभावतः
yāṃtu kṣipraṃ nayāvanme paṃceṣu śarapīḍitam | manovihvalatāṃ gacchedetatprāpterabhāvataḥ
ते त्वरेने जावोत आणि तिला माझ्याकडे घेऊन येवोत; मी पंचबाणांच्या शरांनी पीडित आहे. हे न मिळाल्यास माझे मन अत्यंत व्याकुळ होईल.
Skanda (deduced for Kāśīkhaṇḍa dialogues; in-context likely a daṇuja/āsura ruler issuing orders)
Scene: The daitya-lord, fevered and restless, speaks of being pierced by the five arrows of Kāma; attendants rush to depart, while the speaker’s face shows burning longing and mental turmoil.
Unchecked desire destabilizes the mind; Purāṇic narratives often portray passion as a force that drives unethical urgency.
No direct tīrtha-glorification in this verse; it is narrative within the Kāśī-khaṇḍa frame.
None; it describes affliction by desire and a command to act.