आर्द्रधात्रीफलोन्माना मृदः शौचे प्रकीर्तिताः । सर्वाश्चाहुतयोप्येवं ग्रासाश्चांद्रायणेपि च । प्रागास्य उदगास्योवा सूपविष्टः शुचौ भुवि । उपस्पृशेद्विहीनायां तुषांगारास्थिभस्मभिः
ārdradhātrīphalonmānā mṛdaḥ śauce prakīrtitāḥ | sarvāścāhutayopyevaṃ grāsāścāṃdrāyaṇepi ca | prāgāsya udagāsyovā sūpaviṣṭaḥ śucau bhuvi | upaspṛśedvihīnāyāṃ tuṣāṃgārāsthibhasmabhiḥ
Untuk bersuci, sukatan tanah yang digunakan dinyatakan sebesar buah dhātrī (āmalakī) yang segar. Demikian juga sukatan yang sama terpakai bagi semua āhuti dan bagi suapan dalam nazar Cāndrāyaṇa. Menghadap timur atau utara, duduk dengan tertib di bumi yang suci, hendaklah melakukan upaspṛśa/ācamana; jika (tanah/air yang sesuai) tiada, boleh menggunakan sekam, arang, abu tulang atau abu sebagai ganti.
Skanda (deduced: Kāśīkhaṇḍa commonly as Skanda teaching Agastya)
Tirtha: Kāśī-kṣetra (ritual conduct context)
Type: kshetra
Scene: A ritual teacher demonstrates a measured clod of earth the size of a fresh āmalakī; beside him, a vrata-observer counts Cāndrāyaṇa morsels; a clean mat on the ground is oriented east/north; a small tray shows substitutes—chaff, charcoal, bone-ash, ash—labeled for scarcity situations.
Purification is governed by precise dharmic measures and mindful orientation, yet dharma also provides practical substitutes in scarcity.
The instruction belongs to the Kāśī Khaṇḍa’s ritual framework; it does not single out a named tīrtha in this verse.
Earth for cleansing is measured by a fresh āmalakī; the same standard applies to offerings and Cāndrāyaṇa morsels; face east or north on clean ground; substitutes like chaff/charcoal/ashes are allowed if needed.