धिग्धिक्कलिप्रिय त्वां च रागे वैराग्यकारकम् । त्वया कृतं सर्वमेतद्विधेस्तस्य तथान्तरम्
dhigdhikkalipriya tvāṃ ca rāge vairāgyakārakam | tvayā kṛtaṃ sarvametadvidhestasya tathāntaram
Vergonha sobre ti, ó “amado de Kali”, tu que produzes desapego onde deveria haver amor e apego! Tudo isto foi feito por ti, e igualmente a perturbação daquele decreto do Criador (Vidhātṛ).
Devapatnīs (deduced from immediate context: they speak to Nārada)
Scene: A group of divine women, faces stern, point in accusation toward a sage-like figure labeled ‘kali-priya’; the atmosphere is charged—stormy clouds or dark aura behind him—while a faint image of Brahmā’s ordinance (a cosmic scroll or lotus-throne) appears symbolically disrupted.
Words can uphold dharma or fracture it; stirring needless dispassion and disorder is condemned as a Kali-like tendency.
No site is mentioned in this verse; it belongs to the narrative portion within the Tīrthamāhātmya.
None is stated.