नंदिन्युवाच । तपः कृते प्रशंसंति त्रेतायां ध्यानमेव च । द्वापरे यज्ञयोगं च दानमेकं कलौ युगे । सर्वेषामेव दानानां नास्ति दानमतः परम्
naṃdinyuvāca | tapaḥ kṛte praśaṃsaṃti tretāyāṃ dhyānameva ca | dvāpare yajñayogaṃ ca dānamekaṃ kalau yuge | sarveṣāmeva dānānāṃ nāsti dānamataḥ param
Disse Nandinī: Na era Kṛta louvam a austeridade; na Tretā, somente a meditação; na Dvāpara, a disciplina do sacrifício. Mas na era de Kali, a caridade é o único caminho supremo—entre todas as dádivas, não há dádiva mais elevada do que esta.
Nandinī
Listener: Vyāghra (tiger) and/or the inquiring seeker in the dialogue frame
Scene: Nandinī, composed and authoritative, enumerates the four yugas’ principal disciplines, culminating in Kali’s dāna; symbolic vignettes of tapas, meditation, yajña-fire, and giving appear around her.
Dharma adapts by age; in Kali-yuga, dāna (charitable giving) is emphasized as the highest practical spiritual discipline.
The verse is part of a larger Tīrthamāhātmya narrative; the local sanctity culminates in worship of a renowned Liṅga mentioned shortly after.
It prescribes dāna (charity) as the foremost practice in Kali-yuga.