परं नो दृग्गतान्येव दूरे दूरे व्रजंत्यहो । दैवादद्यैकमायांतं दृष्ट्वा कार्पटिकं मुने
paraṃ no dṛggatānyeva dūre dūre vrajaṃtyaho | daivādadyaikamāyāṃtaṃ dṛṣṭvā kārpaṭikaṃ mune
Ngunit ang anumang masilayan ng aming mga mata ay tila lalong lumalayo, palayo nang palayo—ay, sa aba! Datapwa’t ngayon, sa tadhana, nang makita ang isang pulubing balot sa basahan na papalapit, O muni…
Preta (departed spirit), addressing a sage (mune) (deduced)
Tirtha: Kāśī
Type: kshetra
Listener: muni (sage)
Scene: A hungry wanderer watches desirable things slip away in the distance; in the foreground a rag-clad mendicant (karpaṭika) approaches calmly, staff and begging bowl, eyes serene.
Desire continually recedes and remains unfulfilled; providence can bring a decisive encounter that turns one toward liberation.
Kāśī is the narrative world of the Kāśīkhaṇḍa, though no named tīrtha appears in this verse.
None; the verse sets up an encounter driven by daiva (fate).