भासनाद्भर्त्सनाद्भस्म पांसुः पांसुत्वदायतः । पापानां क्षारणात्क्षारो बुधेरेवं निरुच्यते
bhāsanādbhartsanādbhasma pāṃsuḥ pāṃsutvadāyataḥ | pāpānāṃ kṣāraṇātkṣāro budherevaṃ nirucyate
称其为 bhasma,是因它发光并呵斥邪恶;称其为尘(pāṃsu),是因它使万物归于尘土;称其为碱(kṣāra),是因它能“刮除”罪垢——智者如是阐明其义。
Skanda (deduced: Kāśīkhaṇḍa context, typically Skanda → Agastya)
Tirtha: Kāśī (Avimukta)
Type: kshetra
Scene: A sage-teacher explains three names—bhasma, pāṃsu, kṣāra—while showing ash in his palm; behind him, faint imagery of a cremation ground and a shining inner light, symbolizing impermanence and purification.
Purāṇic dharma often teaches through nirukti (etymology): bhasma is praised as that which purifies, humbles, and removes sin.
The verse supports the Kāśī tīrtha narrative by explaining the sanctity of bhasma used in the tīrtha’s liberating episode.
No explicit rite is commanded here; it provides doctrinal justification for using bhasma/vibhūti as a purifier.