दन्ताश्चलाश्चला लक्ष्मीर्यौवनं जीवितं नृप । चलाचलमतीवेदं दानमेवं गृहं नृणाम्
dantāścalāścalā lakṣmīryauvanaṃ jīvitaṃ nṛpa | calācalamatīvedaṃ dānamevaṃ gṛhaṃ nṛṇām
大王啊,牙齿不稳,福运(吉祥天女拉克希米)不稳,青春与生命亦不稳。既深知此间万事摇曳无常,当修行布施;而人之家庭亦自是不牢靠。
Lomaśa (addressing King Indradyumna)
Listener: nṛpa (king)
Scene: A king listens as a sage enumerates impermanence; in the background, symbolic images: falling teeth, slipping coins, fading youth, a setting sun; foreground shows a householder giving alms to a pilgrim.
Because all worldly supports—body, wealth, youth, and life—are unstable, one should invest in dharma through dāna (charity) and detachment.
No single tīrtha is named in this verse; it functions as a general dharma-teaching within the Kaumārikā-khaṇḍa narrative.
Dāna (charitable giving) is recommended as the dharmic response to impermanence.