अधरोत्तरभावश्च मरणं राष्ट्रविभ्रमः । अन्योन्याभिभवाद्दुःखमन्योन्यातिशयात्पुनः
adharottarabhāvaśca maraṇaṃ rāṣṭravibhramaḥ | anyonyābhibhavādduḥkhamanyonyātiśayātpunaḥ
此世有尊卑升沉,有死亡,亦有邦国倾覆。忧苦起于彼此压胜,又复起于争强好胜、躁动不息的竞逐。
Lomaharṣaṇa (Sūta) to the sages (deduced from Māheśvarakhaṇḍa context)
Scene: A wheel-of-fortune composition: a king ascending a throne while another falls; funeral procession indicating mṛtyu; a crumbling fort for ‘rāṣṭra-vibhrama’; two rival figures locked in contest, both shadowed by sorrow.
Worldly life is marked by instability—status shifts, death, and political upheaval—so one should cultivate detachment rather than rivalry.
No specific tīrtha is named in this verse; it functions as a general dharma-teaching within the Kaumārikākhaṇḍa.
No explicit ritual is prescribed here; the emphasis is on insight into suffering as a basis for renunciation.