The Description of the Four Durgā Mantras
अष्टपत्रावृतं बाह्ये वृतं षोडशभिर्दलैः । चतुरस्रीकृतं बाह्ये कांत्या दृष्टिमनोहरम् ॥ १३२ ॥
aṣṭapatrāvṛtaṃ bāhye vṛtaṃ ṣoḍaśabhirdalaiḥ | caturasrīkṛtaṃ bāhye kāṃtyā dṛṣṭimanoharam || 132 ||
في الظاهر يُحاط بثماني بتلات، ثم يُطوَّق بستَّ عشرة بتلة. وخارجًا يُجعل مربّعًا، وبضيائه البهيّ يكون بهيجًا للنظر ومُسرًّا للقلب.
Narada (descriptive instruction within a technical/ritual-visualization passage, traditionally narrated in dialogue setting)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It describes a sacred lotus-based mandala/yantra form—layers of petals and a square outer enclosure—used to focus the mind, stabilize meditation, and establish an ordered ritual space for upāsanā.
By prescribing a beautiful, radiant, structured form for contemplation, it supports bhakti through visual concentration (dhyāna) and reverent ritual attention, helping the devotee keep the deity’s worship-field orderly and absorbing.
It reflects applied technical knowledge used in ritual practice—precise geometric arrangement (petal counts and square boundary) relevant to kalpa-style procedure and upāsanā visualization methods.