The Description of the Four Durgā Mantras
करालविकरालाख्यावतिकालस्तृतीयकः । महाकालश्चतुर्थः स्यादथ पद्मेष्टशक्तयः ॥ १७ ॥
karālavikarālākhyāvatikālastṛtīyakaḥ | mahākālaścaturthaḥ syādatha padmeṣṭaśaktayaḥ || 17 ||
القِسمُ الثالثُ من الزمان يُسمّى أتيكالا (Atikāla)، ويُعرَف باسمَي «كارالا» و«فيكارالا». وأمّا الرابع فيُقال له مهاكالا (Mahākāla). ثم تُوصَف قوى (شاكتي) بادميشْتا (Padmeṣṭa، أي براهما).
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in the Vedanga/technical sciences section)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It frames Time (Kāla) as a graded, awe-inspiring cosmic principle—moving from Atikāla (Karāla/Vikarāla) to Mahākāla—preparing the reader to understand creation and governance as functions under higher powers, not merely human chronology.
Indirectly: by highlighting Mahākāla as ‘Great Time’, it encourages detachment from fleeting conditions and supports devotion by orienting the mind toward the timeless Lord beyond Kāla, a common purāṇic foundation for steady Vishnu-bhakti.
It reflects Vedāṅga-style technical enumeration of Kāla (time-divisions), relevant to Jyotiṣa and calendrical reasoning used to time rites, vratas, and observances in Narada Purana rituals.