The Exposition of Hanumān’s Protective Kavaca
Māruti-kavaca
सर्वाग्निव्याधिसंस्तंभकारिणे भयहारिणे । सदा वनफलाहारसंतृप्ताय विशेषतः ॥ ४८ ॥
sarvāgnivyādhisaṃstaṃbhakāriṇe bhayahāriṇe | sadā vanaphalāhārasaṃtṛptāya viśeṣataḥ || 48 ||
Ehrerbietung Ihm, der alle Fieber und Krankheiten zum Stillstand bringt, der die Furcht vertreibt und sich besonders an dem erfreut, der stets zufrieden von Waldfrüchten lebt.
Narada (instructing within a Vedanga/observance context, addressing the divine object of praise, typically Vishnu)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: bhakti
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It presents the deity as both a spiritual refuge (fear-remover) and a healer, while praising disciplined simplicity—contentment with a restrained, sattvic diet—as especially pleasing in devotional practice.
Bhakti here is expressed through reverent praise and lifestyle alignment: devotion is not only recitation but also cultivating contentment and restraint, which are offered as a pleasing form of worship.
It reflects applied dharma and vrata-prayoga (practical observance): regulated diet and disciplined conduct are treated as supportive auxiliaries to mantra and worship, a common technical emphasis in Book 1.3’s instructional tone.