The Account of the Lalitā Hymn, the Protective Armor
Kavaca), and the Thousand Names (Sahasranāma
अशोका ह्यमला पूर्णा पूर्णा भाग्योद्यता तथा । विवेका विभवा विश्वा वितता च प्रकीर्तिता ॥ १२९ ॥
aśokā hyamalā pūrṇā pūrṇā bhāgyodyatā tathā | vivekā vibhavā viśvā vitatā ca prakīrtitā || 129 ||
Sie wird verkündet als Aśokā (ohne Kummer), Amalā (makellos), Pūrṇā—vollkommen, ja ganz und gar vollkommen—und auch als Bhāgyodyatā (glückselig und stets tatkräftig); sie ist Vivekā (unterscheidende Weisheit), Vibhavā (Wohlstand), Viśvā (allumfassend) und Vitatā (weit ausgebreitet).
Narada (in an instructional/definitional listing within the Vedanga-oriented section)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
The verse functions as a mantra-like proclamation of auspicious attributes—purity (amalā), completeness (pūrṇā), discernment (vivekā), and expansive universality (viśvā/vitatā)—indicating a perfected, beneficent spiritual principle that removes sorrow (aśokā) and grants well-being.
By praising divine qualities as names (nāma) and attributes, the verse supports bhakti through remembrance and recitation: devotion is cultivated by contemplating the Lord’s/Deity’s auspicious powers—purity, wholeness, and grace—leading the mind away from grief and toward steadiness and surrender.
It reflects the Vedanga-style use of precise epithets for doctrinal and ritual utility—useful for mantra application, semantic clarity (nirukta-like naming), and disciplined recitation (śikṣā), where each term encodes a specific spiritual function (purification, completeness, prosperity, discrimination).