षड्भिर्वर्णैः षडंगानि हुंफडंतैः सजातिभिः । मध्याह्नार्कप्रभं भीमं त्र्यक्षं पन्नगभूषणम् ॥ १८६ ॥
ṣaḍbhirvarṇaiḥ ṣaḍaṃgāni huṃphaḍaṃtaiḥ sajātibhiḥ | madhyāhnārkaprabhaṃ bhīmaṃ tryakṣaṃ pannagabhūṣaṇam || 186 ||
Mit den sechs Silben soll man (Nyāsa) die sechs Glieder einsetzen—zusammen mit den Samenlauten, die mit „huṃ“ und „phaṭ“ beginnen, und den zugehörigen Silben—und dann den Schrecklichen meditieren: strahlend wie die Mittagssonne, dreiaugig und mit Schlangen geschmückt.
Sanatkumara (in instruction to Narada, within the Narada–Sanatkumara dialogue)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: bhayanaka
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It teaches a disciplined ritual method—ṣaḍaṅga-nyāsa joined with potent bīja-sounds—so the practitioner internalizes divine power and steadies the mind through a precise visualization of a fierce, protective deity-form.
Bhakti here appears as reverent, focused upāsanā: devotion expressed through mantra, bodily sanctification (nyāsa), and contemplative meditation on the deity’s form, cultivating surrender and protection through remembrance.
It highlights technical mantra-prayoga—especially ṣaḍaṅga-nyāsa (ritual placement on the body) and the use of bīja mantras like huṃ and phaṭ, a common feature of applied ritual science within Purāṇic and Āgamic practice.