The Exposition of the Maheśa Mantra
Mahēśa-mantra-prakāśana
प्रणवाद्याश्चतुर्थ्यंता नमोंतास्तु प्रकीर्तिताः । पाददोस्तननासासु मूर्ध्नि बाहुयुगे न्यसेत् ॥ ८१ ॥
praṇavādyāścaturthyaṃtā namoṃtāstu prakīrtitāḥ | pādadostananāsāsu mūrdhni bāhuyuge nyaset || 81 ||
Es heißt, die Mantras beginnen mit dem Praṇava (Oṁ), enden mit dem Dativ (vierter Kasus) und schließen mit „namaḥ“. Man vollziehe Nyāsa, indem man sie auf die Füße, die Hände, die Brust, die Nasenlöcher, den Kopf und auf beide Arme legt.
Narada (teaching in a technical/ritual context within Vedanga-oriented material)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: none
It teaches nyāsa—sacralizing the body by installing mantra-syllables on specific limbs—so the practitioner’s body becomes fit for worship and focused devotion.
By prescribing praṇava- and namaḥ-terminated mantras and their bodily placement, it frames devotion as disciplined worship where reverence (“namaḥ”) and remembrance (mantra) are embodied before offering prayers to the deity.
It points to Vyākaraṇa-informed mantra formation (use of the caturthī/dative ending) and Śikṣā/ritual practice through correct application (nyāsa) on designated body parts.