Yakṣiṇī-Mantra-Sādhana Nirūpaṇa
Lakṣmī-avatāra-vidyāḥ: Bālā, Annapūrṇā, Bagalā
मध्यमादौ नभोहंसौ मध्यमांते तु पावकम् । आदावंते च तार्तूयक्रमात्स्वं धूम्रकेतनम् ॥ ४३ ॥
madhyamādau nabhohaṃsau madhyamāṃte tu pāvakam | ādāvaṃte ca tārtūyakramātsvaṃ dhūmraketanam || 43 ||
At the beginning of the middle section stands the “sky-swan” (nābho-haṃsa); at the end of the middle stands Fire (pāvaka). And at the beginning and at the end, in the tārtūya order, one should place—or inwardly recognize—one’s own “smoke-bannered” principle (dhūmraketu).
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It encodes a disciplined way of placing or recognizing specific sacred principles (symbolized as ‘sky-swan’, Agni, and Dhūmraketu) within a structured sequence, emphasizing that mantra-knowledge is not random but ordered and precise.
Though technical, it supports bhakti by insisting on correct sacred procedure: devotion in the Narada Purana is strengthened when worship and recitation follow proper Vedic order, making practice steady and effective.
Śikṣā/Vedāṅga-style sequencing (krama) and placement rules for recitation or ritual mapping—distinguishing beginnings, middles, and endings, and assigning specific identifiers to each position.