The Exposition of the Maheśa Mantra
Mahēśa-mantra-prakāśana
उकाराद्यैः पञ्चह्रस्वौर्विलोमान्संयुतं च यत् । तत्तदंगुलिभिर्भूयस्तत्तदिकान्न्यसेत् ॥ ५४ ॥
ukārādyaiḥ pañcahrasvaurvilomānsaṃyutaṃ ca yat | tattadaṃgulibhirbhūyastattadikānnyaset || 54 ||
Using the five short vowels beginning with ‘u’, and also the syllables formed by combining them in reverse order, one should again perform nyāsa, placing each syllable upon its corresponding finger in the proper sequence.
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: none
It emphasizes mantra-discipline through precise phonetic units and their ritual placement (nyāsa), aligning speech (vāk) and the body’s micro-ritual map (fingers) to stabilize concentration and sanctify recitation.
While primarily technical (Śikṣā/nyāsa), it supports Bhakti by teaching careful mantra-handling—devotional practice becomes steady and effective when syllables are pronounced and ritually ‘installed’ with attention and purity.
Śikṣā (Vedic phonetics) and ritual application: using short vowels, forming reverse-order combinations, and performing aṅguli-nyāsa (assigning syllables to fingers) as part of mantra procedure.
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