The Description of the Worship of Rāma and Others
Rāmādi-pūjā-vidhāna
येजनं काम्यकर्माणि सर्वं कुर्यात्षडर्णवत् । रामश्च चन्द्रभ द्रांतो ङेनमोंतो ध्रुवादिकः ॥ ६३ ॥
yejanaṃ kāmyakarmāṇi sarvaṃ kuryātṣaḍarṇavat | rāmaśca candrabha drāṃto ṅenamoṃto dhruvādikaḥ || 63 ||
Deben realizarse los sacrificios y todos los ritos movidos por el deseo enteramente según el modo del mantra de seis sílabas. ‘Rāma’ y otras formas de seis sílabas—las que terminan en ‘candrabha’, las que terminan en ‘ṅe-namoṃ’ y las que comienzan con ‘dhruva’—han de aplicarse conforme corresponda.
Narada (teaching in a Vedanga/Mantra-vidhi context, within the Narada Purana’s technical sections)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhakti
It emphasizes that even result-oriented (kāmya) rites should be structured around a disciplined mantra-method (ṣaḍarṇa/ṣaḍakṣara-vidhi), implying that correct mantra-application and sacred sound-order are central to efficacy and purity in ritual.
By foregrounding mantra-centered practice (including the ‘Rāma’ mantra-form), the verse points to devotion expressed through regulated japa and ritual—where reverence is embodied in precise, repeated sacred utterance.
Śikṣā (Vedic phonetics) and mantra-prayoga: the verse references technical mantra ‘endings/beginnings’ (nasalized syllables, fixed openings like dhruva), indicating attention to pronunciation, formation, and correct ritual deployment.