Gṛhastha-nitya-karman: Śauca, Sandhyā-vidhi, Pañca-yajña, and Āśrama-krama
उहुत्यं चित्रं तच्चक्षुरित्येतात्र्रितयं जपेत् । सौराञ्छैवान्वैष्णवांश्च मंत्रानन्यांश्च नारद ॥ ५३ ॥
uhutyaṃ citraṃ taccakṣurityetātrritayaṃ japet | saurāñchaivānvaiṣṇavāṃśca maṃtrānanyāṃśca nārada || 53 ||
Qu’on répète en japa cette triade : « uhutyaṃ », « citraṃ » et « tac-cakṣuḥ ». De même, ô Nārada, on peut aussi réciter les mantras de Sūrya, de Śiva et de Viṣṇu, ainsi que d’autres mantras.
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhakti
It emphasizes disciplined japa: specific seed-like mantra-words are to be repeated as a focused practice, while also affirming that authorized deity-mantras (Sūrya, Śiva, Viṣṇu) are valid supports for purification and devotion.
By explicitly including Vaiṣṇava mantras alongside others, it presents mantra-recitation as a practical form of bhakti—devotion expressed through repeated remembrance and vocal/mental worship of the deity.
The verse highlights mantra-vidhi (rules of recitation) tied to Śikṣā (phonetics) and Chandas (meter/recitation discipline): japa is effective when the exact mantra-units are preserved and repeated as taught.