The Account of Kārtavīrya’s Protective Kavaca
Kārtavīrya-kavaca-vṛttānta
विद्याकरीसमायुक्तः सुमहहुःखनाशनः । पातु मे नैर्ऋतीं चापपाणिर्विदिशमीश्वरः ॥ २१ ॥
vidyākarīsamāyuktaḥ sumahahuḥkhanāśanaḥ | pātu me nairṛtīṃ cāpapāṇirvidiśamīśvaraḥ || 21 ||
Que le Seigneur—dispensateur de connaissance et destructeur des grandes souffrances—me protège au sud‑ouest ; que le Souverain, l’arc en main, garde mon quartier.
Narada (in a didactic/protective invocation within the Vedanga-oriented section)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: bhakti
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It frames the Lord as both the giver of true knowledge and the remover of intense suffering, invoking His protection specifically over the south‑west quarter—showing that inner illumination and outer safeguarding are one divine grace.
Bhakti appears as reliance on the Lord’s guardianship: the devotee calls Him “Ishvara,” remembers His attributes (knowledge-giving, sorrow-destroying), and surrenders the protection of one’s life and space to Him.
It reflects ritual directionality (dik-vyavasthā) used in mantras and protective rites—assigning divine guardianship to specific quarters, a practical feature often applied in Vedic ritual procedure and mantra-application.