The Description of the Four Durgā Mantras
पलाशकुसुमैर्होमात्तेजस्वी जायते नरः । चन्दनागुरुकस्तूरी चन्द्रकुंकुमरोचनाः ॥ १५१ ॥
palāśakusumairhomāttejasvī jāyate naraḥ | candanāgurukastūrī candrakuṃkumarocanāḥ || 151 ||
Par le homa offert avec des fleurs de palāśa, l’homme devient rayonnant, empli de tejas, de vigueur et d’éclat spirituel. De même, pour les oblations sont prescrites des substances parfumées telles que le santal, l’agaru, le musc, la fragrance rafraîchissante dite « candra », le safran et la gorocanā.
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in a Vedanga/ritual-results context)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It links specific homa-dravyas (oblational materials) with inner tejas—radiance, potency, and auspicious vitality—showing how disciplined ritual action is taught to refine the practitioner’s qualities.
Though framed as ritual science, the verse supports bhakti indirectly: fragrant, sattvic offerings made with reverence purify the mind and senses, making the devotee more fit for worship and remembrance of the Divine.
Kalpa (ritual procedure) is emphasized—selection of dravya for homa and the expected phala (result), a technical mapping typical of Vedanga-oriented instruction in Book 1.3.