The Description of the Four Durgā Mantras
दीपकाप्रीतिचन्द्राढ्या द्विधा चेद्रञ्जितापुनः । वतिवह्निप्रियामंत्रो धूमावत्या गजाक्षरः ॥ १५५ ॥
dīpakāprīticandrāḍhyā dvidhā cedrañjitāpunaḥ | vativahnipriyāmaṃtro dhūmāvatyā gajākṣaraḥ || 155 ||
« (Une forme de mantra) enrichie de “lampe”, “bien-aimée” et “lune” ; lorsqu’on la scinde en deux puis qu’on la “teint/colore” de nouveau, on obtient le mantra cher à Vati et au Feu ; et, avec Dhūmāvatī, il donne la “syllabe de l’éléphant”. »
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in a technical Vedanga/mantra-vidya section)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: vira
It presents mantra-vidyā as a disciplined, rule-based science where specific named elements and syllables (akṣaras) are combined to produce a targeted mantra, emphasizing precision in sacred speech.
Indirectly: by treating mantra as a valid support for worship, it frames devotion as strengthened through correct recitation and correct mantra-form, which purifies attention and steadies the mind in sādhana.
Akṣara-based construction and splitting/combining of terms (a vyākaraṇa-like method) used for mantra formation—showing a technical approach to phonetics and linguistic derivation applied to ritual practice.