Pañca-prakṛti-nirūpaṇa and Mantra-vidhi: Rādhā, Mahālakṣmī, Durgā, Sarasvatī, Sāvitrī; plus Sāvitrī-Pañjara
तत्तत्पार्श्वे स्थिताः स्वस्ववाहनायुधभूषणाः । स्वस्वदिक्षुस्थिताः पातुं ग्रहशक्त्यंगसंयुताः ॥ १५२ ॥
tattatpārśve sthitāḥ svasvavāhanāyudhabhūṣaṇāḥ | svasvadikṣusthitāḥ pātuṃ grahaśaktyaṃgasaṃyutāḥ || 152 ||
それぞれの側に立ち、それぞれの乗り物・武器・装身具にて荘厳し、各自の方位に住して守護のために在り、惑星の力(グラハ・シャクティ)の肢分たる顕現の威徳を具し給う。
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in a Vedanga/Graha-śānti context)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It frames planetary forces (graha-śakti) as ordered, directional powers that can be harmonized and invoked for protection, emphasizing cosmic law (ṛta) expressed through Jyotiṣa and ritual safeguarding.
While technical in tone, it supports bhakti indirectly by portraying divine powers as protectors when properly honored—encouraging reverent invocation and disciplined worship rather than fear of planetary influence.
Jyotiṣa Vedāṅga: the verse points to directional placement and the operational “powers” of grahas used in graha-śānti/protective rites, aligning ritual action with astrological principles.