The Description of the Four Durgā Mantras
भालभ्रूमध्यवदने घंटिकाकण्ठहृत्सु च । नाभ्यधिष्ठानयोः पञ्च ताराद्याः सुभगादिकाः ॥ ५५ ॥
bhālabhrūmadhyavadane ghaṃṭikākaṇṭhahṛtsu ca | nābhyadhiṣṭhānayoḥ pañca tārādyāḥ subhagādikāḥ || 55 ||
額、眉間、そして顔において、また小舌(「小さな鈴」)・喉・心において、さらに臍とアディシュターナ(adhiṣṭhāna)の基底において――ターラー(Tārā)に始まり、スुभगा(Subhagā)などを伴う五つの力がある。
Narada (teaching in a Vedanga/technical context)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It presents an internalized ritual model: sacred powers/vidyās are contemplated as residing in specific bodily seats, turning worship into an inward practice (antar-yāga) rather than only an external rite.
By assigning sacred presences to the forehead, heart, throat, and other centres, the verse supports devotional recollection (smaraṇa) throughout the body—especially heart-centred devotion—so the practitioner’s whole being becomes an offering.
It aligns with technical ritual methodology used in mantra practice—especially nyāsa (placing mantras/śaktis on body locations) and disciplined recitation—topics commonly treated alongside Vedāṅga-style procedural precision.