The Description of the Four Durgā Mantras
नंद्यावर्तभवैः पुष्पैर्होमो वाक्सिद्धिदायकः । निंबप्रसूनैर्जुहुयादीप्सितश्रीसमृद्धये ॥ १५० ॥
naṃdyāvartabhavaiḥ puṣpairhomo vāksiddhidāyakaḥ | niṃbaprasūnairjuhuyādīpsitaśrīsamṛddhaye || 150 ||
ពិធីហោមដោយផ្កានន្ទ្យាវর্ত (nandyāvarta) ប្រទានវាក្សិទ្ធិ គឺភាពជោគជ័យ និងអំណាចក្នុងពាក្យសម្តី។ គួរបូជាផ្កានឹមបា (neem) ចូលក្នុងភ្លើង ដើម្បីទទួលបានសិរីសម្បត្តិ និងសមృద్ధិដែលប្រាថ្នា នៃព្រះនាង Śrī។
Narada (teaching in a technical/ritual context within Book 1.3)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It teaches the principle of dravya-guṇa (the efficacy of ritual substances): specific offerings in homa are linked to specific siddhis—here, refined speech (vāk-siddhi) and the increase of Śrī (prosperity).
While primarily ritual-technical, it supports Bhakti indirectly: vāk-siddhi strengthens truthful praise, japa, and stotra-recitation, and Śrī-samṛddhi sustains dharmic living that can be dedicated to Viṣṇu-oriented worship.
It reflects practical Kalpa (Vedic ritual procedure) by prescribing specific homa materials (flowers) and stating their intended phala (result), a hallmark of technical instruction in Book 1.3.