The Account of the Lalitā Hymn, the Protective Armor
Kavaca), and the Thousand Names (Sahasranāma
यदक्षरै कमात्रेऽपि संसिद्धे स्पर्द्धते नरः । रवितार्क्ष्येंदुकन्दर्पैः शंकरानलविष्णुभिः ॥ १२ ॥
yadakṣarai kamātre'pi saṃsiddhe sparddhate naraḥ | ravitārkṣyeṃdukandarpaiḥ śaṃkarānalaviṣṇubhiḥ || 12 ||
ពេលអក្សរមួយ—even ត្រឹមមាត្រាមួយ—បានសម្រេចពេញលេញដោយសិទ្ធិមន្ត្រ នោះមនុស្សអាចប្រកួតអំណាចជាមួយព្រះអាទិត្យ តារក្ស្យ (គរុឌ) ព្រះចន្ទ កន្ទರ್ಪ (កាម) សង្ករ ព្រះអគ្គី និងព្រះវិស្ណុ។
Narada (instructional narration within Vedanga/Mantra context)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: vira
It teaches that spiritual efficacy depends on mantra-perfection: even a single correctly realized syllable (akṣara) can become a vehicle of extraordinary divine power, surpassing ordinary human limits.
By implying that sincere, disciplined practice—especially when directed to deities like Viṣṇu—makes the smallest act (one syllable) spiritually potent; bhakti expressed through mantra-japa can culminate in siddhi and divine proximity.
Śikṣā (Vedic phonetics): the verse highlights mātrā (time-measure) and akṣara (syllable), stressing that precise pronunciation and disciplined recitation are essential for mantra-siddhi.