The Account of the Lalitā Hymn, the Protective Armor
Kavaca), and the Thousand Names (Sahasranāma
वीरा विक्षोभिणी विद्या विनोदा बीजविग्रहा । वीतशोका विषग्रीवा विपुला विजयप्रदा ॥ १२५ ॥
vīrā vikṣobhiṇī vidyā vinodā bījavigrahā | vītaśokā viṣagrīvā vipulā vijayapradā || 125 ||
វិទ្យាព្រះសក្ការៈនេះ ជាវីរភាព បំបាត់ការរំខានក្នុងចិត្ត ឲ្យចិត្តរីករាយ; នាងជាគ្រាប់ពូជមានរូប (bīja-vigrahā) នៃសិទ្ធិទាំងអស់។ នាងគ្មានទុក្ខ មានក (viṣa-grīvā) ដែលបំបាត់ពុល ជាវិសាល និងប្រទានជ័យជំនះ។
Narada (praising Vidya in a didactic section of the Third Pada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: vira
It portrays Vidya as a living spiritual power that removes agitation and grief, expands consciousness, and leads to inner and outer victory—making learning a sadhana, not mere information.
By presenting Vidya as joy-giving and sorrow-dispelling, it supports Bhakti as informed devotion—where right understanding stabilizes the mind and strengthens surrender, leading to ‘victory’ over doubt and distraction.
The verse emphasizes Vidya as foundational (“seed-form”) to all shastric disciplines—supporting Vedanga study (like Vyakarana and Shiksha) as the technical basis that makes mantra, ritual, and scriptural meaning effective.