Akhaṇḍa-Ekādaśī Vrata and the Vaiṣṇava Protective Hymn; Prelude to the Kātyāyanī–Mahiṣāsura Narrative
हलमादाय सौनन्दं नमस्ते पुरषोत्तम प्रतीच्यां रक्ष मे विष्णो भवन्तं शरणं गतः
halamādāya saunandaṃ namaste puraṣottama pratīcyāṃ rakṣa me viṣṇo bhavantaṃ śaraṇaṃ gataḥ
ຈົ່ງນຳເອົາໄຖຊື່ «ເສົານັນດະ» ມາຖື; ນະໂມແດ່ພຣະປຸຣຸໂສດຕະມະ. ໃນທິດຕາເວັນຕົກ ຂໍຈົ່ງຄຸ້ມຄອງຂ້າ ໂອ ພຣະວິສນຸ; ຂ້າໄດ້ມາພຶ່ງພາພຣະອົງແລ້ວ.
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Śaraṇāgati (taking refuge) is presented as the primary means of safety: the devotee does not rely on personal power but entrusts protection to the Supreme (Puruṣottama/Viṣṇu), expressed as a concrete, directional request.
This is best classed under ancillary devotional material rather than the five defining marks; it aligns most closely with Vamśānucarita/ācāra-style sections where practice (stotra, protective recitation) is taught within the narrative frame.
Assigning a specific divine implement to a direction ritualizes cosmic order: the west is ‘sealed’ by the Lord’s attribute (here, the plough), implying that dharma/order extends into spatial reality, not merely inner piety.