The Description of the Four Durgā Mantras
चिताग्नौ परभृत्पक्षैर्जुर्हुयादरिमृत्यवे । उन्मत्तकाष्ठदीप्तेऽग्नौ तत्फलं वायसच्छदैः ॥ २८ ॥
citāgnau parabhṛtpakṣairjurhuyādarimṛtyave | unmattakāṣṭhadīpte'gnau tatphalaṃ vāyasacchadaiḥ || 28 ||
ചിതാഗ്നിയിൽ ശത്രുമരണാർത്ഥം കുയിലിന്റെ ചിറകുതൂവലുകൾ ഹോമം ചെയ്യണം. ഉന്മത്തകമരക്കട്ടകൾ കൊണ്ട് ജ്വലിക്കുന്ന അഗ്നിയിൽ കാക്കയുടെ തൂവലുകൾ അർപ്പിച്ചാലും അതേ ഫലം ലഭിക്കുന്നു.
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in a technical/ritual section)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: raudra
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
The verse illustrates a karma-kāṇḍa style principle: specific materials offered into fire (homa) are believed to yield specific results, emphasizing ritual causality (karman → phala) rather than devotional theology.
It does not teach bhakti directly; instead, it contrasts with bhakti by presenting result-oriented ritual techniques (prayoga). In the broader Purāṇic frame, such acts are typically seen as worldly (kāmya) aims, distinct from liberation-focused devotion to Viṣṇu.
Ritual-prayoga knowledge: selection of homa materials (dravyas), contextual conditions of the fire, and the notion of substitute/alternate materials producing the same phala—features aligned with applied ritual science within the Vedāṅga ecosystem.