Previous Verse
Next Verse

Narada Purana — Purva Bhaga, Shloka 18

Gaṇeśa Mantra-vidhi: Mahāgaṇapati Gāyatrī, Vakratuṇḍa Mantra, Nyāsa, Homa, Āvaraṇa-pūjā, and Caturthī Vrata

एवं ध्यात्वा चतुश्चत्वारिंशत्साहस्रसंयुतम् । चतुर्लक्षं जपेन्मंत्रं अष्टद्रव्यैर्दशांशतः ॥ १८ ॥

evaṃ dhyātvā catuścatvāriṃśatsāhasrasaṃyutam | caturlakṣaṃ japenmaṃtraṃ aṣṭadravyairdaśāṃśataḥ || 18 ||

Setelah bermeditasi demikian, hendaklah mengulang mantra sebanyak empat ratus ribu kali, disertai hitungan empat puluh empat ribu sebagaimana ditetapkan; dan hendaklah mempersembahkan homa sebanyak sepersepuluh daripadanya dengan lapan bahan upacara.

evamthus/in this manner
evam:
Kriya-visheshana (Adverb)
TypeIndeclinable
Rootevam (अव्यय)
FormAdverb
dhyātvāhaving meditated
dhyātvā:
Purvakalika Kriya (Prior Action)
TypeIndeclinable
Rootdhyai (धातु)
FormKtva Pratyaya (Gerund/Absolutive)
catuścatvāriṃśatsāhasrasaṃyutamjoined with forty-four thousand
catuścatvāriṃśatsāhasrasaṃyutam:
Visheshana (Adjective to Mantra count)
TypeAdjective
Rootcatuścatvāriṃśat-sāhasra-saṃyuta (प्रातिपदिक)
FormMasculine, Accusative (2nd/द्वितीया), Singular
caturlakṣamfour lakhs (400,000)
caturlakṣam:
Karma (Object)
TypeNoun
Rootcatur-lakṣa (प्रातिपदिक)
FormNeuter, Accusative (2nd/द्वितीया), Singular
japetshould chant/recite
japet:
Kriya (Action)
TypeVerb
Rootjap (धातु)
FormVidhilin Lakara (Potential Mood), Parasmaipada, Prathama Purusha (3rd), Singular
mantramthe mantra
mantram:
Karma (Object)
TypeNoun
Rootmantra (प्रातिपदिक)
FormMasculine, Accusative (2nd/द्वितीया), Singular
aṣṭadravyaiḥwith eight substances
aṣṭadravyaiḥ:
Karana (Instrument)
TypeNoun
Rootaṣṭadravya (प्रातिपदिक)
FormNeuter, Instrumental (3rd/तृतीया), Plural
daśāṃśataḥby one-tenth part
daśāṃśataḥ:
Apadaan/Hetu (Source/Measure)
TypeIndeclinable
Rootdaśāṃśa (प्रातिपदिक)
FormTasil Pratyaya (Suffix indicating 'from' or 'by')

Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)

Vrata: none

Primary Rasa: shanta

Secondary Rasa: bhakti

FAQs

It frames mantra-sādhana as a complete discipline: meditation (dhyāna) first, then a fixed japa count, and finally a proportional offering (daśāṃśa) to seal the practice through yajña-like ritual action.

By insisting on dhyāna before japa, it emphasizes inward remembrance and focused contemplation as the heart of devotional practice, with the ritual component supporting steadiness and sanctity of worship.

It highlights procedural ritual knowledge: fixed numerical discipline in japa and the daśāṃśa rule for homa/offerings, along with the use of specified dravyas (ritual substances) as part of formal mantra practice.