The Exposition of the Maheśa Mantra
Mahēśa-mantra-prakāśana
प्रणवाद्याश्चतुर्थ्यंता नमोंतास्तु प्रकीर्तिताः । पाददोस्तननासासु मूर्ध्नि बाहुयुगे न्यसेत् ॥ ८१ ॥
praṇavādyāścaturthyaṃtā namoṃtāstu prakīrtitāḥ | pādadostananāsāsu mūrdhni bāhuyuge nyaset || 81 ||
Diz-se que os mantras começam com o Praṇava (Oṁ), terminam com o dativo (quarto caso) e se concluem com “namaḥ”. Deve-se realizar o nyāsa, colocando-os nos pés, nas mãos, no peito, nas narinas, na cabeça e em ambos os braços.
Narada (teaching in a technical/ritual context within Vedanga-oriented material)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: none
It teaches nyāsa—sacralizing the body by installing mantra-syllables on specific limbs—so the practitioner’s body becomes fit for worship and focused devotion.
By prescribing praṇava- and namaḥ-terminated mantras and their bodily placement, it frames devotion as disciplined worship where reverence (“namaḥ”) and remembrance (mantra) are embodied before offering prayers to the deity.
It points to Vyākaraṇa-informed mantra formation (use of the caturthī/dative ending) and Śikṣā/ritual practice through correct application (nyāsa) on designated body parts.