ॐ नमः श्रीपुरुषोत्तमाय । ॐ नमः श्रीनर्मदायै । ॐ नमो हरिहरहिरण्यगर्भेभ्यो नमो व्यासवाल्मीकिशुकपराशरेभ्यो नमो गुरुगोब्राह्मणेभ्यः । ॐ मज्जन्मातङ्गगण्डच्युतमदमदिरामोदमत्तालिमालं स्नानैः सिद्धाङ्गनानां कुचयुगविगलत्कुङ्कुमासङ्गपिङ्गम् । सायं प्रातर्मुनीनां कुसुमचयसमाच्छन्नतीरस्थवृक्षं पायाद्वो नर्मदाम्भः करिमकरकराक्रान्तरहंस्तरंगम्
oṃ namaḥ śrīpuruṣottamāya | oṃ namaḥ śrīnarmadāyai | oṃ namo hariharahiraṇyagarbhebhyo namo vyāsavālmīkiśukaparāśarebhyo namo gurugobrāhmaṇebhyaḥ | oṃ majjanmātaṅgagaṇḍacyutamadamadirāmodamattālimālaṃ snānaiḥ siddhāṅganānāṃ kucayugavigalatkuṅkumāsaṅgapiṅgam | sāyaṃ prātarmunīnāṃ kusumacayasamācchannatīrasthavṛkṣaṃ pāyādvo narmadāmbhaḥ karimakarakarākrāntarahaṃstaraṃgam
Om — saudações ao auspicioso Puruṣottama; Om — saudações à venerável Narmadā (Revā). Saudações a Hari, a Hara e a Hiraṇyagarbha; saudações a Vyāsa, Vālmīki, Śuka e Parāśara; saudações ao Guru, à Vaca e aos Brāhmaṇas. Que as águas da Narmadā vos protejam: águas perfumadas pelo licor inebriante que escorre das faces dos elefantes ao se banharem, e tingidas pelo açafrão que se desprende dos seios das donzelas Siddha quando se banham; águas cujas árvores ribeirinhas, ao amanhecer e ao entardecer, ficam cobertas por montes de flores colhidas pelos sábios; águas cujas ondas são agitadas pelas mãos de elefantes e crocodilos, e sobre as quais deslizam os cisnes.
Sūta (deduced maṅgalācaraṇa/narratorial invocation in Purāṇic style)
Tirtha: Revā/Narmadā
Type: river
Scene: A lush Narmadā panorama: elephants bathing with fragrant ichor, siddha maidens bathing with saffron-tinted water, sages gathering blossoms at dawn and dusk under flowering riverbank trees, swans gliding, crocodiles and makaras stirring waves; above, a maṅgala panel with ‘ॐ नमः’ salutations to Puruṣottama and Narmadā, and to Hari-Hara-Hiraṇyagarbha and the sages.
Begin sacred study by honoring God, the holy river, the rishis, and dharmic pillars (guru, cow, brāhmaṇas); then receive the river’s protective grace.
The river Narmadā (Revā) herself—praised as a living tīrtha whose waters sanctify and protect.
Snāna (bathing/immersion) in the Narmadā is implied as a sanctifying act, framing the river as a purifier and protector.