The Exposition of the Krishna Mantra (Kṛṣṇa-mantra-prakāśa): Nyāsa, Dhyāna, Worship, Yantra, and Prayoga
कांचीनूपुरहारकंकणलसत्केयूरभूषान्वितं गोपीनां द्वितयां तरे सुललितं वन्यप्रसूनस्रजम् । अन्योन्यं विनिबद्धगोपदयितादोर्वल्लिवीतं लसद्रासक्रीडनलोलुपं मनसिजाक्रांतं मुकुन्दं भवेत् ॥ १११ ॥
kāṃcīnūpurahārakaṃkaṇalasatkeyūrabhūṣānvitaṃ gopīnāṃ dvitayāṃ tare sulalitaṃ vanyaprasūnasrajam | anyonyaṃ vinibaddhagopadayitādorvallivītaṃ lasadrāsakrīḍanalolupaṃ manasijākrāṃtaṃ mukundaṃ bhavet || 111 ||
Nawa’y si Mukunda ay manahan sa puso—pinalamutian ng sinturong-baywang, pulseras sa bukung-bukong, kuwintas, pulseras sa kamay, at kumikislap na keyūra sa bisig; napakabanayad at marikit sa pagitan ng dalawang gopī; may suot na kuwintas na bulaklak sa gubat; niyayakap ng mga bisig na tila baging ng mga dalagang pastol na magkakawing; sabik sa maningning na sayaw na rāsa; at nilulupig ng lakas ng pag-ibig.
Narada (instructional meditation verse within the Narada Purana’s teaching flow)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: bhakti
Secondary Rasa: shringara
It prescribes a vivid dhyāna (contemplative visualization) of Mukunda as the heart’s chosen form—ornamented, graceful, and engaged in rāsa—so that the mind becomes absorbed in divine beauty and love, a classic bhakti-based method for inner steadiness and purification.
Bhakti here is cultivated through affectionate remembrance (smaraṇa) and meditation on Kṛṣṇa’s līlā with the gopīs, emphasizing intimate, personal devotion where the devotee’s mind is drawn from worldly desire into God-centered love.
The verse primarily functions as a dhyāna-mantra style passage rather than a technical Vedāṅga lesson; its practical takeaway aligns most with correct recitation and contemplative application (linked to śikṣā/phonetics and smṛti-based practice) for sustained mental focus in devotional worship.