The Account of the Lalitā Hymn, the Protective Armor
Kavaca), and the Thousand Names (Sahasranāma
देशकालाकारशब्दरूपा संगीतयोगिनी । समस्तगुप्तप्रकटसिद्धयोगिनिचक्रयुक् ॥ ६७ ॥
deśakālākāraśabdarūpā saṃgītayoginī | samastaguptaprakaṭasiddhayoginicakrayuk || 67 ||
وہ مکان، زمان، ہیئت، صوت اور صورت کی صورت میں مجسّم ہے؛ وہ مقدّس نغمہ کی یوگنی ہے۔ وہ تمام یوگنیوں اور سدھوں کے چکر سے یکتاہے—جو پوشیدہ بھی ہیں اور ظاہر بھی۔
Narada (teaching within the Vedanga/technical-science context of Book 1.3)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: bhakti
It presents sacred sound and music (śabda/saṅgīta) as a divine power that pervades space and time, and it links disciplined sonic practice to a mandala of yogic forces—both subtle (hidden) and overt (manifest).
By identifying the divine with sound and music, it supports bhakti through kīrtana and mantra—devotional practices where disciplined sound becomes a direct means of communion with the sacred.
Śikṣā-oriented sound discipline is implied: correct handling of śabda (tone, rhythm, articulation) and the structured ‘cakra’ idea mirrors technical organization used in mantra and ritual recitation.