लक्ष्मीं श्रियं च कमलां कमलालयां च पद्मां रमां नलिनयुग्मकरां च मां च । क्षीरोदजाममृतकुंभकरामिरां च विष्णुप्रियामिति सदाजपतां क्व दुःखम्
lakṣmīṃ śriyaṃ ca kamalāṃ kamalālayāṃ ca padmāṃ ramāṃ nalinayugmakarāṃ ca māṃ ca | kṣīrodajāmamṛtakuṃbhakarāmirāṃ ca viṣṇupriyāmiti sadājapatāṃ kva duḥkham
جو لوگ ہمیشہ اس کے نام جپتے رہتے ہیں—‘لکشمی، شری، کملا، کملالیہ، پدما، رما، وہ جس کے ہاتھوں میں دو کنول ہیں، ما، کشیرو دجا، امرت کے کُمبھ کو تھامنے والی، اِرا، اور وشنوپریا’—ان کے پاس غم کہاں ٹھہر سکتا ہے؟
Agastya (stuti, contextually in Kāśīkhaṇḍa narrative)
Tirtha: Kāśīkṣetra
Type: kshetra
Scene: A sage and his wife seated in reverence, counting a mālā while reciting Lakṣmī’s many names; Mahālakṣmī appears in a gentle vision holding lotuses and a nectar pot, radiating comfort that dissolves sorrow.
Constant remembrance of the Goddess through her names is taught as a direct remedy for grief and inner instability.
Though the verse is a nāma-focused teaching, it is transmitted within Kāśīkhaṇḍa’s Kāśī context, enhancing the devotional merit.
Japa (repetition) of Lakṣmī’s epithets is explicitly recommended as a practice that dispels duḥkha (sorrow).