Part XV — Nāmas 542–589 (Ślokas 111–118): Holiness, the Mirror of Awareness, and the Three Vidyās
ॐ श्रीमात्रे नमः · oṃ śrīmātre namaḥ
The mirror of awareness and the three Vidyās
Part XV moves from the crown of the ascent toward the heart of the teaching. It opens with the names of holiness — she is renowned for merit, attained through merit, and the hearing and singing of her is itself holiness; she looses every bond. Then comes a name central to the whole Śrī-Vidyā vision: she is Vimarśa-rūpiṇī, the very form of self-awareness — the reflective “turning back” by which the pure light of consciousness (prakāśa) knows itself as “I.” She is Knowledge itself, and the womb of the worlds from space onward; she quiets all disease and wards off every death; she is beyond thought, the destroyer of the stain of the dark age, the conqueror of time. The lovely-form names return — the betel-reddened mouth, the pomegranate-blossom glow, the doe-like eyes — and then the great metaphysical names: the supreme Power, the supreme Ground, and the very mass of consciousness that the Māṇḍūkya names as the deep-sleep knower in whom all distinction dissolves. She dwells on the great Kailāsa, tender as a lotus-fibre, the image of compassion, holding sovereign sway. And the part rises to its summit in the three Vidyās — Ātma-vidyā, the knowledge of the Self; Mahā-vidyā, the great knowledge; and Śrī-vidyā, the sacred knowledge that is her own mantra — closing with the sixteen-syllabled vidyā, the three-peaked, and Kāma-koṭikā. The whole hymn has been building toward this: she is not merely the deity of a knowledge, but Knowledge itself, by which the Self is known to be her.
॥ श्रीललितासहस्रनामस्तोत्रम् ॥
The Thousand Names — Ślokas 111–118 (Nāmas 542–589)
Śloka 111
पुण्यकीर्तिः पुण्यलभ्या पुण्यश्रवण-कीर्तना ।
पुलोमजार्चिता बन्ध-मोचनी बर्बरालका ॥ १११॥
puṇya-kīrtiḥ puṇya-labhyā puṇya-śravaṇa-kīrtanā |
pulomajārcitā bandha-mocanī barbarālakā ǁ 111 ǁ
After the cakra-ascent and its close, the hymn turns to holiness (puṇya) — the merit by which she is known, attained, and made present in the very hearing and telling of her names. Three names ring the changes on puṇya, then she is named as worshipped by Indra's queen, the loosener of every bond, and (in a reading-variant) the curly-haired. The thread is grace through merit: the holiness that both leads to her and is awakened by her remembrance.
542. पुण्यकीर्तिः — Puṇya-kīrtiḥ
Translation: Of holy renown (puṇya-kīrti); whose fame is itself meritorious.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is “of holy fame” — her very renown is puṇya, merit-bearing. The apavāda: to be famed is ordinarily to be an object of others' praise; but her “fame” is holy because hearing it purifies — the renown of the Self is not vanity but the sacred report that turns the hearer Godward. Her glory (recall Yaśasvinī) is sanctifying glory.
Śrī Vidyā: Puṇya-kīrtiḥ is of holy, sanctifying renown; the Goddess whose very fame confers merit on those who hear it.
543. पुण्यलभ्या — Puṇya-labhyā
Translation: Attainable (labhyā) only through merit (puṇya).
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is “attained through merit” — reached only by the accumulated good of many turnings toward the true. The apavāda: she is not bought or seized but received, and the “merit” that earns her is finally the purified heart's readiness (recall Sadyaḥ-prasādinī, the swiftly gracious) — grace meets the merit that is itself her gift. She is had by those whom holiness has prepared.
Śrī Vidyā: Puṇya-labhyā is attained through merit; the Goddess won by the ripened puṇya of the seeker, herself the giver of that ripening.
544. पुण्यश्रवणकीर्तना — Puṇya-śravaṇa-kīrtanā
Translation: The hearing (śravaṇa) and singing (kīrtana) of whom is itself merit (puṇya).
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: To hear of her and to sing her is itself puṇya — the very listening and reciting are holy acts. The apavāda: this names the power of the hymn itself — the thousand names are not a list to be learned but a sacred sound whose hearing purifies (recall the Veda as her command); to recite her is already to be sanctified, for the Name is not other than the Named. The remembrance of her is the merit it requires.
Śrī Vidyā: Puṇya-śravaṇa-kīrtanā is she the hearing and singing of whom is meritorious; the sanctifying power of the hymn and the Name themselves.
545. पुलोमजार्चिता — Pulomajārcitā
Translation: Worshipped by Pulomajā (Śacī, the consort of Indra).
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is worshipped by Pulomajā — Śacī, the daughter of Puloman, queen of Indra. The apavāda, as with her other divine worshippers (Hari, Brahmā, Indra at her feet): the highest of the celestial consorts adores her — even the queen of heaven is her devotee; the divine powers and their consorts alike worship the one reality of which they are faces. Her worshippers are the gods and their queens.
Śrī Vidyā: Pulomajārcitā is worshipped by Pulomajā (Indra's queen Śacī); the Goddess adored by the queen of the gods.
546. बन्धमोचनी — Bandha-mocanī
Translation: The loosener of bondage (bandha) — who frees from saṃsāra.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She looses the bond — frees from the bondage of saṃsāra. The apavāda: the “bond” is the knot of ignorance and its self-sense, the same pāśa she cut as Paśu-pāśa-vimocinī; she “looses bondage” by the rising of knowledge, in which the bound self discovers it was never truly tied (recall Bhava-cchidā, the cutter of becoming). The Vidyā about to be named (Ātma-vidyā) is the very loosening; she frees by being known.
Śrī Vidyā: Bandha-mocanī is the loosener of bondage; the Goddess who frees the jīva from the bonds of saṃsāra, by the knowledge that is herself.
547. बर्बरालका — Barbarālakā
Translation: Of curly, wavy locks (barbara-alaka); (variant: Bandhurālakā, of lovely curls).
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is “of curly locks” — wavy-haired (a reading also given as bandhurālakā, “of lovely curls”). The apavāda: a touch of the beautiful form (recall Nīla-cikurā, the dark hair) set among the loftiest names — the loveliness of the curling hair, enjoyed as the grace of her appearing; even amid the names of holiness and bondage-loosening, the tender beauty of the form is not forgotten.
Śrī Vidyā: Barbarālakā is of curly, wavy locks (variant Bandhurālakā, of lovely curls); a feature of the Goddess's beautiful form.
Śloka 112
विमर्शरूपिणी विद्या वियदादि-जगत्प्रसूः ।
सर्वव्याधि-प्रशमनी सर्वमृत्यु-निवारिणी ॥ ११२॥
vimarśa-rūpiṇī vidyā viyad-ādi-jagat-prasūḥ |
sarva-vyādhi-praśamanī sarva-mṛtyu-nivāriṇī ǁ 112 ǁ
This śloka opens with a name at the very centre of the Śrī-Vidyā and Pratyabhijñā vision — Vimarśa-rūpiṇī. The supreme reality has two inseparable aspects: prakāśa, the pure light of consciousness (the side named in Prakāśa-, Prabhā-rūpā), and vimarśa, the reflective self-awareness by which that light knows itself as “I.” Śiva is prakāśa; Śakti is vimarśa — and she is named here as vimarśa itself, the self-knowing of the Absolute, without which the light would shine unaware. She is then Knowledge, the womb of the worlds, and the queller of all disease and death.
548. विमर्शरूपिणी — Vimarśa-rūpiṇī
Translation: Whose form is vimarśa — the reflective self-awareness of the Absolute.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is “of the form of vimarśa” — the supreme self-awareness. The apavāda: consciousness is not a bare, inert light; it is luminous and self-aware — and vimarśa is that self-awareness, the “turning back” of the light upon itself by which it knows “I am.” Where prakāśa (Śiva) is the shining, vimarśa (Śakti) is the shining's knowing-of-itself; the two are one reality, as a light and its self-luminosity. She is named as vimarśa: the Self's own self-knowing — that without which the Absolute would be light unaware of itself, and by which it is the living “I” at the root of every “I.” (This is the Pratyabhijñā and Śrī-Vidyā heart: the supreme “I”-awareness, aham, is the Goddess.)
Śrī Vidyā: Vimarśa-rūpiṇī is the form of vimarśa, the reflective self-awareness of the Absolute; the Śakti-pole (self-knowing) inseparable from the Śiva-pole (prakāśa, the light) — the supreme “I,” heart of the Śrī Vidyā.
549. विद्या — Vidyā
Translation: Vidyā — Knowledge itself; the liberating wisdom.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is Vidyā — Knowledge, the liberating wisdom (named again, after Siddha-vidyā, in a single word). The apavāda: vidyā is the knowing that frees, as distinct from avidyā that binds (recall Vidyāvidyā-svarūpiṇī, where she was both); here she is named as the liberating knowledge itself — and since she is also vimarśa, the self-awareness, the “knowledge” that frees is finally the Self's recognition of itself as her. She is the Vidyā that the three great Vidyās (Ātma-, Mahā-, Śrī-, to come) will name in full.
Śrī Vidyā: Vidyā is Knowledge itself, the liberating wisdom; the Goddess as the vidyā that frees — anticipating the three Vidyās of śloka 118.
550. वियदादिजगत्प्रसूः — Viyad-ādi-jagat-prasūḥ
Translation: The womb/mother (prasū) of the world (jagat) beginning with space (viyat).
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is the womb of the world, beginning with viyat, space (ether) — the first of the five elements. The apavāda: from her the whole graded manifestation unfolds, ether first, then air, fire, water, earth (the order of cosmic emanation); she is jagat-prasū, the mother who brings forth the worlds (recall Sṛṣṭi-kartrī, Jananī) — yet, as the unmanifest root (Mūla-prakṛti) and self-aware light (Vimarśa-rūpiṇī), she brings them forth not as other than herself but as her own self-display. The cosmos is her offspring and her own form.
Śrī Vidyā: Viyad-ādi-jagat-prasūḥ is the mother of the world from space onward; the Goddess as the womb of the five elements and all that follows, the source of cosmic manifestation.
551. सर्वव्याधिप्रशमनी — Sarva-vyādhi-praśamanī
Translation: The queller (praśamanī) of all diseases (sarva-vyādhi).
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She quiets all disease. The apavāda: beyond bodily ills, the “great disease” is saṃsāra itself — the fever of birth and death, the sickness of the separate self (the tradition calls it bhava-roga); she is its healer (recall Bhava-cchidā), quelling the root-malady by the knowledge that ends it. She cures all ills because she removes the one ill of which the rest are symptoms: the forgetting of the Self.
Śrī Vidyā: Sarva-vyādhi-praśamanī quells all diseases; the Goddess who heals both bodily ills and the great disease of saṃsāra (bhava-roga).
552. सर्वमृत्युनिवारिणी — Sarva-mṛtyu-nivāriṇī
Translation: The warder-off (nivāriṇī) of all death (sarva-mṛtyu).
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She wards off all death. The apavāda: as Mṛtyu-mathanī, the death-churner, she conquers death — and the deathlessness she gives is not endless duration but the recognition of the deathless Self, which was never born and so cannot die (recall Nitya, the deathless). She “wards off death” by revealing that what one truly is has no death to be warded; the fear of death ends when the Self is known as her, the ever-living.
Śrī Vidyā: Sarva-mṛtyu-nivāriṇī wards off all death; the Goddess who conquers death by the knowledge of the deathless Self — the giver of amṛtatva.
Śloka 113
अग्रगण्याऽचिन्त्यरूपा कलिकल्मष-नाशिनी ।
कात्यायनी कालहन्त्री कमलाक्ष-निषेविता ॥ ११३॥
agra-gaṇyā'cintya-rūpā kali-kalmaṣa-nāśinī |
kātyāyanī kāla-hantrī kamalākṣa-niṣevitā ǁ 113 ǁ
553. अग्रगण्या — Agra-gaṇyā
Translation: Agra-gaṇyā — the foremost, to be counted first of all.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is “to be counted first” — the foremost, reckoned before all. The apavāda: in any true reckoning she comes first, for she is the source and ground from which all else proceeds (recall Ādi, the beginning; Anuttamā, the unsurpassed); to count her first is to acknowledge that all counting begins from the One. She is the first, because she is that from which firstness itself comes.
Śrī Vidyā: Agra-gaṇyā is the foremost, counted first of all; the Goddess pre-eminent, source and head of all that is reckoned.
554. अचिन्त्यरूपा — Acintya-rūpā
Translation: Of inconceivable form (acintya-rūpa) — beyond the reach of thought.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: Her form is acintya — unthinkable, beyond conception. The apavāda: as Mano-vācām-agocarā, she cannot be thought, for thought makes its object finite, and she is the awareness within which thought arises; acintya-rūpā names the form that is no graspable form (Nirākārā) — she can be loved and realised, but never thought, for the thinker is already she. The mind reaches her only by falling still.
Śrī Vidyā: Acintya-rūpā is of inconceivable form, beyond thought; the Goddess the mind cannot compass, knowable only by the cessation of thought.
555. कलिकल्मषनाशिनी — Kali-kalmaṣa-nāśinī
Translation: The destroyer (nāśinī) of the sins/taints (kalmaṣa) of the dark age (Kali).
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She destroys the kalmaṣa — the taint, the sin — of the Kali age. The apavāda: the “stain of Kali” is the special darkening of the present age, the dimming of dharma and the thickening of ignorance; she destroys it (recall Mahā-pātaka-nāśinī) — and in the Kali age, it is said, her Name is the readiest means, for puṇya-śravaṇa-kīrtanā (her hearing and singing) is itself the cleansing. The age's special darkness meets its special remedy in her remembrance.
Śrī Vidyā: Kali-kalmaṣa-nāśinī destroys the sins of the Kali age; the Goddess whose Name is the cleansing remedy for the special darkness of this age.
556. कात्यायनी — Kātyāyanī
Translation: Kātyāyanī — the Goddess as worshipped in the line of the sage Kātyāyana; a great form of Durgā.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is Kātyāyanī — a celebrated form of the Goddess (Durgā), said to have arisen among or been worshipped by the sage Kātyāyana's line, and named in the Gopīs' vow and the Navadurgā. The apavāda: as with her other great names (Pārvatī, Umā, Bhairavī), Kātyāyanī is the one reality in a revered form; to name her so is to gather the whole Durgā-tradition into the one Lalitā. She is every great Goddess, here under this honoured name.
Śrī Vidyā: Kātyāyanī is a great form of Durgā (sixth of the Navadurgā), worshipped in the line of sage Kātyāyana; the one Goddess under this celebrated name.
557. कालहन्त्री — Kāla-hantrī
Translation: Kāla-hantrī — the slayer of Time/Death (kāla).
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is “the slayer of kāla” — of Time, and of Death (which is Time's face). The apavāda: kāla devours all, but she devours kāla — for she is the timeless (Nityā, Anādi-nidhanā) in which time itself appears and dissolves; as the consort of the time-conquering Mahākāla, she is the power by which time is overcome (recall Mṛtyu-mathanī, Sarva-mṛtyu-nivāriṇī). To know her is to step out of time's reach into the deathless.
Śrī Vidyā: Kāla-hantrī is the slayer of Time and Death; the timeless Goddess who conquers kāla, the power of Mahākāla's victory over time.
558. कमलाक्षनिषेविता — Kamalākṣa-niṣevitā
Translation: Served/worshipped by the lotus-eyed (kamalākṣa) — by Viṣṇu.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is served by the lotus-eyed — by Viṣṇu (Kamalākṣa, “lotus-eyed,” and Kamalā's lord). The apavāda: as Hari-brahmendra-sevitā, the great gods serve her; here Viṣṇu in particular, the preserver, worships her (recall Padmanābha-sahodarī, sister of Viṣṇu) — the sustainer of worlds himself adores the Goddess who is the worlds' source. The highest serve her, for they draw their power from her.
Śrī Vidyā: Kamalākṣa-niṣevitā is worshipped by the lotus-eyed Viṣṇu; the Goddess served by the preserver of the worlds.
Śloka 114
ताम्बूल-पूरित-मुखी दाडिमी-कुसुम-प्रभा ।
मृगाक्षी मोहिनी मुख्या मृडानी मित्ररूपिणी ॥ ११४॥
tāmbūla-pūrita-mukhī dāḍimī-kusuma-prabhā |
mṛgākṣī mohinī mukhyā mṛḍānī mitra-rūpiṇī ǁ 114 ǁ
After the lofty names of knowledge and time, the hymn returns to the loveliness of the form — the betel-reddened mouth, the glow of the pomegranate blossom, the doe-like eyes — then names her the enchantress, the foremost, the consort of Mṛḍa (Śiva), and (most tenderly) “of the form of a friend.” The descent from the metaphysical to the intimate is the hymn's own rhythm: the supreme reality is also the near and dear.
559. ताम्बूलपूरितमुखी — Tāmbūla-pūrita-mukhī
Translation: Whose mouth is filled with (reddened by) betel (tāmbūla).
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: Her mouth is filled with tāmbūla, betel — reddening the lips, a mark of auspicious enjoyment and of the married woman's grace. The apavāda: a homely, intimate detail of the beloved form — the Goddess at her ease, enjoying the betel as any cherished consort; the supreme reality met not in austere abstraction but in warm, particular loveliness. The transcendent wears the dearest human grace.
Śrī Vidyā: Tāmbūla-pūrita-mukhī has a mouth reddened with betel; an intimate mark of the auspicious, enjoying form of the Goddess.
560. दाडिमीकुसुमप्रभा — Dāḍimī-kusuma-prabhā
Translation: Whose radiance is like the pomegranate (dāḍimī) blossom.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: Her glow is like the pomegranate flower — a warm red-orange radiance. The apavāda, as with the dawn-red (Aruṇā) and the rosy rapture-flush: the colour of the Goddess is the warm glow of life and bliss; the pomegranate-blossom hue is one more naming of the radiance that is the visible overflow of her inner fullness. Beauty as the colour of bliss.
Śrī Vidyā: Dāḍimī-kusuma-prabhā glows like the pomegranate blossom; the warm radiance of the Goddess's form.
561. मृगाक्षी — Mṛgākṣī
Translation: Mṛgākṣī — doe-eyed; with the soft, startled grace of a deer's eyes.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is “doe-eyed” — her eyes soft, wide, and gracefully startled like a deer's. The apavāda: the doe-eye is the image of gentle, liquid beauty and of a tender alertness (recall the long, restless, love-filled eyes); her doe-like gaze is grace looking out with soft attentiveness upon the world. The eyes, here, are the gentleness of the Mother made visible.
Śrī Vidyā: Mṛgākṣī is doe-eyed; the soft, graceful eyes of the Goddess, gentle and alert.
562. मोहिनी — Mohinī
Translation: Mohinī — the enchantress, she who bewitches and beguiles.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is Mohinī — the enchantress, she who casts the spell of fascination. The apavāda: the power to enchant is the power of māyā, by which the One appears as the bewitching many (recall Viṣṇu-māyā); she is Mohinī as the very allure of manifestation, the beauty that draws all hearts — and the same power that beguiles into the world can, turned around, draw the heart home. Her enchantment binds the worldward and frees the Godward.
Śrī Vidyā: Mohinī is the enchantress; the Goddess as the bewitching power of māyā (recall Viṣṇu-māyā), the allure that both binds to the world and draws toward herself.
563. मुख्या — Mukhyā
Translation: Mukhyā — the foremost, the principal, the chief.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is Mukhyā — “the foremost,” the principal (echoing Agra-gaṇyā). The apavāda: she is chief of all, the first and primary, for she is the source (the word mukhya derives from mukha, “face/mouth,” the foremost part); she is the principal reality from which all proceeds — the head and front of existence. The foremost, because the origin.
Śrī Vidyā: Mukhyā is the foremost and principal; the Goddess chief of all, the primary reality.
564. मृडानी — Mṛḍānī
Translation: Mṛḍānī — the consort of Mṛḍa (Śiva, “the gracious one”).
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is Mṛḍānī — the power and consort of Mṛḍa, “the gracious,” a name of Śiva (recall Mṛḍa-priyā, dear to Mṛḍa). The apavāda: as the Śakti of the gracious Lord, she is grace itself — and one with him (the very name Mṛḍānī is Mṛḍa made feminine, as Bhavānī from Bhava, Rudrāṇī from Rudra); she and the gracious Śiva are one being, named now from her side. The consort-name is again a non-difference name.
Śrī Vidyā: Mṛḍānī is the consort of Mṛḍa (the gracious Śiva); the Śakti of the gracious Lord, one with him — her name his own made feminine.
565. मित्ररूपिणी — Mitra-rūpiṇī
Translation: Of the form of a friend (mitra); and of the form of the Sun (Mitra).
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is “of the form of a friend” — and Mitra is also a name of the Sun. The apavāda holds both: she is the truest mitra, the friend who wills only the good of the beloved (recall Vandāru-jana-vatsalā, tender to her devotees) — the supreme met not as distant Lord but as nearest friend; and she is Mitra the Sun, the friendly light that sustains all life. The Absolute as one's own dearest friend: perhaps the tenderest of all the names of relation. (And the friend who, like the Sun, gives without asking return.)
Śrī Vidyā: Mitra-rūpiṇī is of the form of a friend (and of Mitra, the Sun); the Goddess as the truest friend, willing only the devotee's good — and the friendly, life-giving solar light.
Śloka 115
नित्यतृप्ता भक्तनिधिर्नियन्त्री निखिलेश्वरी ।
मैत्र्यादि-वासनालभ्या महाप्रलय-साक्षिणी ॥ ११५॥
nitya-tṛptā bhakta-nidhir niyantrī nikhileśvarī |
maitryādi-vāsanā-labhyā mahā-pralaya-sākṣiṇī ǁ 115 ǁ
566. नित्यतृप्ता — Nitya-tṛptā
Translation: Ever-content (nitya-tṛptā); eternally satisfied, lacking nothing.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is “ever-satisfied” — perpetually content, in need of nothing. The apavāda: contentment that never lapses is the mark of the Full (Pūrṇā), for only what lacks nothing can be always satisfied; she is nitya-tṛptā because she is the plenum, complete in herself, desiring nothing from outside (recall Tuṣṭi, contentment, among her faces). Her eternal contentment is the fullness of the Self that wants for nothing.
Śrī Vidyā: Nitya-tṛptā is ever-content; the Goddess eternally satisfied, the fullness (pūrṇatva) that lacks nothing and desires nothing.
567. भक्तनिधिः — Bhakta-nidhiḥ
Translation: The treasure (nidhi) of her devotees.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is the “treasure of devotees” — the hoard of wealth that is the devotee's true riches. The apavāda: where worldly treasure is outwardly sought and spent, she is the inexhaustible inner wealth (recall Nidhi, the treasures at her command) — the one possession that, possessed, leaves nothing more to want. To have her is to be rich beyond loss; she is the devotee's whole fortune.
Śrī Vidyā: Bhakta-nidhiḥ is the treasure of devotees; the inexhaustible inner wealth, the one possession that fulfills all desire for those who love her.
568. नियन्त्री — Niyantrī
Translation: Niyantrī — the ruler, controller, ordainer of all.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is “the controller” — she who governs and ordains all. The apavāda: as Sarveśvarī, the sovereign, she is the inner ruler (antaryāmin) directing all from within (recall the Gītā's “Lord seated in the heart of all”); she is niyantrī not as an external tyrant but as the one awareness ordering the whole from its core. All law and order are her governance.
Śrī Vidyā: Niyantrī is the controller and ordainer of all; the Goddess as the inner ruler (antaryāmin) governing all from within.
569. निखिलेश्वरी — Nikhileśvarī
Translation: Nikhileśvarī — the sovereign of all (nikhila) without exception.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is “sovereign of the entire” — lady of all, leaving nothing out (echoing Sarveśvarī, Parameśvarī). The apavāda: nikhila is “all, the whole, without remainder”; her lordship excludes nothing, for there is nothing outside her — the all-sovereignty of the One who is the all. Not ruler over an other, but the all-encompassing reality that is itself the all it rules.
Śrī Vidyā: Nikhileśvarī is the sovereign of all without exception; the all-encompassing lordship of the Goddess, who is herself the all she rules.
570. मैत्र्यादिवासनालभ्या — Maitryādi-vāsanā-labhyā
Translation: Attainable through the cultivated dispositions beginning with friendliness (maitrī).
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is “attained through the vāsanās beginning with maitrī” — the inner dispositions of friendliness, compassion, gladness, and equanimity (the four brahma-vihāras, named in the Yoga-sūtra: maitrī, karuṇā, muditā, upekṣā). The apavāda: she is reached by the heart made pure and clear through these cultivated attitudes — for the mind cleansed of ill-will and unrest becomes the still, transparent water in which she is reflected (recall Bhakta-mānasa-haṃsikā, the swan in the cleared lake). The disposition of universal friendliness is itself a road to her.
Śrī Vidyā: Maitryādi-vāsanā-labhyā is attained through the dispositions beginning with friendliness; the Goddess reached by the heart purified through the four brahma-vihāras (maitrī, karuṇā, muditā, upekṣā) of the Yoga-sūtra.
571. महाप्रलयसाक्षिणी — Mahā-pralaya-sākṣiṇī
Translation: The witness (sākṣiṇī) of the great dissolution (mahā-pralaya).
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is the witness of the mahā-pralaya — the great cosmic dissolution in which all the worlds, and even the creator-gods, are withdrawn. The apavāda: when everything dissolves — when even Brahmā's day ends and the manifest returns to the unmanifest — she remains, the one awareness that witnesses the dissolution of all (recall Viśva-sākṣiṇī, witness of all; Niṣkriyā, the actionless witness). She is what abides when nothing else does — the consciousness that survives the end of worlds because it was never one of the things that end. The witness of the great death of the cosmos is the deathless Self.
Śrī Vidyā: Mahā-pralaya-sākṣiṇī is the witness of the great dissolution; the one consciousness that abides when all the worlds and gods are withdrawn — the deathless sākṣin surviving the cosmic end.
Śloka 116
परा शक्तिः परा निष्ठा प्रज्ञानघन-रूपिणी ।
माध्वीपानालसा मत्ता मातृका-वर्ण-रूपिणी ॥ ११६॥
parā śaktiḥ parā niṣṭhā prajñāna-ghana-rūpiṇī |
mādhvī-pānālasā mattā mātṛkā-varṇa-rūpiṇī ǁ 116 ǁ
At the centre of this śloka stands one of the hymn's deepest Vedāntic names — Prajñāna-ghana-rūpiṇī, “whose form is a dense mass of pure consciousness.” The phrase is the Māṇḍūkya Upaniṣad's own: in deep sleep (and beyond), the Self is prajñāna-ghana, undivided awareness without inner or outer distinction, a single seamless density of knowing. She is named as that — the supreme Power, the supreme Ground, and that homogeneous mass of consciousness into which all difference dissolves. The śloka then turns, by the hymn's characteristic rhythm, to the rapture-names: languid with the wine of bliss, intoxicated, and the very form of the letters of the alphabet.
572. परा शक्तिः — Parā-śaktiḥ
Translation: Parā-śakti — the supreme Power.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is Parā-śakti — “the supreme Power,” the highest energy beyond all lesser powers. The apavāda: every power in existence (of knowing, willing, acting) is a ray of one supreme power, and she is that — the parā-śakti from which the triad of will, knowledge, and action (icchā, jñāna, kriyā) and all forces derive (recall Sarva-śakti-mayī). Not a power among powers, but Power itself, the dynamic face of the Absolute. (And inseparable from Parā-prakāśa, the supreme light — power and light, Śakti and Śiva, one.)
Śrī Vidyā: Parā-śaktiḥ is the supreme Power; the highest śakti from which all powers (icchā, jñāna, kriyā) derive — the dynamic Absolute, inseparable from the supreme light.
573. परा निष्ठा — Parā-niṣṭhā
Translation: Parā-niṣṭhā — the supreme Ground, the ultimate state or abidance.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is Parā-niṣṭhā — “the supreme abidance,” the ultimate ground and final resting-state. The apavāda: niṣṭhā is firm standing, the state in which one comes to rest; she is the highest such state — the final repose of the realised, the ground beyond which there is nowhere further to go (recall Para-devatā, the supreme). She is both the supreme Power (active) and the supreme Repose (still) — the dynamic and the restful Absolute named together.
Śrī Vidyā: Parā-niṣṭhā is the supreme Ground and ultimate abidance; the final resting-state of realisation, the Absolute as supreme repose (beside Parā-śakti as supreme power).
574. प्रज्ञानघनरूपिणी — Prajñāna-ghana-rūpiṇī
Translation: Whose form is a dense, undivided mass of pure consciousness (prajñāna-ghana).
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is “of the form of a mass of pure consciousness.” The apavāda quotes the Māṇḍūkya Upaniṣad directly: in deep sleep the Self is prajñāna-ghana — undivided knowing, without the distinctions of inner and outer, a single seamless density of awareness (recall Vijñāna-ghana-rūpiṇī, the same teaching, and Prājña, the deep-sleep knower). She is that homogeneous mass of consciousness — not many awarenesses, nor awareness broken by objects, but one unbroken “block” of pure knowing in which all difference has dissolved. The deepest Vedāntic name: the Self as undivided consciousness, dense and whole, the ground from which the dream of multiplicity arises and into which it sinks. (The fourth, Turīya, is this very awareness known as ever-present, not merely in sleep.)
Śrī Vidyā: Prajñāna-ghana-rūpiṇī is the dense, undivided mass of pure consciousness; the Māṇḍūkya's prajñāna-ghana — seamless awareness without inner/outer distinction, the Self in which all multiplicity dissolves.
575. माध्वीपानालसा — Mādhvī-pānālasā
Translation: Languid (alasā) with the drinking (pāna) of the sweet wine (mādhvī).
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is “languid with the drinking of mādhvī” — drowsy-eyed, as if from sweet wine. The apavāda, as with Vāruṇī-mada-vihvalā and the mada-cluster: the “wine” is the nectar of bliss (recall the kādambarī, the soma of the Self), and the languor is the swoon of ānanda, not the stupor of drink; she is heavy-lidded and slow with the rapture of her own fullness, drunk on the sweetness of the Self. The intoxication is bliss, the wine is the nectar of awareness. (Read as the inner amṛta, not the literal cup.)
Śrī Vidyā: Mādhvī-pānālasā is languid with the drinking of sweet wine; the Goddess heavy with the swoon of ānanda — the “wine” being the inner nectar of bliss, not the literal cup.
576. मत्ता — Mattā
Translation: Mattā — intoxicated, rapturous.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is Mattā — “intoxicated,” rapturous. The apavāda: deepening the languor, she is wholly absorbed in rapture — the mada of bliss (Mada-śālinī), the joy so full it overflows as a sweet intoxication; not the disorder of drink but the ecstatic absorption of awareness in its own fathomless delight. She is drunk on herself, on the bliss that she is.
Śrī Vidyā: Mattā is intoxicated with rapture; the Goddess absorbed in the ecstasy of ānanda, the swoon of bliss (not literal intoxication).
577. मातृकावर्णरूपिणी — Mātṛkā-varṇa-rūpiṇī
Translation: Whose form is the letters (varṇa) of the mātṛkā — the alphabet, the matrix of sound.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is “of the form of the mātṛkā letters” — the fifty (or fifty-one) sounds of the Sanskrit alphabet, called mātṛkā, “the little mothers,” the matrix of all speech. The apavāda: every word, every mantra, every name (including these thousand) is built of the mātṛkā sounds; she is their very form (recall Mālinī, the letter-garland; Nāda-rūpā; the four levels of speech) — the alphabet itself is her body, and all language is her self-expression. The “little mothers” of sound are the one Mother in her form as the source of all utterance. Fittingly placed beside Prajñāna-ghana: from the seamless mass of consciousness, the differentiated sounds of speech arise as her own articulation.
Śrī Vidyā: Mātṛkā-varṇa-rūpiṇī is of the form of the mātṛkā letters (the fifty-one alphabet-sounds, “the little mothers”); the Goddess as the matrix of all speech and mantra, the alphabet as her body.
Śloka 117
महाकैलास-निलया मृणाल-मृदु-दोर्लता ।
महनीया दयामूर्तिर्महासाम्राज्य-शालिनी ॥ ११७॥
mahā-kailāsa-nilayā mṛṇāla-mṛdu-dorlatā |
mahanīyā dayā-mūrtir mahā-sāmrājya-śālinī ǁ 117 ǁ
578. महाकैलासनिलया — Mahā-kailāsa-nilayā
Translation: Whose abode is the great Kailāsa (mahā-kailāsa).
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She dwells on the great Kailāsa — Śiva's mountain, and esoterically the supreme summit, the crown beyond the crown. The apavāda: as she was seated on Sumeru's peak (Part III) and the sahasrāra's thousand-petalled lotus (Part XIV), Mahā-Kailāsa is the highest abode, the seat of Śiva-Śakti union at the very top of all (recall Sahasrārāmbujārūḍhā); to dwell on Mahā-Kailāsa is to be at the summit of being, where she and Śiva are one. The supreme height, named as her home.
Śrī Vidyā: Mahā-kailāsa-nilayā dwells on the great Kailāsa; the supreme summit, seat of Śiva-Śakti union — the highest abode, beyond even the sahasrāra.
579. मृणालमृदुदोर्लता — Mṛṇāla-mṛdu-dorlatā
Translation: Whose creeper-like arms (dorlatā) are tender (mṛdu) as lotus-fibres (mṛṇāla).
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: Her arms are creeper-soft, tender as the fibre of the lotus-stalk. The apavāda: after the lofty Mahā-Kailāsa, an image of exquisite delicacy — her arms like vines, soft as the mṛṇāla, the lotus-fibre (recall Bisatantu-tanīyasī, finer than a lotus-fibre); the supreme reality wearing the tenderest grace, the arms that embrace the devotee soft as the gentlest thing in nature. Power at the summit, tenderness in the touch.
Śrī Vidyā: Mṛṇāla-mṛdu-dorlatā has arms tender as lotus-fibres; the delicate, creeper-soft arms of the Goddess, an image of her gentleness.
580. महनीया — Mahanīyā
Translation: Mahanīyā — the venerable, the worshipful, the great.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is Mahanīyā — “to be magnified,” the venerable, worthy of all worship. The apavāda: she is the supremely worshipful (recall Mahā-pūjyā, Vandyā) — that before which reverence is the only fitting response; her greatness (mahat) calls forth worship not by demand but by its sheer majesty. To know her greatness is to revere.
Śrī Vidyā: Mahanīyā is the venerable and worshipful; the Goddess worthy of all worship, great beyond measure.
581. दयामूर्तिः — Dayā-mūrtiḥ
Translation: Dayā-mūrtiḥ — the very embodiment (mūrti) of compassion (dayā).
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is “compassion embodied” — mercy taken form. The apavāda: not merely compassionate but compassion itself made visible (recall Sāndra-karuṇā, dense with mercy; Karuṇā-rasa-sāgarā, the ocean of the savour of mercy; Nitya-klinnā, ever-moist with grace); her very form is dayā, so that to behold her is to behold mercy. The supreme reality, whose nature toward all that suffers is pure compassion, wearing compassion as its form.
Śrī Vidyā: Dayā-mūrtiḥ is the embodiment of compassion; the Goddess whose very form is mercy (recall Sāndra-karuṇā, Karuṇā-rasa-sāgarā) — compassion made visible.
582. महासाम्राज्यशालिनी — Mahā-sāmrājya-śālinī
Translation: Who holds (śālinī) the great empire (mahā-sāmrājya) — sovereign sway over all.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She holds the “great empire” — possessed of universal sovereign sway. The apavāda: as Rājarājeśvarī, the queen of king-of-kings, her empire is the whole of existence (recall Sāmrājya-dāyinī, giver of empire); mahā-sāmrājya is the supreme dominion, rule over all worlds and beings — yet hers is the sovereignty of the One over what is not other than herself, the rule of the Self over its own kingdom. The great empire is the all, and she is its sole sovereign. (And she grants this inner sovereignty — self-rule — to the devotee.)
Śrī Vidyā: Mahā-sāmrājya-śālinī holds the great empire; the supreme sovereign sway of the Goddess (Rājarājeśvarī) over all worlds — and the inner sovereignty she bestows on the devotee.
Śloka 118
आत्मविद्या महाविद्या श्रीविद्या कामसेविता ।
श्रीषोडशाक्षरी-विद्या त्रिकूटा कामकोटिका ॥ ११८॥
ātma-vidyā mahā-vidyā śrī-vidyā kāma-sevitā |
śrī-ṣoḍaśākṣarī-vidyā tri-kūṭā kāma-koṭikā ǁ 118 ǁ
The part rises to its summit in the three Vidyās — the names toward which the whole hymn has been building. She is Ātma-vidyā, the knowledge of the Self; Mahā-vidyā, the great knowledge; and Śrī-vidyā, the sacred knowledge that is her own mantra. These are not three deities of three knowledges but the one Goddess named as Knowledge in its three faces: the inward (knowledge of the Self), the supreme (the great knowledge of the Absolute), and the sacred-auspicious (the Śrī-Vidyā mantra by which she is worshipped). The śloka completes the crown with the sixteen-syllabled vidyā, the three-peaked, and Kāma-koṭikā — names of the highest mantra and seat. The hymn here states plainly what it has implied throughout: she is not the object of a knowledge, but Knowledge itself — and to know is to know oneself as her.
583. आत्मविद्या — Ātma-vidyā
Translation: Ātma-vidyā — the knowledge of the Self.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is Ātma-vidyā — “the knowledge of the Self,” the supreme science by which the Ātman is known. The apavāda: this is the knowledge the Upaniṣads call the highest, by which “that being known, all is known” — and she is that knowledge itself, not its object; for the Self that is known and the knowing by which it is known are, in the end, one (recall Tat-pada-lakṣyārthā, Vidyā). To gain ātma-vidyā is to know oneself as the Self — and the Self as her. The whole edition's reading culminates here: the chart, the mantra, the form, all serve this one knowledge, the knowledge of the Self.
Śrī Vidyā: Ātma-vidyā is the knowledge of the Self; the supreme vidyā of the Upaniṣads by which the Ātman is realised — the Goddess as Self-knowledge itself.
584. महाविद्या — Mahā-vidyā
Translation: Mahā-vidyā — the great knowledge; and the Mahāvidyās, the great wisdom-goddesses.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is Mahā-vidyā — “the great knowledge,” the supreme wisdom; and the name of the ten great wisdom-goddesses (the Daśa-mahāvidyā). The apavāda: mahā-vidyā is knowledge in its greatness — the wisdom of the Absolute, surpassing all lesser learning (the aparā-vidyā); and as the Mahāvidyās, she is the supreme reality in its ten great forms (Kālī, Tārā, and the rest), all of which are she. The great knowledge and the great Goddesses of knowledge are one: she, as Wisdom supreme.
Śrī Vidyā: Mahā-vidyā is the great knowledge (the parā-vidyā of the Absolute) and the Daśa-mahāvidyā (the ten great wisdom-goddesses); the Goddess as supreme Wisdom in all her great forms.
585. श्रीविद्या — Śrī-vidyā
Translation: Śrī-vidyā — the sacred, auspicious knowledge; her own mantra-science.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is Śrī-vidyā — “the auspicious knowledge,” the sacred science that is her own mantra and worship, the very tradition this commentary serves. The apavāda: the Śrī-Vidyā is the path of the supreme mantra (the Pañcadaśī and Ṣoḍaśī) and the Śrī Cakra, by which she is worshipped and known — and she is named here as that knowledge itself; the path and its goal are one, for the Vidyā is the Goddess, the mantra not other than the deity. To take up the Śrī-Vidyā is to take up her own self-knowledge. (Its inner detail belongs to the initiate; here she is named as the sacred knowledge that she is.)
Śrī Vidyā: Śrī-vidyā is the sacred, auspicious knowledge — the supreme mantra-science (Pañcadaśī, Ṣoḍaśī) and Śrī Cakra worship that is the Goddess's own; the path identical with its goal, the Vidyā that is the Devī herself.
586. कामसेविता — Kāma-sevitā
Translation: Served/worshipped by Kāma (the god of love); and by desire rightly turned.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is served by Kāma — the god of love whom she revived, and who worships her (recall Kāma-pūjitā). The apavāda: as before, kāma returned to its source becomes worship — desire, no longer scattered on objects, gathers into love of her; and Kāma the god, restored by her grace, is among her worshippers. The arc of desire (burnt, revived, offered) completes once more: longing turned Godward is her service. (Also: she is sought by those who, like Kāma, desire rightly — the legitimate desires the Śrī-Vidyā fulfills.)
Śrī Vidyā: Kāma-sevitā is worshipped by Kāma; desire consecrated becomes the Goddess's service — and she is sought by those whose desires are rightly turned, fulfilling the four aims through the Śrī-Vidyā.
587. श्रीषोडशाक्षरीविद्या — Śrī-ṣoḍaśākṣarī-vidyā
Translation: The sacred sixteen-syllabled knowledge (ṣoḍaśākṣarī-vidyā) — the supreme Ṣoḍaśī mantra.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is the “sacred sixteen-syllabled Vidyā” — the supreme Ṣoḍaśī, the sixteen-syllable form of her mantra (the fifteen-syllable Pañcadaśī crowned by a sixteenth secret syllable). The apavāda: this is the highest form of the Śrī-Vidyā mantra, the crown of the tradition (recall Nityā-ṣoḍaśikā-rūpā, the never-waning sixteenth digit); she is named as that mantra itself — the most sacred sound-form by which the supreme is invoked and known. The detail of the sixteen syllables belongs to the initiate; the name declares that the mantra is the Goddess. (The sixteenth syllable is the secret of the parampara.)
Śrī Vidyā: Śrī-ṣoḍaśākṣarī-vidyā is the sacred sixteen-syllabled mantra (the supreme Ṣoḍaśī, the Pañcadaśī crowned by the secret sixteenth syllable); the highest form of the Śrī-Vidyā — its inner detail held within the parampara.
588. त्रिकूटा — Tri-kūṭā
Translation: Tri-kūṭā — the three-peaked; she of the three clusters (kūṭa) of the mantra.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is Tri-kūṭā — “three-peaked,” the three kūṭas (clusters, segments) of the Pañcadaśī mantra (the vāgbhava, kāmarāja, and śakti kūṭas, recalling the three forming the body of the mantra in Part II). The apavāda: the three peaks are the three segments of her mantra, and esoterically the three great divisions — of the mantra, of the Śrī Cakra, of the cosmos (three guṇas, three states, three worlds) — all gathered in her threefold form. She is the three-peaked mountain of the mantra, whose summit is the bindu. (Tri-kūṭā is also a sacred mountain; the geography mirrors the mantra.)
Śrī Vidyā: Tri-kūṭā is the three-peaked; the three kūṭas (vāgbhava, kāmarāja, śakti) of the Pañcadaśī mantra, and the threefold divisions of the Śrī Cakra and cosmos — the Goddess as the three-segmented mantra.
589. कामकोटिका — Kāma-koṭikā
Translation: Kāma-koṭikā — she of Kāmakoṭi (the supreme bindu/peak of desire-fulfilment); the deity of the Kāmakoṭi seat.
Adhyāropa–Apavāda: She is Kāma-koṭikā — of kāma-koṭi, “the summit (koṭi) of desire,” the supreme point where all desire is fulfilled and ceases. The apavāda: koṭi is the highest point, the peak; kāma-koṭi is the bindu at the centre of the Śrī Cakra where desire reaches its end — not by gratification but by fulfilment in the Self, beyond which nothing is left to want (recall the bindu, Bindu-maṇḍala-vāsinī; Kāmeśvarī, the mistress of desire). She is the point where longing comes home; and Kāmakoṭi is also her great seat (the Kāmakoṭi pīṭha at Kāñcī). The summit of desire is its resolution in her. Fittingly, this closes the section: from the knowledge of the Self (Ātma-vidyā) to the peak where all desire rests (Kāma-koṭi), the way and its end.
Śrī Vidyā: Kāma-koṭikā is she of Kāmakoṭi, the supreme bindu where all desire is fulfilled and ceases; the deity of the Kāmakoṭi pīṭha (Kāñcī) — the summit where longing rests in the Self.
Devanagari per the sanskritdocuments.org recension (Brahmāṇḍa Purāṇa, Uttarakhaṇḍa; Hayagrīva–Agastya saṃvāda); numbering per the arunachala/standard recension. Transliteration, translation, and commentary original to this edition. — End of Part XV.
