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durgadevishakradi-stutidurga-saptashati

Durge Smrita Harasi

दुर्गे स्मृता हरसि in English · English

🕉️ hindu·📿 11× repetitions·🕐 Daily at dawn, on Tuesdays and Fridays, and throughout Navaratri·📜 Durga Saptashati (Devi Mahatmyam) Chapter 4 — Shakradi Stuti, verses 16, 22-23; from the Markandeya Purana
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Meaning

'Durge Smrita Harasi' is among the most beloved single verses of the entire Durga Saptashati, drawn from the Shakradi Stuti of Chapter 4, sung by Indra and the gods after the slaying of Mahishasura. It declares that the mere remembrance of Durga removes the fear of every being, grants an auspicious mind to the fortunate, and asks who else has a heart so ever-tender toward all. The accompanying verses thank her for saving the three worlds and beg her to guard the devotee with her spear, sword, bell and bow.

Origin & Story

Durga Saptashati (Devi Mahatmyam) Chapter 4 — Shakradi Stuti, verses 16, 22-23; from the Markandeya Purana · Sage Markandeya (traditional) · Ancient (the Devi Mahatmyam is dated to c. 5th-6th century CE)

After the Goddess vanquished the mighty buffalo-demon Mahishasura, who had driven the gods from heaven, Indra and the assembled deities extolled her with the Shakradi Stuti ('the praise by Indra and the gods'). Marvelling that her face was at once gentle as the full moon and terrible to her foes, and that she showed compassion even to the enemies she slew, they sang 'Durge Smrita Harasi' — that her very remembrance removes the fear of all — and begged her protection on every side.

As told in scripture

This verse is traditionally regarded as an apad-uddharaka (rescuer from calamity) mantra. It is said that those who recite 'Durge Smrita Harasi Bhitim' in moments of acute danger — illness, accident, lawsuit or attack — find their fear lifted as though by the Mother's own hand, in keeping with her promise in the Devi Mahatmyam to remove the gravest calamities the instant she is remembered.

Complete Text with Meaning

Tap any line — or the ▶ button — to hear it recited

Verse 1

durge smṛtā harasi bhītimaśeṣajantoḥ svasthaiḥ smṛtā matimatīva śubhāṃ dadāsi dāridryaduḥkhabhayahāriṇi tvadanyā sarvopakārakaraṇāya sadārdracittā

Meaning:O Durga, when remembered you remove the fear of every creature; remembered by those in well-being, you bestow a most auspicious mind. O remover of poverty, pain and fear, who but you has a heart ever tender to do good to all?

Verse 2

trailokyametadakhilaṃ ripunāśanena trātaṃ tvayā samaramūrdhani te'pi hatvā nītā divaṃ ripugaṇā bhayamapyapāstam asmākamunmadasurāribhavaṃ namaste

Meaning:This entire three worlds has been saved by you through the destruction of the foes; having slain them on the front of battle you have led the enemy hosts to heaven, and dispelled too our fear born of the frenzied foes of the gods — salutation to you!

Verse 3

śūlena pāhi no devi pāhi khaḍgena cāmbike ghaṇṭāsvanena naḥ pāhi cāpajyāniḥsvanena ca

Meaning:Protect us with your spear, O Devi; protect us, O Ambika, with your sword; protect us by the sound of your bell and by the twang of your bowstring.

Word-by-Word Meaning

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durge🔊O Durga
smṛtā🔊when remembered / called to mind
harasi bhītiṃ🔊you remove the fear
aśeṣa-jantoḥ🔊of every creature without exception
svasthaiḥ smṛtā🔊remembered by those in well-being / health
matim atīva śubhāṃ dadāsi🔊you bestow a most auspicious mind / intelligence
dāridrya-duḥkha-bhaya-hāriṇi🔊O remover of poverty, sorrow and fear
kā tvad-anyā🔊who other than you (is there)?
sarva-upakāra-karaṇāya🔊for doing good to all
sadā-ārdra-cittā🔊whose heart is ever tender / compassionate
trailokyam etat akhilaṃ🔊this entire three worlds
ripu-nāśanena trātaṃ🔊saved by the destruction of the foes
samara-mūrdhani🔊on the front / forefront of battle
nītā divaṃ ripu-gaṇāḥ🔊the hosts of enemies led to heaven
bhayam api apāstam🔊(our) fear too has been dispelled
namaste🔊salutation to you
śūlena pāhi naḥ🔊protect us with your spear (trident)
khaḍgena ca ambike🔊and with your sword, O Ambika (Mother)
ghaṇṭā-svanena🔊by the sound of your bell
cāpa-jyā-niḥsvanena🔊by the twang of your bowstring

Benefits of Chanting दुर्गे स्मृता हरसि

Declares that the mere remembrance of Durga removes the fear of every living being

Bestows an auspicious, clear and noble mind (mati) upon those who are well

Invoked as the remover of poverty (daridrya), sorrow (duhkha) and fear (bhaya)

Affirms the Mother's boundless compassion — her heart ever tender toward all

Begs her fourfold protection with spear, sword, bell-sound and bowstring

One of the most cherished verses recited daily and during Navaratri for safety and prosperity

How to Chant दुर्गे स्मृता हरसि

Repetitions11times
Best TimeDaily at dawn, on Tuesdays and Fridays, and throughout Navaratri

Sit before an image of Durga with a lit lamp and recite the verses with devotion after 'Om'. 'Durge Smrita Harasi' is often chanted on its own as a daily remembrance and is a key verse of the Shakradi Stuti recited during Durga Saptashati paath. Dwell on its promise that simply remembering the Mother dissolves fear, and on her compassion that does good to all. Repeating it 11 or 21 times is a traditional practice for relief from fear, poverty and grief.

Frequently Asked Questions

This page shows the complete दुर्गे स्मृता हरसि written in the English script — the same Sanskrit/Hindi verses, transliterated character-by-character so you can read and chant comfortably. Tap any line (or the ▶ button) to hear it recited aloud.
Yes — only the script changes; the words and their meaning are the original. The verse-by-verse meaning, benefits and how-to-chant guidance on this page apply exactly the same.
It means 'O Durga, when remembered, you remove the fear of every creature.' This single line is among the most quoted of the Devi Mahatmyam, expressing the faith that simply calling the Mother to mind dispels all fear.
It is verse 16 of the Shakradi Stuti in Chapter 4 of the Durga Saptashati (Devi Mahatmyam), sung by Indra and the gods after the Goddess slew the buffalo-demon Mahishasura. The protective verses 'Shulena pahi no devi' (v.23) follow in the same hymn.
Because it explicitly names the Goddess as 'daridrya-duhkha-bhaya-harini' — the remover of poverty, sorrow and fear — and promises that her remembrance itself takes away dread. Devotees chant it for protection, prosperity and peace of mind.
In the verse 'Shulena pahi no devi', the gods ask the Mother to guard them with four things: her spear (shula/trident), her sword (khadga), the sound of her bell (ghanta-svana) and the twang of her bowstring (chapa-jya) — symbolising protection on every front.

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