HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 53Shloka 49
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Vamana Purana — Nakshatra-Purusha Vrata, Shloka 49

The Nakshatra-Purusha Vrata: Worship of Vishnu’s Body as the Constellations

सौवीरतिलपिण्याकसक्तुशाकादिभोनैः क्षपयामि कदन्नाद्यैरात्मानं कालयापनैः

sauvīratilapiṇyākasaktuśākādibhonaiḥ kṣapayāmi kadannādyairātmānaṃ kālayāpanaiḥ

{"bhagavata_parallel": null, "vishnu_purana_parallel": null, "ramayana_connection": null, "mahabharata_echo": "Śiva–Viṣṇu mutual honor and shared martial symbolism (echoes of Harihara motifs found across epic-purāṇic strata).", "other_puranas": ["Skanda Purana (tirtha-mahatmya genre parallels; Harihara kshetra themes)", "Shiva Purana (Hari-Hara concord motifs)", "Padma Purana (tirtha-mahatmya and sectarian reconciliation passages)"], "vedic_reference": null}

Unspecified in prompt; first-person voice of a sufferer/penitent continuing the confession in Adhyaya 53.
Austerity through poverty-like dietKarmic retribution and bodily wastingSubsistence vs. dharmic flourishing

{ "primaryRasa": "karuna", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

They can signal both. In Purāṇic rhetoric, listing coarse foods (oil-cake, saktu, greens) often depicts either forced poverty (pāpa-phala) or deliberate austerity; the phrase ‘kāla-yāpanaiḥ’ leans toward mere survival rather than chosen tapas.

It suggests the body is being ‘worn down’—either by illness, hardship, or penitential living—reinforcing the speaker’s degraded state and the urgency for purification or refuge.

Indirectly. While no place-name appears here, such confessional passages commonly frame why a particular tīrtha (named elsewhere in the chapter) is sought for relief, expiation, or merit.