The Nakshatra-Purusha Vrata: Worship of Vishnu’s Body as the Constellations
चरता तदरण्यं वै दुःखाक्रान्तेन नारद आत्मा इव शमीवृक्षो मरावासादितः शुभः
caratā tadaraṇyaṃ vai duḥkhākrāntena nārada ātmā iva śamīvṛkṣo marāvāsāditaḥ śubhaḥ
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In Purāṇic and Vedic imagination, the śamī is a resilient, sacred tree associated with protection, ritual fire, and auspiciousness. In an arid ‘maru’ landscape, its presence functions as a natural sanctuary and a narrative signpost—often preceding a significant encounter or revelation.
The phrase is primarily poetic personification: the tree stands ‘as if living,’ emphasizing its sheltering, life-giving quality in a harsh terrain. Purāṇas frequently treat certain trees as sacred loci, but this line itself does not explicitly identify an indwelling deity.
Even without naming a specific tīrtha here, the text maps pilgrimage experience through ecological markers (forest, desert, sacred tree). Such landscape cues often lead into the identification of a nearby sacred site or a moral-geographical lesson tied to place.