Vishnu Enters the Deva–Asura War and Slays Kalanemi
तथा विबाहुर्विशिरा मुण्डतालो यथा वने तस्थौ मेरुरिवाकम्प्यः कबन्धः क्ष्माधरेश्वरः
tathā vibāhurviśirā muṇḍatālo yathā vane tasthau merurivākampyaḥ kabandhaḥ kṣmādhareśvaraḥ
ఇలా గుణసంపన్నుడైన ఆ దనువంశశ్రేష్ఠుడు—మహాత్ముడు బలి—శుభబుద్ధిగలవాడు, ఆత్మవంతుడు; యజ్ఞకర్త, తపస్వి, మృదుస్వభావి, సత్యవాక్కు; దాత, పోషకుడు, స్వజనరక్షకుడు।
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It provides a concrete battlefield visual: a tall trunk standing after being cut, mirroring a headless body still upright. The tāla palm is a familiar marker of height and straightness, making the scene vivid and immediate.
Meru symbolizes absolute stability in Purāṇic cosmology. The comparison heightens the demon’s massive, immovable presence even in death-throes, thereby magnifying the scale of Viṣṇu’s feat in overcoming such a formidable opponent.
Meru is primarily cosmological (axis-mundi) rather than a mapped terrestrial tīrtha in this context. The verse uses it as a poetic standard of immovability, not as a travel or sacred-site locator.