Sami
Created by Jijith Nadumuri at 03 Mar 2010 17:36 and updated at 03 Mar 2010 17:36
Mahabharata: 18 Parvas
MAHABHARATA NOUN
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Mbh.3.129.6573 | This is the Sami tree, which hath got but a single leaf, and this is a most excellent lake. |
Mbh.4.5.193 | Arjuna said, Hard by yon cemetery and near that inaccessible peak is a mighty Sami tree, throwing-about its gigantic branches and difficult to ascend. |
Mbh.4.5.196 | Stowing away our weapons on the Sami tree, let us, O Bharata, go to the city, and live there, free from anxiety |
Mbh.4.39.1575 | SECTION XXXIX Vaisampayana said, Beholding that bull among men seated on the car in the habit of a person of the third sex, driving toward the Sami tree, having taken the flying Uttara up, all the great car-warriors of the Kurus with Bhishma and Drona at their head, became affrighted at heart, suspecting the comer to be Dhananjaya. |
Mbh.4.40.1599 | SECTION XL Vaisampayana said, Having reached that Sami tree, and having ascertained Virata's son to be exceedingly delicate and inexperienced in battle, Partha addressed him, saying, Enjoined by me, O Uttara, quickly take down from this tree some bows that are there. |
Mbh.4.41.1612 | Vaisampayana said, Thus addressed by Partha, Virata's son, decked in ear-rings, alighted from the car, and climbed up that Sami tree reluctantly. |
Mbh.4.46.1762 | SECTION XLVI Vaisampayana said, Making Uttara his charioteer, and circumambulating the Sami tree, the son of Pandu set out taking all his weapons with him. |
Mbh.4.46.1763 | And that mighty car-warrior set out with Uttara as the driver of his car, having taken down that banner with the lion's figure and deposited it at the foot of the Sami tree. |
Mbh.4.66.2586 | Vaisampayana continued, Having vanquished the hostile army and wrested the whole of the cattle wealth from the Kurus, Jishnu returned again to the cemetery and having approached the same Sami tree stood there with body mangled by the arrows of the enemy. |
Mbh.4.66.2596 | And the Matsya and the Bharata princes having thus consulted together re-approached the same Sami tree. |
Mbh.4.66.2597 | And gratified with the victory they had won, and arrived at the foot of the Sami tree, they wore on their persons and took up on their car the ornaments and robes they had left there. |
Mbh.7.176.9579 | And they struck each other, tearing up many kinds of large-branched trees such as Sami and Pilu and Karira and Champaka, O Bharata, and Inguidi and Vadari and flowering Kovidara and Arimeda and Plaksha and banian and peepul, and also with diverse mountain-summits and diverse kinds of metals. |
Mbh.8.44.2374 | When shall I be amongst those ladies eating cakes of flour and meat and balls of pounded barley mixed with skimmed milk, in the forests, having many pleasant paths of Sami and Pilu and Karira! |
Mbh.9.45.3365 | Bathing in that tirtha also and giving away diverse kinds of gifts, Baladeva, the slayer of Pralamva, possessed of great wisdom, then proceeded to Agnitirtha, that spot where the eater of clarified butter, disappearing from the view, became concealed within the entrails of the Sami wood. |
Mbh.9.45.3375 | Concealing himself within the entrails of the Sami wood, that adorable god disappeared from the view. |
Mbh.9.45.3377 | Finding Agni then, they saw that god lying within the entrails of the Sami wood. |
Mbh.12.40.2107 | There were golden jars full to the brim with water, and those made of copper and silver and earth, and flowers, and fried paddy, and Kusa grass, and cow's milk, and sacrificial fuel consisting of the wood of Sami, Pippala, and Palasa, and honey and clarified butter and sacrificial ladles made of Udumvara, and conches adorned with gold |
Mbh.13.85.7657 | Having been pointed out by the elephants, the deity of fire cursed all elephants even thus and then went away and entered the heart of the Sami tree from the desire of residing within it for some time. |
Mbh.13.85.7661 | Indeed, having issued out of the Aswattha tree, the deity of fire had entered the heart of Sami. |
Mbh.13.85.7669 | Having said these words unto the parrot, and beholding the deity of fire within the heart of the Sami, the gods made Sami wood a sacred fuel fit for producing fire in all religious rites. |
Mbh.13.85.7670 | It was from that time that fire is seen to reside in the heart of the Sami. |
Mbh.13.85.7671 | Men came to regard the Sami as proper means for producing fire in sacrifice |
Mbh.13.103.9216 | Throwing the Sami, I adored the gods in myriads of such sacrifices as are completed in course of a single day, and such others as take twelve days for completing, and others still as can be completed in three and ten days, besides many Pundarikas. |
Jijith Nadumuri Ravi
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Reference:- Mahabharata of Krishna Dwaipayana Vyasa, translated to English by Kisari Mohan Ganguli; Source of Plain Text: www.sacred-texts.com; Wikified at AncientVoice. |
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