Numerous
popular stories throughout the world reflect a firmly-rooted belief in an intimate connection between a
human being and a
tree,
plant or
flower. Sometimes a man's life depends upon the tree and suffers when it withers or is injured, and we encounter the idea of the external soul, already found in the
Ancient Egyptian
Tale of Two Brothers from at least 3000 years ago. Here one of the brothers leaves his heart on the top of the flower of the acacia and falls dead when it is cut down. Sometimes, however, the tree is a mysterious token which shows its sympathy with an absent hero by weakening or dying, as the man becomes ill or loses his life. These two features very easily combine, and they agree in representing to us mysterious sympathy between tree and human life. Important sacred trees are also the object of pilgrimage, one of the most noteworthy being the branch of the
Bo tree at
Sri Lanka brought thither before the Christian era. The tree spirits will hold sway over the surrounding forest or district, and the animals in the locality are often sacred and must not be harmed. Some
Ancient Indian
tree deities, such as Puliyidaivalaiyamman, the
Tamil deity of the
tamarind tree, or Kadambariyamman, associated with the
kadamba tree were seen as manifestations of a goddess who offers her blessings by giving fruits in abundance. ==In literature==