The Solar Eclipse at Samanta-pañcaka and the Great Reunion of Yādavas, Pāṇḍavas, and Vraja
ते रथैर्देवधिष्ण्याभैर्हयैश्च तरलप्लवै: । गजैर्नदद्भिरभ्राभैर्नृभिर्विद्याधरद्युभि: ॥ ७ ॥ व्यरोचन्त महातेजा: पथि काञ्चनमालिन: । दिव्यस्रग्वस्त्रसन्नाहा: कलत्रै: खेचरा इव ॥ ८ ॥
te rathair deva-dhiṣṇyābhair hayaiś ca tarala-plavaiḥ gajair nadadbhir abhrābhair nṛbhir vidyādhara-dyubhiḥ
The mighty Yādavas passed with great majesty along the road. They were attended by their soldiers, who rode on chariots rivaling the airplanes of heaven, on horses moving with a rhythmic gait, and on bellowing elephants as huge as clouds. Also with them were many infantrymen as effulgent as celestial Vidyādharas. The Yādavas were so divinely dressed — being adorned with gold necklaces and flower garlands and wearing fine armor — that as they proceeded along the road with their wives they seemed to be demigods flying through the sky.
It depicts the Yadavas traveling in magnificent chariots, swift horses, and cloudlike elephants, shining brilliantly with divine ornaments and accompanied by their wives—appearing like celestial beings moving through the sky.
Śukadeva Gosvāmī is narrating to King Parīkṣit, describing the splendor of Kṛṣṇa’s party as they travel.
External splendor and success can be impressive, but the Bhagavatam uses such imagery to set the stage for deeper devotion—encouraging us to look beyond display and seek the inner purpose of life: bhakti and remembrance of Kṛṣṇa.