कंसस्तु धनुषो भङ्गं रक्षिणां स्वबलस्य च । वधं निशम्य गोविन्दरामविक्रीडितं परम् ॥ २६ ॥ दीर्घप्रजागरो भीतो दुर्निमित्तानि दुर्मति: । बहून्यचष्टोभयथा मृत्योर्दौत्यकराणि च ॥ २७ ॥
kaṁsas tu dhanuṣo bhaṅgaṁ rakṣiṇāṁ sva-balasya ca vadhaṁ niśamya govinda- rāma-vikrīḍitaṁ param
Wicked Kaṁsa, hearing that Govinda and Rāma had broken the bow and slain his guards and soldiers as if in mere sport, was struck with terror. He lay awake for a long time, and both waking and in dreams he beheld many evil omens, like messengers of death.
This verse notes that Kaṁsa heard how Kṛṣṇa broke the bow and how the guards and Kaṁsa’s soldiers were killed, recognizing these events as the supreme pastime of Govinda and Balarāma.
Because the news showed that Kṛṣṇa and Balarāma were overpowering Kaṁsa’s defenses with ease, and Kaṁsa understood these acts as extraordinary divine play—signaling his impending danger.
The verse contrasts the devotee’s reverence with the tyrant’s fear: recognizing a higher divine order can shift one from anxiety and control to humility, accountability, and trust.