The Slaying of Śālva and the Destruction of Saubha
यत्त्वया मूढ न: सख्युर्भ्रातुर्भार्या हृतेक्षताम् । प्रमत्त: स सभामध्ये त्वया व्यापादित: सखा ॥ १७ ॥ तं त्वाद्य निशितैर्बाणैरपराजितमानिनम् । नयाम्यपुनरावृत्तिं यदि तिष्ठेर्ममाग्रत: ॥ १८ ॥
yat tvayā mūḍha naḥ sakhyur bhrātur bhāryā hṛtekṣatām pramattaḥ sa sabhā-madhye tvayā vyāpāditaḥ sakhā
[Śālva said:] You fool! Because in our presence You kidnapped the bride of our friend Śiśupāla, Your own cousin, and because You later murdered him in the sacred assembly while he was inattentive, today with my sharp arrows I will send You to the land of no return! Though You think Yourself invincible, I will kill You now if You dare stand before me.
Śālva, driven by hostility, taunts Kṛṣṇa by recalling the killing of Śiśupāla and frames it as an unjust act done when the opponent was off guard.
It refers to Śiśupāla as the one dear to Rukmiṇī (the wife of their ‘brother’ Kṛṣṇa), since Śālva twists the relationship to insult Kṛṣṇa.
It shows how envy distorts perception—an offender tries to portray the Lord’s righteous actions as blameworthy—so one should guard against resentment and cultivate humble, truthful speech.