अन्येषां यदुवीराणां पापकर्मातिनिर्घृणः । जिजीविषुरिह प्राप्तो वासुदेवनिराकृतः
anyeṣāṃ yaduvīrāṇāṃ pāpakarmātinirghṛṇaḥ | jijīviṣuriha prāpto vāsudevanirākṛtaḥ
And (he spoke) of other Yadu heroes—sinful in conduct and utterly without compassion. Desiring to cling to life, I have come here, cast off (as it were) by Vāsudeva.
Arjuna (reported within Īśvara’s narration)
Tirtha: Prabhāsa-kṣetra
Type: kshetra
Listener: Devī (addressed as ‘devi’ in nearby verses) / assembled sages (frame-dependent)
Scene: A remorseful Yādava hero stands at Prabhāsa’s sacred shore, head bowed, speaking of other Yādavas’ cruelty and his own clinging to life, feeling cast off by Vāsudeva; the sea and temple horizon loom as witnesses.
Power and lineage do not protect one who abandons dharma; the Purāṇic lens reads historical tragedy as ethical instruction.
The narrative belongs to Prabhāsakṣetra’s tīrtha-cycle, where Yādava-associated events frame the sanctity of local rivers and rites.
None explicitly; it is a confessional narrative that precedes tīrtha-phala teachings.