Draupadī Meets Kṛṣṇa’s Queens — Narratives of the Lord’s Marriages and the Queens’ Bhakti
तत: पुरीं यदुपतिरत्यलङ्कृतां रविच्छदध्वजपटचित्रतोरणाम् । कुशस्थलीं दिवि भुवि चाभिसंस्तुतां समाविशत्तरणिरिव स्वकेतनम् ॥ ३६ ॥
tataḥ purīṁ yadu-patir aty-alaṅkṛtāṁ ravi-cchada-dhvaja-paṭa-citra-toraṇām kuśasthalīṁ divi bhuvi cābhisaṁstutāṁ samāviśat taraṇir iva sva-ketanam
Entonces el Señor de los Yadus entró en su capital, Kuśasthalī (Dvārakā), alabada en el cielo y en la tierra. La ciudad estaba ricamente adornada con mástiles y estandartes que velaban el sol, y con espléndidos arcos; al entrar Kṛṣṇa, parecía el dios Sol entrando en su morada.
The abode of the sun is in the western mountains, where he sets each evening.
This verse praises Dvārakā (Kuśasthalī) as a magnificently decorated divine city, celebrated both on earth and in heaven, fit for Śrī Kṛṣṇa’s residence.
Because just as the sun naturally enters and illuminates his own abode, Kṛṣṇa—the radiant Lord—enters His own city, bringing auspiciousness and splendor.
By remembering Kṛṣṇa’s divine presence as the true source of light and order, and by making one’s home and heart “well-adorned” through devotion, cleanliness, and sacred remembrance.