कालनेमिनिहा वीर: शौरि: शूरजनेश्वर: । त्रिलोकात्मा त्रिलोकेश: केशव: केशिहा हरि:
kālaneminihā vīraḥ śauriḥ śūrajaneśvaraḥ | trilokātmā trilokeśaḥ keśavaḥ keśihā hariḥ ||
Dijo Bhīṣma: «Él es el matador de Kālanemi; un héroe sin par; Śauri, nacido en el linaje de Śūra; señor entre los poderosos; el Ser interior de los tres mundos y el soberano de los tres mundos; Keśava; el matador de Keśin; Hari, que elimina el pecado con el mero acto de recordarlo».
भीष्म उवाच
The verse teaches devotional recollection and theological recognition: Kṛṣṇa is praised as both a heroic protector who destroys demonic forces and as the indwelling Self and sovereign of the cosmos; remembering Hari is presented as ethically purifying, removing sin and strengthening dharmic orientation.
Bhīṣma, in the Anuśāsana Parva’s devotional and instructional context, recites a chain of divine epithets for Kṛṣṇa/Viṣṇu—linking mythic deeds (slaying Kālanemi and Keśin) with cosmic lordship (trilokātmā, trilokeśa) to extol him as the supreme refuge.