Kāliya-damana: Kṛṣṇa Subdues the Serpent and Purifies the Yamunā
श्रीशुक उवाच कालिन्द्यां कालियस्यासीद् ह्रद: कश्चिद् विषाग्निना । श्रप्यमाणपया यस्मिन् पतन्त्युपरिगा: खगा: ॥ ४ ॥
śrī-śuka uvāca kālindyāṁ kāliyasyāsīd hradaḥ kaścid viṣāgninā śrapyamāṇa-payā yasmin patanty upari-gāḥ khagāḥ
Śrī Śukadeva Gosvāmī dit : Dans la Kālindī (Yamunā) se trouvait un lac habité par le serpent Kāliya ; son poison, brûlant comme le feu, chauffait et faisait bouillir sans cesse ses eaux. Les vapeurs en étaient si toxiques que les oiseaux volant au-dessus tombaient dedans.
In this regard the ācāryas explain that the Kāliya lake was situated apart from the main current of the river; otherwise the Yamunā’s waters would have been poisonous even in cities like Mathurā and in other places farther away.
This verse describes Kāliya’s lake in the Yamunā as burning with poisonous fire, with scalding waters so dangerous that even birds flying above would fall into it.
He sets the scene for Kṛṣṇa’s Kāliya-damana līlā by showing how severe the threat was—poison had made the river region deadly—so the listener can understand the magnitude of Kṛṣṇa’s protective mercy.
It warns that “poisonous” environments and influences can harm even those merely passing overhead; a devotee should avoid toxic association and take shelter of Kṛṣṇa, who can purify what seems incurably contaminated.