Akrūra’s Mission: The Departure from Vraja and the Yamunā Vision of Viṣṇu-Ananta
तस्योत्सङ्गे घनश्यामं पीतकौशेयवाससम् । पुरुषं चतुर्भुजं शान्तं पद्मपत्रारुणेक्षणम् ॥ ४६ ॥ चारुप्रसन्नवदनं चारुहासनिरीक्षणम् । सुभ्रून्नसं चारुकर्णं सुकपोलारुणाधरम् ॥ ४७ ॥ प्रलम्बपीवरभुजं तुङ्गांसोर:स्थलश्रियम् । कम्बुकण्ठं निम्ननाभिं वलिमत्पल्लवोदरम् ॥ ४८ ॥
tasyotsaṅge ghana-śyāmaṁ pīta-kauśeya-vāsasam puruṣaṁ catur-bhujaṁ śāntam padma-patrāruṇekṣaṇam
Akrūra vit alors la Personne Suprême de Dieu, paisiblement étendue sur les genoux d’Ananta Śeṣa. Sa carnation était bleu sombre comme un nuage, Il portait une soie jaune, avait quatre bras et des yeux rougeoyants tels des pétales de lotus.
In this verse, Akrūra beholds the Supreme Person as four-armed, peaceful, cloud-dark and dressed in yellow silk—showing that the same Lord behind Krishna’s humanlike pastimes can reveal His Nārāyaṇa form to a devotee.
Because of Akrūra’s devotion and the Lord’s independent will, the Lord granted him direct darśana, revealing His supreme identity even while Krishna’s Vraja pastimes were unfolding.
By cultivating steady bhakti—hearing, chanting, and remembering—the heart becomes receptive to the Lord’s presence, and one learns to recognize the divine reality behind ordinary appearances.