The Disappearance of Lord Śrī Kṛṣṇa and the Aftermath in Dvārakā
भगवान् पितामहं वीक्ष्य विभूतीरात्मनो विभु: । संयोज्यात्मनि चात्मानं पद्मनेत्रे न्यमीलयत् ॥ ५ ॥
bhagavān pitāmahaṁ vīkṣya vibhūtīr ātmano vibhuḥ saṁyojyātmani cātmānaṁ padma-netre nyamīlayat
全能の主は、宇宙の祖父ブラフマーと、御自身の力ある顕現である諸天を御前に見て、心を自己の内に収め、蓮華の御眼を閉じられた。
According to Śrīla Śrīdhara Svāmī, Lord Kṛṣṇa had previously answered the prayers of Lord Brahmā and the other demigods, who had requested the Lord to descend within this universe for the protection of His servants, the demigods. Now the demigods arrived before the Lord, each one desiring to take the Lord to his own planet. To avoid these innumerable social obligations, the Lord closed His eyes as if absorbed in samādhi.
This verse describes the Lord withdrawing His own divine energies into Himself and entering inward absorption, indicating a transcendental, self-willed conclusion to His manifest līlā—not an ordinary death.
By glancing at Brahmā—grandfather of the universe’s created beings—the Lord signals that even the cosmic administrator witnesses the Lord’s supreme independence as He concludes His manifest pastimes.
It points to inner recollection: regularly draw attention away from distractions and place the mind in the heart through remembrance of Bhagavān, cultivating steadiness, detachment, and devotion.