कुब्जानुग्रहः, धनुर्भङ्गः, कुवलयापीडवधः, मल्लयुद्धं, कंसवधः, स्तुतयः
संनिपातावधूतैस् तु चाणूरेण समं हरिः क्षेपणैर् मुष्टिभिश् चैव कीलवज्रनिपातनैः
saṃnipātāvadhūtais tu cāṇūreṇa samaṃ hariḥ kṣepaṇair muṣṭibhiś caiva kīlavajranipātanaiḥ
Então Hari, travado com Cāṇūra, foi sacudido pelos choques mútuos; arremessado por quedas poderosas, martelado por punhos, e derrubado repetidas vezes por golpes como estacas de ferro e raios—contudo, o propósito do Senhor Supremo permaneceu inabalável.
Sage Parāśara (narrating to Maitreya)
Speaker: Parasara
Teaching: Historical
Quality: vivid, revealing
Avatara: Krishna
Purpose: To subdue Kaṃsa’s violent champions and advance the liberation of Mathurā from adharma.
Leela: Yuddha
Dharma Restored: Reassertion of righteous sovereignty by breaking the instruments of tyranny.
Concept: Though appearing to struggle in the world, Hari remains unwavering, revealing divine sovereignty within human-like action.
Vedantic Theme: Dharma
Application: Meet adversity with steadiness (dhairya) while remembering the Lord’s protecting presence behind events.
Vishishtadvaita: The Supreme (Hari) engages in embodied action without losing transcendence—immanence without diminution.
Vishnu Form: Hari
It dramatizes Krishna’s līlā: the Lord enters a public arena, meets adharma on its own ground, and demonstrates sovereign mastery while appearing to fight on equal terms.
Through vivid action-description rather than abstract doctrine—Parāśara narrates intense blows and throws to show the realism of the scene, while identifying Krishna as “Hari,” signaling divinity behind the human-like contest.
“Hari” frames the episode as the Supreme Vishnu’s intervention: even amid violent strikes, the Lord remains the ultimate controller who removes the burden of adharma and restores dharmic order.