द्विविद-वधः, यज्ञ-विध्वंस-निवारणम्, बलदेव-पराक्रम-समाहारः
उपगीयमानो विलसल्ललनामौलिमध्यगः रेमे यदुवरश्रेष्ठः कुबेर इव मन्दरे
upagīyamāno vilasallalanāmaulimadhyagaḥ reme yaduvaraśreṣṭhaḥ kubera iva mandare
当歌者与颂者以歌咏赞颂之时,雅度族中最尊者在王者安乐中自得,穿行于娴雅女子灿然冠冕之间,宛如俱毗罗在曼陀罗山上游乐。
Sage Parāśara (narrating to Maitreya)
Vamsha: Chandra
Key Kings: Balarāma
Vishnu Form: Vasudeva
Bhakti Type: Madhurya
Kubera on Mandara symbolizes effortless abundance and majesty; the comparison frames Kṛṣṇa’s Yādava sovereignty as naturally prosperous and auspicious, yet presented as divine līlā.
Through poetic imagery—praise sung by others and Kṛṣṇa amid regal splendor—Parāśara depicts an ideal, dharma-protecting sovereignty while keeping the tone of divine play rather than mere worldly indulgence.
Kṛṣṇa is portrayed as the supreme Lord who can inhabit royal magnificence without being bound by it—his enjoyment is līlā, affirming Vishnu’s transcendence alongside immanence in human history.