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Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam
<< Canto 1, Creation >> << 11 - Lord Kṛṣṇa’s Entrance into Dvārakā >>
<< VERSE 9 >>
यर्ह्यम्बुजाक्षापससार भो भवान्कुरून्मधून्वाथ सुहृद्दिदृक्षया तत्राब्दकोटिप्रतिमः क्षणो भवेद्रविं विनाक्ष्णोरिव नस्तवाच्युत
yarhy ambujākṣāpasasāra bho bhavān kurūn madhūn vātha suhṛd-didṛkṣayā tatrābda-koṭi-pratimaḥ kṣaṇo bhaved raviṁ vinākṣṇor iva nas tavācyuta
WORD BY WORD
yarhi whenever; ambuja-akṣa O lotus-eyed one; apasasāra You go away; bho oh; bhavān Yourself; kurūn the descendants of King Kuru; madhūn the inhabitants of Mathurā (Vrajabhūmi); vā either; atha therefore; suhṛt-didṛkṣayā for meeting them; tatra at that time; abda-koṭi millions of years; pratimaḥ like; kṣaṇaḥ moments; bhavet becomes; ravim the sun; vinā without; akṣṇoḥ of the eyes; iva like that; naḥ ours; tava Your; acyuta O infallible one;
TRANSLATION
| O lotus-eyed Lord, whenever You go away to Mathurā-Vṛndāvana or Hastināpura to meet Your friends and relatives, every moment of Your absence seems like millions of years. O infallible one, at that time our eyes become useless, as if bereft of sun.
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PURPORT
| We are all proud of our material senses for making experiments to determine the existence of God. But we forget that our senses are not absolute by themselves. They can only act under certain conditions. For example, our eyes. As long as the sunshine is there, our eyes are useful to a certain extent. But in the absence of sunshine, the eyes are useless. Lord Śrī Kṛṣṇa, being the primeval Lord, the Supreme Truth, is compared to the sun. Without Him all our knowledge is either false or partial. The opposite of the sun is the darkness, and similarly the opposite of Kṛṣṇa is māyā, or illusion. The devotees of the Lord can see everything in true perspective due to the light disseminated by Lord Kṛṣṇa. By the grace of the Lord the pure devotee cannot be in the darkness of ignorance. Therefore, it is necessary that we must always be in the sight of Lord Kṛṣṇa so that we can see both ourselves and the Lord with His different energies. As we cannot see anything in the absence of the sun, so also we cannot see anything, including our own self, without the factual presence of the Lord. Without Him all our knowledge is covered by illusion.
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