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Book V. Chapter Xii

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"The Vishnu Purana", translated by Horace Hayman Wilson, [1840],

p. 528

Chap. Xii.

Indra comes to Gokula: praises Krishna, and makes him prince over the cattle. Krishna promises to befriend Arjuna.

After
Gokula had been saved by the elevation of the mountain, Indra became desirous of beholding Krishna. The conqueror of his foes accordingly mounted his vast elephant Airvata, and came to Govarddhana, where the king of the gods beheld the mighty Dmodara tending cattle, and assuming the person of a cow-boy, and, although the preserver of the whole world, surrounded by the sons of the herdsmen: above his head he saw Garuda, the king of birds, invisible to mortals, spreading out his wings to shade the head of Hari. Alighting from his elephant, and addressing him apart, akra, his eyes expanding with pleasure, thus spake to Madhusdana: "Hear, Krishna, the reason why I have come hither; why I have approached thee; for thou couldest not otherwise conceive it. Thou, who art the supporter of all, hast descended upon earth, to relieve her of her burden. In resentment of my obstructed rites I sent the clouds to deluge Gokula, and they have done this evil deed. Thou, by raising up the mountain, hast preserved the cattle; and of a verity I am much pleased, O hero, with thy wondrous deed. The object of the gods is now, methinks, accomplished, since with thy single hand thou hast raised aloft this chief of mountains. I have now come by desire of the cattle 1, grateful for their preservation, in order to install you as Upendra; and, as the Indra of the cows, thou shalt be called Govinda 2." Having thus said, Mahendra took a ewer from his elephant

p. 529

[paragraph continues] Airvata, and with the holy water it contained performed the regal ceremony of aspersion. The cattle, as the rite was celebrating, deluged the earth with their milk.

When Indra had, by direction of the kine, inaugurated Krishna, the husband of ach said to him affectionately, "I have thus performed what the cows enjoined me. Now, illustrious being, hear what farther I propose, with a view to facilitate your task. A portion of me has been born as Arjuna, the son of Pritha: let him ever be defended by thee, and he will assist thee in bearing thy burden. He is to be cherished by thee, Madhusdana, like another self." To this Krishna replied, "I know thy son, who has been born in the race of Bharata, and I will

p. 530

befriend him as long as I continue upon earth. As long as I am present, invincible akra, no one shall be able to subdue Arjuna in fight. When the great demon Kansa has been slain, and Arishta, Kein, Kuvalaypda, Naraka, and other fierce Daityas, shall have been put to death, there will take place a great war, in which the burden of the earth will be removed. Now therefore depart, and be not anxious on account of thy son; for no foe shall triumph over Arjuna whilst I am present. For his sake I will restore to Kunti all her sons; with Yudhishthira at their head, unharmed, when the Bhrata war is at an end."

Upon Krishna's ceasing to speak, he and Indra mutually embraced; and the latter, mounting his elephant Airvata, returned to heaven. Krishna, with the cattle and the herdsmen, went his way to Vraja, where the wives of the Gopas watched for his approach.

Footnotes

528:1
Gobhischa chodita; that is, 'delegated,' says the commentator, 'by the cow of plenty, Kmadhenu, and other celestial kine, inhabitants of Goloka, the heaven of cows:' but this is evidently unauthorized by the text, as celestial cattle could not be grateful for preservation upon earth; and the notion of Goloka, a heaven of cows and Krishna, is a modern piece of mysticism, drawn from such sectarial works as the Brahma Vaivartta P. and Hari Vana.

528:2
The purport of Indra's speech is to explain the meaning of two of Krishna's names, Upendra and Govinda. The commentators on the Amara Kosha agree in p. 529 explaining the first, the younger brother of Indra, ### conformably to the synonyme that immediately follows in the text of Amara, Indrvaraja; a name that occurs also in the Mahbhrata: Krishna, as the son of Devak, who is an incarnation of Adit, being born of the latter subsequently to Indra. Govinda is he who knows, finds, or tends cattle; Gm vindati. The Paurnik etymology makes the latter the Indra (### quasi ###) of cows; and in this capacity he may well be considered as a minor or inferior Indra, such being the proper sense of the term Upendra (Upa in composition); as, Upa-purna, 'a minor Purna,' &c. The proper import of the word Upendra has, however, been anxiously distorted by the sectarian followers of Krishna. Thus the commentator on our text asserts that Upa is here synonymous with Upari, and that Upendratwa, 'the station of Upendra,' means 'rule in the heaven of heavens, Goloka;' a new creation of this sect, above Satya-loka, which, in the uncorrupt Paurnik system, is the highest of the seven Lokas: see p. 213. So the Hari Vana makes Indra say, 'As thou, Krishna, art appointed, by the cows, Indra superior to me, therefore the deities in heaven shall call thee Upendra.' The Bhgavata does not introduce the name, though it no doubt alludes to it in making the divine cow Surabhi, who is said to have come from Goloka with Indra, address Krishna, and say, 'We, instructed by Brahm, will crown you as our Indra.' Accordingly Krishna has the water of the Ganges thrown over him by the elephant of Indra, and Indra, the gods, and sages praise him, and salute him by the appellation of Govinda. The Hari Vana assigns this to Indra alone, who says, 'I am only the Indra of the gods; thou hast attained the rank of Indra of the kine, and they shall for ever celebrate thee on earth as Govinda.' All this is very different from the sober account of our text, and is undoubtedly of comparatively recent origin.
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