nÄhaá¹ bhaká¹£itavÄn amba
sarve mithyÄbhiÅ›aá¹sinaḥ
yadi satya-giras tarhi
samakṣaṠpaśya me mukham
na - not; aham - I; bhaká¹£itavÄn - have eaten dirt; amba - My dear mother; sarve - all of them; mithya-abhiÅ›aá¹sinaḥ - all liars, simply complaining against Me so that you may chastise Me; yadi - if it is actually a fact; satya-giraḥ - that they have spoken the truth; tarhi - then; samaká¹£am - directly; paÅ›ya - see; me - My; mukham - mouth.
Kṛṣṇa presented Himself as an innocent child to increase the transcendental ecstasy of maternal affection. As described in the Å›Ästra, tÄá¸ana-bhayÄn mithyoktir vÄtsalya-rasa-poá¹£ikÄ. This means that sometimes a small child speaks lies. For example, he may have stolen something or eaten something and yet deny that he has done so. We ordinarily see this in the material world, but in relation to Kṛṣṇa it is different; such activities are meant to endow the devotee with transcendental ecstasy. The Supreme Personality of Godhead was playing as a liar and accusing all the other devotees of being liars. As stated in ÅšrÄ«mad-BhÄgavatam (10.12.11), ká¹›ta-puṇya-puñjÄḥ: a devotee may attain such an ecstatic position after many, many births of devotional service. Persons who have amassed the results of a vast amount of pious activities can attain the stage of associating with Kṛṣṇa and playing with Him like ordinary playmates. One should not consider these transactions of transcendental service to be untruthful accusations. One should never accuse such devotees of being ordinary boys speaking lies, for they attained this stage of associating with Kṛṣṇa by great austerities (tapasÄ brahmacaryeṇa Å›amena ca damena ca).