तस्य प्रीतेन मनसा तां दत्त्वैडविडस्ततः ।
पश्यतोऽन्तर्दधे सोऽपि स्वपुरं प्रत्यपद्यत ॥९॥

tasya prÄ«tena manasÄ
tÄá¹ dattvaiá¸aviá¸as tataḥ
paśyato 'ntardadhe so 'pi
sva-puraá¹ pratyapadyata

 tasya - with Dhruva; prÄ«tena - being very pleased; manasÄ - with such a mentality; tÄm - that remembrance; dattvÄ - having given; aiá¸aviá¸aḥ - Kuvera, son of Iá¸aviá¸Ä; tataḥ - thereafter; paÅ›yataḥ - while Dhruva was looking on; antardadhe - disappeared; saḥ - he (Dhruva); api - also; sva-puram - to his city; pratyapadyata - returned.


Text

The son of Iá¸aviá¸Ä, Lord Kuvera, was very pleased, and happily he gave Dhruva MahÄrÄja the benediction he wanted. Thereafter he disappeared from Dhruva’s presence, and Dhruva MahÄrÄja returned to his capital city.

Purport

Kuvera, who is known as the son of Iá¸aviá¸Ä, was very pleased with Dhruva MahÄrÄja because he did not ask him for anything materially enjoyable. Kuvera is one of the demigods, so one may put forward the argument, “Why did Dhruva MahÄrÄja take a benediction from a demigod?†The answer is that for a Vaiṣṇava there is no objection to taking a benediction from a demigod if it is favorable for advancing Kṛṣṇa consciousness. The gopÄ«s, for example, worshiped KÄtyÄyanÄ«, a demigoddess, but the only benediction they wanted from the goddess was to have Kṛṣṇa as their husband. A Vaiṣṇava is not interested in asking any benediction from the demigods, nor is he interested in asking benedictions from the Supreme Personality of Godhead. It is said in the BhÄgavatam that liberation can be offered by the Supreme Person, but even if a pure devotee is offered liberation by the Supreme Lord, he refuses to accept it. Dhruva MahÄrÄja did not ask Kuvera for transference to the spiritual world, which is called liberation; he simply asked that wherever he would remain — whether in the spiritual or material world — he would always remember the Supreme Personality of Godhead. A Vaiṣṇava is always respectful to everyone. So when Kuvera offered him a benediction, he did not refuse it. But he wanted something which would be favorable to his advancement in Kṛṣṇa consciousness.