of wondrous, manifold power
'Of marvellous powers' — Brahmā's hymn marvels at the variegated (vicitra) nature of Kṛṣṇa's powers; he is simultaneously one and many, present and hidden, infinite and contained.
विचित्रशक्तिर् व्यालीनसृष्टगोवत्सवत्सपः ।ब्रह्मत्रपाकरो धातृस्तुतः सर्वार्थसाधकः॥
vicitraśaktir vyālīnasṛṣṭagovatsavatsapaḥ ·brahmatrapākaro dhātṛstutaḥ sarvārthasādhakaḥ
of wondrous, manifold power
'Of marvellous powers' — Brahmā's hymn marvels at the variegated (vicitra) nature of Kṛṣṇa's powers; he is simultaneously one and many, present and hidden, infinite and contained.
who re-manifested the calves and boys that had been spirited away
'Who emerged from his own creation when Brahmā restored the children' — when Brahmā finally returns the stolen children, Kṛṣṇa's multiplied selves dissolve back into him; the seamless re-merge is described.
who put Brahmā to shame
'Causer of Brahmā's shame' — Brahmā realizes that his cosmic experiment has been seen through and reversed by a 'mere' cowherd child; his embarrassment becomes the beginning of his hundred-verse hymn.
praised by Dhātṛ, the Creator (Brahmā)
'Praised by the Creator (Dhātṛ = Brahmā)' — Brahmā's stuti to Kṛṣṇa after the vimohana is one of the Bhāgavata's most celebrated hymns; the chapter is known by this stuti alone.
accomplisher of every aim
'Accomplisher of every purpose' — Brahmā's hymn declares that Kṛṣṇa achieves every aim — cosmic and personal, large and small — in every act; nothing is wasted in his līlā.