Srimad Bhagavatam Canto 10, Chapter 13, Text 56

SB 10.13.56

tato ’tikutukodvrtya-
stimitaikadasendriyah
tad-dhamnabhud ajas tusnim
pur-devy-antiva putrika
 
Translation by His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Srila Prabhupada: 
 
Then, by the power of the effulgence of those visnu-murtis, Lord Brahma, his eleven senses jolted by astonishment and stunned by transcendental bliss, became silent, just like a child’s clay doll in the presence of the village deity.
 
Purport by His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Srila Prabhupada: 
 
Brahma was stunned because of transcendental bliss (muhyanti yat surayah). In his astonishment, all his senses were stunned, and he was unable to say or do anything. Brahma had considered himself absolute, thinking himself the only powerful deity, but now his pride was subdued, and he again became merely one of the demigods an important demigod, of course, but a demigod nonetheless. Brahma, therefore, cannot be compared to God Krsna, or Narayana. It is forbidden to compare Narayana even to demigods like Brahma and Siva, what to speak of others.
 
yas tu narayanam devam
brahma-rudradi-daivataih
samatvenaiva vikseta
sa pasandi bhaved dhruvam
 
“One who considers demigods like Brahma and Siva to be on an equal level with Narayana must certainly be considered an offender.” We should not equate the demigods with Narayana, for even Sankaracarya has forbidden this (narayanah paro ’vyaktat). Also, as mentioned in the Vedas, eko narayana asin na brahma nesanah: “In the beginning of creation there was only the Supreme Personality, Narayana, and there was no existence of Brahma or Siva.” Therefore, one who at the end of his life remembers Narayana attains the perfection of life (ante narayana-smrtih).
Srimad Bhagavatam Canto 10, Chapter 13, Text 55
Srimad Bhagavatam Canto 10, Chapter 13, Text 57