Srimad Bhagavatam Canto 10, Chapter 42, Text 14

SB 10.42.14

tad-darsana-smara-ksobhad
 atmanam navidan striyah
visrasta-vasah-kavara
 valaya lekhya-murtayah
 
Translation: 
 
The sight of Krsna aroused Cupid in the hearts of the city women. Thus agitated, they forgot themselves. Their clothes, braids and bangles became disheveled, and they stood as still as figures in a painting.
 
Purport: 
 
Srila Visvanatha Cakravarti states that since the women of Mathura immediately experienced symptoms of conjugal attraction when they saw Krsna, they were the most advanced devotees in the city. The ten effects of Cupid are described as follows: caksu-ragah prathamam cittasangas tato ’tha sankalpah nidra-cchedas tanuta visaya-nivrttis trapa-nasah/ unmado murccha mrtir ity etah smara-dasa dasaiva syuh. “First comes attraction expressed through the eyes, then intense attachment in the mind, then determination, loss of sleep, becoming emaciated, disinterest in external things, shamelessness, madness, becoming stunned and death. These are the ten stages of Cupid’s effects.”
 
Srila Visvanatha Cakravarti also points out that devotees who possess pure love of Godhead generally do not exhibit the symptom of death, since this is inauspicious in relation to Krsna. They do, however, manifest the other nine symptoms, culminating in becoming stunned in ecstasy.
Srimad Bhagavatam Canto 10, Chapter 42, Text 13
Srimad Bhagavatam Canto 10, Chapter 42, Text 15