Atithi’s Direction to the Nāga-sage Padma at Naimiṣa (अतिथ्युपदेशः—नैमिषे पद्मनागोपाख्यानप्रस्तावः)
तस्यां द्वैधीभूतायां ब्रह्मवध्यायां भयादिन्द्रो देवराज्यं पर्यत्यजदप्सु सम्भवां च शीतलां मानससरोगतां नलिनीं प्रतिपेदे तत्र चैश्वर्ययोगादणुमात्रो भूत्वा बिसग्रन्थिं प्रविवेश
tasyāṃ dvaidhībhūtāyāṃ brahmavadhyāyāṃ bhayād indro devarājyaṃ paryatyajad apsu sambhavāṃ ca śītalāṃ mānasasarogatāṃ nalinīṃ pratipede tatra caiśvaryayogād aṇumātro bhūtvā bisagranthiṃ praviveśa
Cuando aquella terrible carga del brahma-hatyā, el crimen de matar a un brahmán, se hubo dividido en dos, Indra—presa del miedo—abandonó su soberanía sobre los dioses. Buscó refugio en un fresco estanque de lotos nacido de las aguas, en el lago Mānasa. Allí, por el poder de su señorío yóguico, se volvió tan diminuto como un átomo y se introdujo en el nudo de un tallo de loto, ocultándose.
तास्त्वाष्ट उवाच क्व गमिष्यथास्यतां तावन्मया सह श्रेयो भविष्यन्तीति
Even the highest authority is not beyond moral consequence: the taint of brahma-slaughter brings fear, loss of sovereignty, and the need for concealment or expiation. The passage underscores dharma’s supremacy over power and the inevitability of ethical accountability.
Indra, frightened by the burden of brahma-slaughter that has become twofold, abandons the throne of the gods and flees to a cool lotus-pond at Lake Mānasa. Using yogic mastery, he shrinks to atomic size and hides inside the knot of a lotus-stalk.