Vivāha-dharma: Kanyā-pradāna, Śulka, and Pāṇigrahaṇa-niṣṭhā (अनुशासन पर्व, अध्याय ४४)
पुरन्दरश्न तत्रस्थो बभूव विमना भृशम् | स तद्वैकृतमालक्ष्य देवराजो विशाम्पते
Purandaraś ca tatrastho babhūva vimanā bhṛśam | sa tad-vaikṛtam ālakṣya devarājo viśāmpate sahasranetro divya-dṛṣṭyā tasyābhimukhaṃ dadarśa | tataḥ śarīrāntar-gataṃ vipulaṃ muniparam asya dṛṣṭiḥ samapadyata |
Bhishma disse: Indra (Purandara), ali de pé, ficou profundamente abatido ao ouvir aquelas palavras. Ó senhor dos povos! Percebendo a mudança no estado interior e a perturbação da mente, Indra—o rei dos deuses de mil olhos—olhou para ele com visão divina. Então seu olhar recaiu sobre um grande e eminente sábio que habitava dentro daquele corpo.
भीष्म उवाच
The verse highlights ethical discernment: outward demeanor can conceal deeper realities, and true judgment requires insight into inner states. Indra’s divine sight symbolizes the need to look beyond surface reactions and perceive the hidden presence of virtue or spiritual power.
Indra, hearing a prior statement, becomes deeply troubled. Observing a visible change in the other person’s mental condition, he uses divine vision to examine the situation and then perceives a great sage residing within that person’s body, indicating a concealed spiritual presence influencing events.