<Dd> The residue of the king's effort--a burning splendour which utterly destroyed his enemies--leaves not the earth even now, just like (the residual heat of) a burned - out conflagration in a great forest . </Dd> <Dd> He, as if wearied, has abandoned this world, and resorted in actual form to the other world--a place won by the merit of his deeds--(and although) he has departed, he remains on earth through (the memory of his) fame (kīrti). </Dd> <P> Willis concludes: "Candragupta may have passed away but the legacy of his achievement is so great that he seems to remain on earth by virtue of his fame . Emphasis is placed on Candragupta's conquest of enemies and the merit of his deeds, ideas which are also found in coin legends: kṣitim avajitya sucaritair divaṃ jayati vikramādityaḥ, i.e.' Having conquered the earth with good conduct, Vikramāditya conquered heaven' . The king's conquest of heaven combined with the description of him resorting to the other world in bodily form (gām āśritasyetarāṃ mūrtyā), confirms our understanding of the worthy dead as autonomous theomorphic entities ." </P> <P> One short inscription on the pillar is associated with the Tomara king Anangpal, although it is hard to decipher . Alexander Cunningham (1862 - 63) read the inscription as follows: </P>

Discuss the art and architectural features of iron pillar mehrauli