Vikramadithyan

Many tried. Mighty emperors from distant lands arrived, their crowns heavy with jewels, their armies numbered in lakhs. They would climb the first step, hear the ethereal question, and crumble. Their arrogance would shatter like glass. They would retreat, declaring the throne cursed.

“Who are you?” they asked.

The throne hummed. It had never been about sitting. It was about carrying . Vikramadithyan had carried the weight of every soul in his realm as if they were his own family. Vikramadithyan

“A throne does not make the king. The king makes the throne a home for dharma.” Many tried

The throne room was silent, save for the whisper of dust motes dancing in the pale moonlight. Thirty-two sandalwood steps led to the obsidian seat—the throne of the great Vikramadithyan . For centuries, it had remained empty. Not because no king dared to sit upon it, but because the throne itself chose its master. Their arrogance would shatter like glass

The poet, without ambition, sat down. And for a moment, the ruins transformed. The air smelled of jasmine and justice. The poet felt a vision—not of conquests, but of a court where the poorest farmer could call the king by his name. Where a king’s true wealth was measured not in gold, but in the sleepless nights he spent solving a single widow’s grievance.

When dawn broke, the poet rose. He left the throne as he had found it—empty. But the nymphs bowed to him, because he understood the final lesson of Vikramadithyan: