He brought in his head, but not in his hands, four texts, the contents of which he taught for the memorization of Sivakaival We might imagine that he recited these aloud, line by line, until the chaplain had memorized their whole. We might imagine that, same time, Siva Kaivalya consecrated a small, portable bronze image that was to be the repository of the chants' words. And we are later told that wherever the king and his successors went there the image (and the chants went also. are never told that, when all was finished, "Silver Bullet" returned to Janapada. Nor are we told that "Silver Bullet received any gift or payment for his services. We are left to conclude that, when the ceremony was concluded, "Silver Bullet" was killed. The manuscripts on which he had based his work disappeared, one of which was discovered by Teun Goudriaan only in the 1970s, The significance of what "Silver Bullet" did is that he seems to have inaugurated the formalities which made a king into a devarafa. And the importance of the devaraja idea is that it augmented a widespread cultural pattern in Southeast Asia which exaggerated the concept of royalty, making it possible to have only one "king" per realm, just as a family could have only one head, and even twins could not be equals and one had to be senior to the other.