About This Book
An imagined conversation between a poet and a ruling despot probes whether supreme authority produces genuine happiness. The ruler concedes that wealth and dominion bring distinctive anxieties: costly obligations, fear of rivals, dependence on flatterers, and the loss of simple, reliable companionship. The exchange contrasts the modest satisfactions and mutual protections of ordinary life with the restlessness of unchecked power, arguing that larger possessions often create larger needs and diminish contentment. Through ethical argument and illustrative comparisons, the dialogue examines desire, sufficiency, pleasure, and the hidden costs of political domination.
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