About This Book
A dying father recounts to his children an episode in which he was entrusted with settling a deceased man's estate and discovered a long-hidden will that favored wealthy legatees over the visibly impoverished claimants. He describes the shock and anguish of nearly destroying the document in an act of compassion, his prolonged hesitation as legal duty and pity conflicted, and his eventual choice to seek outside counsel rather than decide alone. The framed anecdote prompts reflections on reputation, strict probity, the limits of personal judgment, and the danger of setting individual mercy above established law.
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