The Man Who Would Be King
First published in 1888, Rudyard Kipling's "The Man Who Would Be King" is a novella that explores themes of ambition, hubris, and the corrupting influence of power in colonial India. The narrator encounters two vagabonds with grandiose plans to become kings of the remote, unmapped region of Kafiristan by leveraging their military knowledge and modern weaponry. What begins as a fantastical scheme unfolds into a haunting meditation on the price of divine pretension and the inevitable collapse of empires built on deception.