About This Book
The poem dramatizes the arc of a great Babylonian king who, after conquering Jerusalem, is undone by pride and struck with divine madness, wandering like a brute in the wilderness and recovering reason only shortly before death. Biblical episodes and village scenes provide dramatic texture while the author layers a broad antiwar argument: prefatory commentary condemns massive standing armies, urges citizen militias and federal reforms, and points to Switzerland and the United States as models for civic defense and social progress. The work pairs lyric passages and stagecraft to weave narrative events with moral reflection and political critique.
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