Temporal Power: A Study in Supremacy by Marie Corelli

(2 User reviews)   626
Corelli, Marie, 1855-1924 Corelli, Marie, 1855-1924
English
Hey, have you heard about this wild book from 1902? It's called 'Temporal Power,' and it's like someone took a time machine back to the start of the 20th century, saw all the political and social anxiety, and then wrote a super dramatic novel about it. The story follows a king who is basically a puppet, controlled by his scheming ministers and a corrupt church. He's miserable, trapped in a gilded cage, while the people outside his palace are starving and angry. The whole thing is a powder keg waiting to blow. It's part political thriller, part philosophical argument, and all wrapped up in the kind of extravagant, emotional prose that makes you feel like you're watching a grand opera. If you like stories about power, corruption, and one man's desperate search for meaning against a system that wants to crush his soul, you need to check this out. It's surprisingly relevant, even today.
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Published in 1902, Temporal Power drops us into the fictional kingdom of 'Gloria.' We meet King 'Sergius Thord,' a ruler who has all the trappings of power but none of the real authority. His government is run by a cynical Prime Minister, and the official State Church is more interested in wealth and control than spiritual guidance. Sergius is deeply unhappy, a thoughtful man trapped in a ceremonial role, while his citizens suffer in poverty just outside the palace walls.

The Story

The plot kicks off when the King, disguised as a commoner, sneaks out of the palace to see his kingdom's true state. He's horrified. This experience sparks a crisis of conscience. He starts to secretly write radical essays criticizing the very system he's supposed to lead, publishing them under a pseudonym. These writings electrify the public and infuriate the establishment. The story becomes a tense cat-and-mouse game. Can the King inspire real change without his powerful enemies discovering the author's true identity and destroying him? It's a battle for the soul of a nation, fought with pens, secrets, and high-stakes intrigue.

Why You Should Read It

Forget dry history. Corelli writes with fiery conviction. Her passion for spiritual truth and social justice burns on every page. Yes, the prose is ornate—it's a product of its time—but that's part of the charm. You feel the King's claustrophobic despair and the public's boiling anger. The central question is gripping: What is true power? Is it crowns and titles, or is it the power of a sincere idea? The book is a fascinating window into the fears and hopes of the Edwardian era, questioning the role of monarchy, religion, and government in a way that still echoes now.

Final Verdict

This book is perfect for readers who love classic novels with big ideas and emotional drama. If you enjoy the social critiques of Dickens or the romantic intensity of the Brontës, but wish they'd tackled politics more directly, you'll find a lot to love here. It's also a great pick for anyone interested in the history of popular fiction and bestsellers—Corelli was a rockstar in her day. Be ready for lavish descriptions and speeches full of feeling. It's not a subtle book, but it's a powerful and utterly absorbing one.

Charles White
2 years ago

Essential reading for students of this field.

Mary White
1 year ago

Citation worthy content.

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5 out of 5 (2 User reviews )

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