"Power? It's like a Dead Sea fruit. When you achieve it, there is nothing there"
About this Quote
Power is sold as a ripened prize, but Macmillan reaches for a deliberately nasty image: the Dead Sea fruit, beautiful on the outside, ash on the inside. It’s a metaphor designed to puncture the glamour around high office, especially the kind that clings to British leadership with its robes of history and imperial nostalgia. You can almost feel the dry crumble on the tongue. The point isn’t that power is hard to get; it’s that the chase itself manufactures meaning that the thing can’t deliver.
Coming from a politician who actually held the levers of government, the line carries the authority of disappointment rather than the moralizing of an outsider. Macmillan governed in the era when Britain was learning, painfully, that “world power” was slipping from performance into pretense: decolonization, Suez’s hangover, a new American-dominated order, and domestic constraints that made grand promises expensive to keep. The fruit is also a rebuke to the romantic myth of the omnipotent leader. By the time you sit in the chair, the machinery, the briefings, the party factions, the international realities have already hollowed out the fantasy.
Subtextually, it’s a warning aimed at both rivals and admirers: don’t confuse proximity to authority with satisfaction, or even with agency. Power looks like fulfillment to the ambitious because ambition needs an object. Macmillan’s sting is that the object is often a mirage - and the thirst that led you there doesn’t go away.
Coming from a politician who actually held the levers of government, the line carries the authority of disappointment rather than the moralizing of an outsider. Macmillan governed in the era when Britain was learning, painfully, that “world power” was slipping from performance into pretense: decolonization, Suez’s hangover, a new American-dominated order, and domestic constraints that made grand promises expensive to keep. The fruit is also a rebuke to the romantic myth of the omnipotent leader. By the time you sit in the chair, the machinery, the briefings, the party factions, the international realities have already hollowed out the fantasy.
Subtextually, it’s a warning aimed at both rivals and admirers: don’t confuse proximity to authority with satisfaction, or even with agency. Power looks like fulfillment to the ambitious because ambition needs an object. Macmillan’s sting is that the object is often a mirage - and the thirst that led you there doesn’t go away.
Quote Details
| Topic | Wisdom |
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