“There for us to ponder also is a clear case in which personal pride and rage kept two principals from acting for the welfare of their people. Shiz insisted on ‘getting his man,’ even if it meant the destruction of his own people; and Coriantumr offered his kingdom but not his life for his people. Each said, in effect, that the ultimate object of his selfishness was nonnegotiable! Neither was willing to play the role of the intervener and say of the circumstances, ‘This has gone too far—enough is enough.’ How often on a lesser scale in human affairs do tinier tragedies occur for want of this selfless intervention?” (Maxwell, “Three Jaredites,” 11).