That is the depth of the Wise Prince. He is not the hero who wins. He is the saint who sees . And in a world of blind kings, to see is everything.
His greatest test is not the dragon on the mountain or the invading Qaaf-caesar. It is the temptation to use his intelligence for petty cruelty: to manipulate, to punish, to prove his superiority. He fails often, and each failure carves a deeper wrinkle of huzn (sorrow) into his young face. That sorrow, however, becomes his crown. In a corrupted kingdom, to be both prince and wise is to be doomed to act rightly —and to suffer for it. shaahzaad daanaa
His answer is always a silent tear, a half-smile, and the quiet act of planting a tree whose shade he knows he will never sit in. That is the depth of the Wise Prince