When the sword of the tongue is drawn, the emperor thought, it inflicts deeper cuts than the sharpest sword.The power of artistic creation is a central to the book, in small ways:
the court's musical genius Tansen had gone so far as to create a raag in the two courtesan's honor, the raag deepak, so called because when he played it for the first time in the House of Skanda the sorcery of the melody made unlit lamps burst into flame.
And in major themes: The emperor, through the power of his imagination alone, creates one living, perfect wife, visible to him and a few others, who is eventually replaced by Qara KÖz, Lady Black Eyes, who had died more than a century previously.
The book is a pleasure to read, in its historical range, bursts of humor, mordant views of man, and celebration of artists.