![]() ![]() At the time, villainy was embodied in the United States by Boss Tweed, the prototype of modern political, financial and corporate greed and corruption, and Billy the Kid, a Western outlaw. This paper examines the powerful socionomic forces that helped shape this unredeemable villain in the 1870s when the novel was being written. ![]() Disabled in the famous chariot race, Messala carries on his villainy until his Egyptian temptress murders him, but even then it takes the power of Christ to restore the Hur family at the end of the novel. He does this without a twinge of guilt and hides his crimes behind the cloak of Roman imperial rule, the worst aspects of which he demonstrably represents. As the novel’s most prominent villain, he is initially responsible for condemning the protagonist Judah to death in the galleys. Messala was the villain of Lew Wallace’s best-selling novel Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (1880). ![]()
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