Rider Haggard wrote this novel in a few days shortly after his success
with "King Solomon's Mines", and in it he again uses his African
experiences and his familiarity with old legends. But there is a greater
and more frightening depth in this book. In the story the three men from
Cambridge endure shipwreck, fever, and cannibals as they search for
"She", the object and end of their adventure, bequeathed to them two
thousand years previously. "She" is the incarnation of one of the most
powerful and most ambiguous figures in Western consciousness: a woman
who is at the same time a seductress and a figure of terror. "My empire
is an empire of the imagination." Those words are spoken by Ayesha, the
central figure of this book and the queen of a central African tribe.
Her soubriquet "She-who-must-be-obeyed" alludes to her deathless beauty
and her magical powers. But taken together those two utterances bear
witness to the powerful hold the author, Henry Rider Haggard, has had on
his readers over the years.