In this passage what type of rule is
inevitable when a ruler doesn't leave
the comforts of the palace?
"A monarch, who was never permitted to leave this prison [the harem] till he as cended the throne, was likey to be effeminate and inefficient. It was hardly poss ble that he could resist the intoxication of absolute power. The unlimited indulgenc es of his passions seemed almost the certain consequence of his former debauch eries, and his entire lack of experience.... The love of wine, in which this prince often indulged to excess, was the cause of all the evils of his reign. It was in his mo ments of intoxication alone that he was capricious, cruel, and unjust.... To the public officers of government he was severe, but to the poor mild and lenient."