About This Book
The poem, structured in four cantos, uses the image of a punitive lyre to voice conscience and condemn society's mistreatment of creative genius, following an aged, starving poet who wanders the city's nocturnal streets. Scenes alternate between stark street tableaux and imagined memories of distant lands, juxtaposing public revelry with private destitution. Vivid sensory details and liturgical, rhetorical invocations portray hunger, shame, and the performative masks of society while promising broader portraits of urban vice, incest, suicide, and the hypocrisies of wealth. The work blends social protest, elegy, and grotesque caricature to mourn neglected talent and demand justice.
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