About This Book
A dramatic poem follows a young Moorish woman whose visionary enchantments and intimate friendship with a lame boy draw the scrutiny of zealous inquisitors and debating monks. Clerical figures argue over mercy and orthodoxy while a fervent friar demands the eradication of her supposed heresy; she is confined and prepared for an auto-da-fé. The scenes shift from private reverie and ritualized song to interrogation and dungeon vigil, examining mystical longing, communal fear, the tensions between compassion and doctrinal rigor, and the tragic results when imaginative life confronts institutional religious power.
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