About This Book
A first-person narrator, troubled by unrequited love, composes a long allegorical poem that blends dream vision and moral counsel. The speaker invokes sacred and classical examples, reflects on nature and social roles, and describes a visit to a fragrant garden where an older, wise woman offers consolation and practical advice about patience, prudence, and honor. The poem shifts between lyrical description, personal lament, and didactic digression, exploring courtly behavior, the trials of love, and the duties of gentility, and closes with exhortations to temper desire with wisdom and hope.
About the Author
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