About This Book
A compact, allegorical elegy stages funeral rites for two symbolic birds whose absolute mutual fidelity culminates in a single, mystical death. Mourners and ritual imagery frame an argument about ideal love as a union that dissolves individual property while reason struggles to reconcile their simultaneous oneness and distinctness. A threnody asserts that their chastity leaves no posterity, so truth, beauty, and rarity are buried with them and an urn becomes their memorial. The poem explores love, constancy, and paradox through dense, ceremonial language and compressed imagery, closing on a solemn, unresolved meditation on purity and the lack of earthly legacy.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
6 picks
A Fairy Tale in Two Acts Taken from Shakespeare (1763)
by William Shakespeare
A Lover's Complaint
by William Shakespeare
A Lover's Complaint
by William Shakespeare
A Midsummer Night's Dream
by William Shakespeare
A Midsummer Night's Dream
by William Shakespeare
A Midsummer Night's Dream
by William Shakespeare
You May Also Like
6 picks
"1914"
by John Oxenham
"All's Well"; or, Alice's Victory
by Emily Sarah Holt
"Ask Mamma"; or, The Richest Commoner In England
by Robert Smith Surtees
"Bones": Being Further Adventures in Mr. Commissioner Sanders' Country
by Edgar Wallace
"Captains Courageous": A Story of the Grand Banks
by Rudyard Kipling
"Captains Courageous": A Story of the Grand Banks
by Rudyard Kipling