About This Book
A trio of Old English poems adapts a classical bestiary pattern to describe a land animal, a mythical sea creature, and a bird, each followed by a Christian moral reading. The first poem portrays a multicolored panther that sleeps in caves, awakes after three days, and issues a captivating song and sweet fragrance that draws other beasts while it alone wages war with a dragon. The second treats a sea-monster often identified with the whale, offering symbolic interpretation, and the third, a fragmentary partridge poem, survives chiefly in brief devotional application and poetly exhortation. Descriptive natural history alternates with explicit ethical and religious reflection.
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