About This Book
A satirical poem begins with a dedication urging a noble patron to renounce fashionable folly, then unfolds an allegorical April vision in which Folly presides over a gaudy festival. The narrator tours a tinsel palace of distorted art and sham grandeur, watches revelers, ceremonies, and dancing votaries, and sees public figures reduced to objects of ridicule. Through ironic description and pointed moral admonition the poem exposes vanity, theatrical display, and courtly flattery as substitutes for taste and wisdom, criticizes the corrupting habits of the fashionable elite, and urges cultivation of virtue and social responsibility.
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