About This Book
The satirical poem sketches the life and manners of an idle, well-born heir whose fashionable airs and disdain for commoners expose social pretensions. Through ironic episodes—family portraits reclaimed at auction, fashionable fads, comparisons between inherited wealth and self-made success, and the heir's worldly travels—the speaker lampoons vanity, class snobbery, and the fickleness of taste. The verse alternates anecdote and moral observation, using humor and caricature to contrast ostentation with industry and to satirize social climbing and affectation.
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