About This Book
A speaker offers an exuberant, sensuous celebration of a living beloved, cataloguing bodily features and small gestures with floral and mythic imagery. The poem repeatedly contrasts the beloved’s fragile, animated beauty with famous or legendary belles of the past, insisting on the present lover’s greater vividness. Natural and tactile metaphors—springtime, ferns, perfume, blossoms—merge with references to vanished cities and old love-tales to evoke ephemerality, desire, and memory. Throughout, language oscillates between intimate physical detail and ecstatic metaphor to honor the beloved while acknowledging time and loss.
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