
A lyrical meditation opens the work, offering a heartfelt tribute to the feminine spirit. The narrator, humbled by his own limited literary skill, presents his modest offering as a young tree still bearing only fragile fruit. He frames the text as a personal testament of gratitude, inviting the reader to overlook its rough edges and appreciate the sincerity behind each line.
From this poetic foundation emerges a vivid portrait of women as both earthly guides and celestial messengers. Their influence is described in terms of love, sacrifice, and the quiet power that steadies men through hardship. The prose weaves philosophical reflections with tender observations, hinting at the lives of Portuguese expatriates in Tangier, whose community provides the backdrop for these intimate musings.
Through lyrical language and gentle humor, the early chapters set a tone of reverence and contemplation, inviting listeners to explore how affection, duty, and cultural identity intertwine in a world where the simple act of a smile can become a beacon of hope.
Language
pt
Duration
~22 minutes (21K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Pedro Saborano (produced from scanned images of public domain material from Google Book Search)
Release date
2010-01-10
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Best known today for a small 1860 Portuguese work that blends lyrical reflection with historical narrative, this writer left behind a curious, compact piece of nineteenth-century prose. The surviving record is thin, which only adds to the sense of rediscovering a forgotten voice.
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