The Dark Lady's

verse 130 i have actually read before in highschool i was suprised to learn. the writer appears to know that much of the overflown statements of grandiose comparison are only that, but his love for her as a seemingly normal person is still the same as if she were a goddess in her own right.

verse 131 appears to continue along the same lines by continuing to comment upon her normal earthly appearence, though they be plain and really nothing remarkable to look at. the beauty who lives up to this beauty apparently winds up tending to be crueler for it than his mistress. nonetheless he still thinks her beautifull in his eyes.

verse 133 suddenly takes a sharp veer to the right in explaining that while he loves her, she is also one to take advantage of this fact and takes the eyes and hearts of others despite her plainess. at the end he seems thoughly unhappy about that fact.

from piecing these things together i can conclude very little. what i did manage to weld together is that the writer has had a very troubled time and tends to make decisions he somewhat regrets later on down the line, and isnt overly interested in the highflung beauty that is flaunted, by the plainess that sets off the hidden beauty within. this is something many of us could learn from.