EnThe Hermit is the most autobiographical work of the Galateo, a sort of Menippean satire; it recalls in the prologue the Apokolokintosis of Seneca. The author-character aspires to a social condition adequate to his rank of doctor and humanist, characterized by a life devoted to integrity, but this condition is denied to him. Paradise, where he shows up in the fiction, is a metaphor of this condition. The author engages those who are hostile to him, hided under the masks of saints and prophets, in a clashing controversy. The clash reveals the inconvenient conditions in which the church of his time is, but does not assure him the right recognition. This is obtained through St. Thomas, a metaphor of absolute wisdom, which tells him that the c...