<Dt> À Mon Seul Désir </Dt> <P> This tapestry is wider than the others, and has a somewhat different style . The lady stands in front of a tent, across the top of which is written "À Mon Seul Désir", an obscure motto, variously interpretable as "my one / sole desire", "according to my desire alone"; "by my will alone", "love desires only beauty of soul", "to calm passion". Her maidservant stands to the right, holding open a chest . The lady is placing the necklace she wears in the other tapestries into the chest . To her left is a low bench with a dog sitting on a decorative pillow . It is the only tapestry in which she is seen to smile . The unicorn and the lion stand in their normal spots framing the lady while holding onto the pennants . </P> <P> This tapestry has elicited a number of interpretations . One interpretation sees the lady putting the necklace into the chest as a renunciation of the passions aroused by the other senses, and as an assertion of her free will . Another sees the tapestry as representing a sixth sense of understanding (derived from the sermons of Jean Gerson of the University of Paris, c. 1420). Various other interpretations see the tapestry as representing love or virginity . It is also debated whether the lady in "À Mon Seul Désir" is picking up or setting aside the necklace . </P> <P> In The Lady with the Unicorn tapestry series, it is generally accepted that the first five tapestries represent the five senses of sight, hearing, taste, smell, and touch . The interpretation of the sixth tapestry, "À Mon Seul Désir," remains uncertain . </P>

Who created the lady and the unicorn tapestry