Themes and Variations in Shakespeare's SonnetsRoutledge, 15.04.2013 г. - 256 страници First published in 1961. This study analyses Shakespeare's treatment of the universal themes of Beauty, Love and Time. He compares Shakespeare with other great poets and sonnet writers - Pindar, Horace and Ovid, with Petrarch, Tasso and Ronsart, with Shakespeare's own English predecessors and contemporaries, notably Spenser, Daniel and Drayton and with John Donne. By discussing their resemblances and differences, a not altogether orthodox picture of Shakespeare's attitude to life is presented, which suggests that he was not as phlegmatic and equable a person as critics have often supposed. |
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Страница 11
... series of sonnets. The first series (I-126) is addressed to a youth, or to a very young man, of great beauty (in IoS he is called 'sweet boy' and in 126, not a sonnet but a poem of twelve lines in couplets, which may II Introductory.
... series of sonnets. The first series (I-126) is addressed to a youth, or to a very young man, of great beauty (in IoS he is called 'sweet boy' and in 126, not a sonnet but a poem of twelve lines in couplets, which may II Introductory.
Страница 12
... sweet and lovely dost thou make the shame Which, like a canker in the fragrant rose, Doth spot the beauty of thy budding name! O, in what sweets dost thou thy sins enclose! and sonnet 96, beginning: Some say thy fault is youth, some ...
... sweet and lovely dost thou make the shame Which, like a canker in the fragrant rose, Doth spot the beauty of thy budding name! O, in what sweets dost thou thy sins enclose! and sonnet 96, beginning: Some say thy fault is youth, some ...
Страница 16
... sweet boy' and 'lovely boy'; he was (and remained until the end of his life) a womaniser, and until 1604, when he married the daughter of the Earl of Shrewsbury (for her fortune, as Clarendon suggests, rather than for her person), he ...
... sweet boy' and 'lovely boy'; he was (and remained until the end of his life) a womaniser, and until 1604, when he married the daughter of the Earl of Shrewsbury (for her fortune, as Clarendon suggests, rather than for her person), he ...
Страница 18
... sweet and lovely dost thou make the shame Which, like a canker in the fragrant rose, Doth spot the beauty of thy budding name! O, in what sweets dost thou thy sins enclose! Since Pembroke's disgrace followed almost immediately upon his ...
... sweet and lovely dost thou make the shame Which, like a canker in the fragrant rose, Doth spot the beauty of thy budding name! O, in what sweets dost thou thy sins enclose! Since Pembroke's disgrace followed almost immediately upon his ...
Страница 27
... sweet flute, and thy fame waxeth widely by favour of the Pierid daughters of Zeus. From the sixth Pythian, for Xenocrates of Acragas, where Pindar declares (ll. I–18) that he is once more approaching the Delphic temple, where a treasure ...
... sweet flute, and thy fame waxeth widely by favour of the Pierid daughters of Zeus. From the sixth Pythian, for Xenocrates of Acragas, where Pindar declares (ll. I–18) that he is once more approaching the Delphic temple, where a treasure ...
Съдържание
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11 | |
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II DEVOURING TIME AND FADING BEAUTY FROM THE GREEK ANTHOLOGY TO SHAKESPEARE | 92 |
III HYPERBOLE AND RELIGIOUSNESS IN SHAKESPEARES EXPRESSIONS OF HIS LOVE | 147 |
Firstline index of Sonnets quoted or mentioned | 233 |
General index | 239 |
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Често срещани думи и фрази
achieve Aeschylus allusion Amores amours ancient love-poetry Antony and Cleopatra appears beginning Bellay beloved called carpe florem celebrated Chaucer Christian comparable compensation Daniel Dark Lady death declares Defier despite distinction Donne Donne's doth Drayton edition elegy Elizabethan eternal example expression eyes fame flowers Greek Anthology hath heaven Herbert Horace Horace's Horatian hyperbole idea imitated ingrateful beauty inspired Kassner kind Laura lines love's lover Mary Fitton means memorable merely metaphor Michelangelo mistress Muses never odes Othello Ovid Ovid's partly passages perhaps periphrasis Petrarch Petrarch and Ronsard Petrarchan phrase Pindar Platonism poems poetry poets possible professes Propertius Puttenham quoted recognised regarded religious Renaissance Renaissance poets Ronsard seems sense Shakespeare Shakespeare's sonnets sonnet 74 sonnets written soul Spenser spirit stanzas style suggested sweet Tasso thee theme things thou Tibullus Time's topic tragedies transience true verse Vittoria Colonna word writing written during absence youth