A Companion to Shakespeare's SonnetsMichael Schoenfeldt John Wiley & Sons, 2008年4月15日 - 544 頁 This Companion represents the myriad ways of thinking about the remarkable achievement of Shakespeare’s sonnets.
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 87 筆
第 4 頁
... suggests that the effort to contain love only gives it further fuel , ending with the line “ Love's fire heats water , water cools not love , " so the abandoned female in A Lover's Complaint admits in her final lines that she would do ...
... suggests that the effort to contain love only gives it further fuel , ending with the line “ Love's fire heats water , water cools not love , " so the abandoned female in A Lover's Complaint admits in her final lines that she would do ...
第 18 頁
... suggests that there may be something about the sonnet form that makes it not to be scorned. In an earlier chapter I ... suggest that the concentration of different organizing systems active in the form before any particulars of substance ...
... suggests that there may be something about the sonnet form that makes it not to be scorned. In an earlier chapter I ... suggest that the concentration of different organizing systems active in the form before any particulars of substance ...
第 23 頁
... suggest equation between the two object clauses – an equation which gives the reader a sense that what is both new and separate from the first two lines is at the same time neither new nor separate. In short, the physics of the ...
... suggest equation between the two object clauses – an equation which gives the reader a sense that what is both new and separate from the first two lines is at the same time neither new nor separate. In short, the physics of the ...
第 24 頁
... suggests the theatrical metaphor , particularly in the second half of the line , when the encouragement and rebuke turn out to be given by the selfsame sky that has earlier been audience to the shows on the huge stage . In line 7 ...
... suggests the theatrical metaphor , particularly in the second half of the line , when the encouragement and rebuke turn out to be given by the selfsame sky that has earlier been audience to the shows on the huge stage . In line 7 ...
第 29 頁
... suggests a flexibility - even an instability - of response verbally “ guaranteeing " the presence of passion . — praise of female beauty in 130 ; he condones adultery. 3. Semantic . The speaker's mind has a great number of compartments ...
... suggests a flexibility - even an instability - of response verbally “ guaranteeing " the presence of passion . — praise of female beauty in 130 ; he condones adultery. 3. Semantic . The speaker's mind has a great number of compartments ...
內容
1 | |
13 | |
PART II Shakespeare and His Predecessors | 71 |
PART III Editorial Theory and Biographical Inquiry Editing the Sonnets | 119 |
PART IV The Sonnets in Manuscript and Print | 183 |
PART V Models of Desire in the Sonnets | 223 |
PART VI Ideas of Darkness in the Sonnets | 291 |
PART VII Memory and Repetition in the Sonnets | 329 |
PART VIII The Sonnets inand the Plays | 361 |
PART IX The Sonnets and A Lovers Complaint | 403 |
Appendix The 1609 Text of Shakespeares Sonnets and A Lovers Complaint | 441 |
Index | 502 |
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常見字詞
addressed argue argument beauty beloved Benedick body Colin Burrow color couplet critics culture dark lady dark lady sonnets death desire doth Dubrow Duncan-Jones early modern edition editors Elizabethan emotional Empson English erotic essay eyes fair female Fineman hath haue heart Helen Vendler identity imagined James Schiffer John Kerrigan kind language literary liue London loue Lover's Complaint Lucrece lyric male man’s manuscript meaning memory metaphor mind narrative object Oxford Passionate Pilgrim Petrarch Petrarchan play poem poet poet's poetic poetry praise procreation sonnets quarto quatrain readers Renaissance rhetorical rhyme seems selfe sense sexual Shake-speares Sonnets Shakespeare Shakespeare's Sonnets Sidney sonnet 15 sonnet 20 sonnet 53 sonnet 71 sonnet 94 sonnet sequence speaker Stephen Booth substance suggests sweet tender theater thee thine things Thorpe tion tradition Vendler verse William William Shakespeare words writing young man's youth