Shakespeare's SonnetsRoutledge, 2013年9月13日 - 200 頁 This edition first published in 1979. Discussing Shakespeare's sonnets in relation to sonnets by Italian, French and English poets, Kenneth Muir shows how they were influenced by Shakespeare's reading of Sidney, Erasmus and Ovid and discusses their art in terms of construction, sound patterns and imagery. He considers the relationship of the sonnets to Shakespeare's dramatic writing, while stressing the dramatic element in the sonnets themselves. Finally he surveys the changing attitudes to the sonnets during the last three centuries. |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 17 筆
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... summer's day?' (XVIII) and 'Th'expense of spirit in a waste of shame' (CXXIX), nor even with 'Poor soul, the centre of my sinful earth' (CXLVI). Yet, when all is said, the rearrangements according to rhyming, by Bray and others, do not ...
... summer's day?' (XVIII) and 'Th'expense of spirit in a waste of shame' (CXXIX), nor even with 'Poor soul, the centre of my sinful earth' (CXLVI). Yet, when all is said, the rearrangements according to rhyming, by Bray and others, do not ...
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... the housetops ... That he might hear the mournings of such as are in captivity. This he compares with the nightingale's mournful song: As Philomel in summer's front doth sing, And stops her pipe in growth of riper days; Not.
... the housetops ... That he might hear the mournings of such as are in captivity. This he compares with the nightingale's mournful song: As Philomel in summer's front doth sing, And stops her pipe in growth of riper days; Not.
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... summer is less pleasant now Than when her mournful hymns did hush the night. Even the parallel with Psalm 6 seems insubstantial. 'My beauty is worn away because of mine enemies' (v. 7) is compared with the enemies of beauty in the ...
... summer is less pleasant now Than when her mournful hymns did hush the night. Even the parallel with Psalm 6 seems insubstantial. 'My beauty is worn away because of mine enemies' (v. 7) is compared with the enemies of beauty in the ...
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... summer (5) 104 trees The psalmist's 'own familiar friend whom he trusted' has laid in wait for him. death (12), winds (3), too hot (5) gold (12) heart (6), raiment(6), babe(12), slain (13) forests (4) Some of these parallels are ...
... summer (5) 104 trees The psalmist's 'own familiar friend whom he trusted' has laid in wait for him. death (12), winds (3), too hot (5) gold (12) heart (6), raiment(6), babe(12), slain (13) forests (4) Some of these parallels are ...
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內容
Tradition and the Individual Talent | |
Commentary | |
Style | |
The Truest Poetry | |
Links With Other Works | |
Critical History | |
C The Rival Poets | |
Notes | |
Select Bibliography | |
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常見字詞
addressed alliteration appears argued argument Astrophil and Stella autobiographical Baldwin beauty beauty's believe Berowne's C. S. Lewis Chapter compared concerned contrast critics Dark Lady Dark Lady sonnets death doth Dover Wilson dramatic Drayton echoed edition Elizabethan Sonnet Emilia Lanier Erasmus Essay example eyes fair flowers friendship hath heart Hotson Hubler ibid idea imagery imitated immortalising immortality Keats Kenneth Muir later linked live loue Love's Love's Labour's Lost lover Lover's Complaint lust marry means Melchiori merely mistress Ovid parallels Petrarch phrase plays poem Poet's poetry praise previous sonnet Psalms quatrain quibbles refer rhyme Rival Poet Rollins Ronsard second quatrain seems sequence seventeen sonnets sexual Shakespeare Shakespeare's Sonnets shame Sidney Sidney's Sonnets were written Southampton Spenser spirit Stephen Booth suggested summer's sweet thee theme thine third quatrain thought Time's translation true Venus and Adonis verse words writing wrote XCIV