Mind in Character: Shakespeare's Speaker in the SonnetsUniversity of Missouri Press, 1987 - 195 頁 "This book is about poetry rather than theory. Shakespeare's poetry, I find, remains more relevant and more rewarding than any theory, however elaborate, as to who, if anyone, should read a text and, if so, how they should do it. In other words, I do not intend another prolegomena for future studies of the reader in the text and/ or the text in the reader. I simply have written what I think the sonnets are about, what they say and how they say it. I do not attempt to speak for "the reader," as I know little about him or her, but only for myself. What interests me especially is the behavior of Shakespeare's sonnet-speaker, the coherent psychological entity projected by the speaking voice in these poems. I do not identify that speaker with the historical William Shakespeare, knowing scarcely more about him than about "the reader."--Preface. |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 44 筆
第 46 頁
... contrast to the self - effacing picture of the youth that was drawn in sonnet 20 : " A woman's face , with nature's own hand painted . " Although Shakespeare's speaker had entered the sequence in sonnet 10 , his references to himself ...
... contrast to the self - effacing picture of the youth that was drawn in sonnet 20 : " A woman's face , with nature's own hand painted . " Although Shakespeare's speaker had entered the sequence in sonnet 10 , his references to himself ...
第 89 頁
... contrast is between abstract states of mind , while the " our / others " " contrast in the fourth line anticipates the extended disjunc- tion of " I " and " they " in lines 5-12 . This disjunction gains intensity by reiteration while ...
... contrast is between abstract states of mind , while the " our / others " " contrast in the fourth line anticipates the extended disjunc- tion of " I " and " they " in lines 5-12 . This disjunction gains intensity by reiteration while ...
第 91 頁
... contrast , although the speaker is unwilling to proclaim his own virtue , he implies it in unequivocal terms . For if those who think evil are evil , then the con- verse holds no less true : he who " thinks good " must be good . In ...
... contrast , although the speaker is unwilling to proclaim his own virtue , he implies it in unequivocal terms . For if those who think evil are evil , then the con- verse holds no less true : he who " thinks good " must be good . In ...
常見字詞
action appears argument attempt auditor awareness beauty becomes begins beloved called claims closing comparison concern concludes continues contrast corresponds couplet creates criticism defined described dialogue direct earlier effect entire evil example experience expression eyes fair false feelings final follows four gives heart human idea ideal imagery implies ironic irony lack lady leads less lines linked live looks marks meaning merely mind mode moral nature never object observation once opening pattern phrase poem poetic poetry praise present procreation pronouns quatrain question reference reflects relation remains result rhetorical seems seen sense sequence serves Shakespeare's Shakespeare's Sonnets single soliloquy sonnet 63 speaker speaking statement structure suggests thee theme things thou thought throughout tion true turning verb woman youth