Shakespeare's Sonnets: With Three Hundred Years of CommentaryFairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2007 - 404 Seiten This is a collection of the scholarship of dozens of commentators who have written about Shakespeare's sonnets over the past 300 years. The text details how the poems work and how they may be interpreted. |
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Seite 14
... individual or event . This has the advantage of avoiding distracting excur- sions into unsupportable conjectures about the author of The Sonnets that have no value in understanding or appreciating them . For those interested in ...
... individual or event . This has the advantage of avoiding distracting excur- sions into unsupportable conjectures about the author of The Sonnets that have no value in understanding or appreciating them . For those interested in ...
Seite 56
... individual's self rather than the emphatic personal pronoun . For the editor who insists on a modernized text , this presents a prob- lem he or she must choose one or the other form and the reader is denied the opportunity to apprehend ...
... individual's self rather than the emphatic personal pronoun . For the editor who insists on a modernized text , this presents a prob- lem he or she must choose one or the other form and the reader is denied the opportunity to apprehend ...
Seite 193
... individual words of this sonnet , or how we punctuate it or scan it , or what we know about Shake- speare or who the beloved is . The answer depends on our mood as we read it . As with The Sonnets as a whole , and as with all of ...
... individual words of this sonnet , or how we punctuate it or scan it , or what we know about Shake- speare or who the beloved is . The answer depends on our mood as we read it . As with The Sonnets as a whole , and as with all of ...
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Shakespeare's Sonnets: With Three Hundred Years of Commentary William Shakespeare Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2007 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Abbott Alden beauty BEECHING beloved beloved's Booth notes Burto citation cites collated editors collated texts comma commentary to Sonnet compositor compositorial error couplet doth DOWDEN dropped letter Dunc Duncan-Jones Elizabethan emendations in collated end of line Evans explains eyes felfe feminine endings giue gloss Harbage hath haue heart iambic iambic pentameter iambs Ingram and Redpath Kerrigan line 11 line 9 liue loue MALONE meaning metaphor meter mistress modern moſt Onions pause phrase poem poet poet's POOLER praiſe punctuation Quarto quatrain reader Redpath note refers rest rhyme Rollins notes says scansion Schmidt second quatrain ſee seems sense Seymour-Smith Shakespeare ſhall ſhould Sonnet 18 Sonnet 29 Sonnet 33 Sonnets 40 speaker spondee ſtill substantive emendations suggests ſweet syllable thee theme thine things third quatrain thoſe thought tone trochee trochee-iamb Tucker Vendler verse Willen and Reed Wils Wilson word WYNDHAM