Themes and Variations in Shakespeare's SonnetsRoutledge, 2013 M04 15 - 256 páginas First published in 1961. |
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Página 13
... p . 562 . 2 The Sonnets of Shakespeare , 1904 , pp . lxv - vi . 3 Walton's Lives , World's Classics ed . , p . 314 . 4 Texts and Pretexts , 1932 , p . 12 . The earliest mention of Shakespeare as a sonneteer is by INTRODUCTORY 13.
... p . 562 . 2 The Sonnets of Shakespeare , 1904 , pp . lxv - vi . 3 Walton's Lives , World's Classics ed . , p . 314 . 4 Texts and Pretexts , 1932 , p . 12 . The earliest mention of Shakespeare as a sonneteer is by INTRODUCTORY 13.
Página 23
... live again in his friend ( 30 , 31 ) . ( viii ) His life is dependent on the continuance of his friend's love ( 92 ) . ( ix ) His friend is a perpetual subject of recollection or anticipation ( 52 , 57 ) . ( x ) All else is nothing to ...
... live again in his friend ( 30 , 31 ) . ( viii ) His life is dependent on the continuance of his friend's love ( 92 ) . ( ix ) His friend is a perpetual subject of recollection or anticipation ( 52 , 57 ) . ( x ) All else is nothing to ...
Página 30
... lives of men ; and Professor Fraenkel has expressed the ( so far as I am aware ) original conviction1 that these three odes were deliberately intended to form a kind of central triad , and that between 1 Horace , 1957 , pp . 419 , 421 ...
... lives of men ; and Professor Fraenkel has expressed the ( so far as I am aware ) original conviction1 that these three odes were deliberately intended to form a kind of central triad , and that between 1 Horace , 1957 , pp . 419 , 421 ...
Página 37
... lives this , and this gives life to thee . 55 18 ) , mentions it in 65 only with a kind of tremulous questioning ( ' Unless this miracle have might ' ) , and who in 74 , the most beautiful of all his sayings about it , professes to ...
... lives this , and this gives life to thee . 55 18 ) , mentions it in 65 only with a kind of tremulous questioning ( ' Unless this miracle have might ' ) , and who in 74 , the most beautiful of all his sayings about it , professes to ...
Página 40
... live and a great part of me will survive ' ) — lines which contain an audacious and obvious imitation of a passage in Horace's epilogue to the Third Book : Non omnis moriar multaque pars mei vitabit Libitinam . ( ' I shall not wholly ...
... live and a great part of me will survive ' ) — lines which contain an audacious and obvious imitation of a passage in Horace's epilogue to the Third Book : Non omnis moriar multaque pars mei vitabit Libitinam . ( ' I shall not wholly ...
Contenido
9 | |
25 | |
44 | |
Shakespeare and Tasso 53 358 | 53 |
Shakespeare and his English predecessors | 69 |
DEVOURING TIME AND FADING BEAUTY FROM | 93 |
Shakespeares sonnets on Love as the Defier of Time | 102 |
The instinctiveness and unphilosophicalness of Shakespeares | 119 |
Personifications of Time Age and Youth by Ovid Horace | 134 |
Tragedy and the Whole Truth | 142 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
able absence achieved addressed Aeschylus already ancient appears attempt beauty beginning beloved better called celebrated characteristic comparable compensation concerned concluding continually death declares described despite distinction Donne Donne's doth doubt earth edition Elizabethan eternal example expression eyes fact fair fame feel flowers give hand hath heart heaven Horace's hyperbole idea imitated immortality impression inspired kind later Laura least less lines live love-poetry lover manner means memorable merely metaphor mind Nature never odes once partly passages perhaps person Petrarch phrase Platonism poems poetic poetry poets possible probably professes quoted regarded religious remain remarked Renaissance Ronsard seems sense Shakespeare Shakespeare's sonnets sometimes soul speaks spirit style suggested suppose sweet thee theme things thou thought topic true verse whole writing written young youth