The SonnetsCambridge University Press, 22 jun 2006 The New Cambridge Shakespeare appeals to students worldwide for its up-to-date scholarship and emphasis on performance. The series features line-by-line commentaries and textual notes on the plays and poems. Introductions are regularly refreshed with accounts of new critical, stage and screen interpretations. For this second edition of The Sonnets, Stephen Orgel has written a new introduction to Shakespeare's best-loved and most widely read poems. In a series of focused readings he probes the sonnets' sexual and temperamental ambiguity as well as their complex textual history, and explores the difficulties editors face when modernising the spelling, punctuation and layout of the 1609 quarto. Orgel reminds us that the order in which the sonnets were composed bears no relation to the order in which they appear in the quarto and he warns against reading them biographically. This edition retains the text prepared by G. Blakemore Evans, together with his notes and commentary. |
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Pagina
... Venus and Adonis. This went through ten editions before his death in 1616, and another six before 1640. His other long narrative poem The Rape of Lucrece was less popular, but it too circulated far more widely than any of the plays ...
... Venus and Adonis. This went through ten editions before his death in 1616, and another six before 1640. His other long narrative poem The Rape of Lucrece was less popular, but it too circulated far more widely than any of the plays ...
Pagina
... Venus and Adonis (1593) and Lucrece (1594) are well-printed, elegant little books. They addressed an audience of readers who knew the classics, both Latin and English; they recall, in both their physical presentation and versification ...
... Venus and Adonis (1593) and Lucrece (1594) are well-printed, elegant little books. They addressed an audience of readers who knew the classics, both Latin and English; they recall, in both their physical presentation and versification ...
Pagina
... Venus and Adonis was witty, inventive, and stylish; it was also daring, erotically explicit, even amoral. Though it seems to us sexually more comic than pornographic, its immense popularity is cited frequently in Shakespeare's own time ...
... Venus and Adonis was witty, inventive, and stylish; it was also daring, erotically explicit, even amoral. Though it seems to us sexually more comic than pornographic, its immense popularity is cited frequently in Shakespeare's own time ...
Pagina
... Venus and Adonis and Lucrece may be the search for a noble patron; but the Sonnets imply a literary circle of taste and wit in which Shakespeare moves with ease. Patronage is still an issue in these poems, with the poet promising ...
... Venus and Adonis and Lucrece may be the search for a noble patron; but the Sonnets imply a literary circle of taste and wit in which Shakespeare moves with ease. Patronage is still an issue in these poems, with the poet promising ...
Pagina
... Venus and Adonis but obviously not by Shakespeare, nevertheless enabled Jaggard to trade on the poet's name by evoking his best-known poem. Shakespeare clearly had nothing to do with the book's publication, though there is no reason to ...
... Venus and Adonis but obviously not by Shakespeare, nevertheless enabled Jaggard to trade on the poet's name by evoking his best-known poem. Shakespeare clearly had nothing to do with the book's publication, though there is no reason to ...
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The Commentary | 155 |
Textual analysis | 203 |
Manuscript copies of the Sonnets | 214 |
Reading list | 219 |
Index of first lines | 222 |
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
A. B. Grosart Abbott appearance beauty beauty’s beloved Benson Booth suggests Capell Capell’s Collation notes compare line compositor conj context couplet Dark Lady death dost doth edited editors Elizabethan emendation eyes fair false favour flowers Gildon grace hath headnote heart Hood implied Ingram and Redpath Kerrigan kind line 14 line 9 Lintott live looks loue love i.e. love’s lover Lover’s Complaint Malone meaning metaphor metonymy mind misreading mistress moral Muse nature Nature’s night notes for Sonnet Ovid Passionate Pilgrim perhaps phrase play poems poet poet’s pow’r praise Q 12 Sonnet Q Sonnet Q variant quatrain Rape of Lucrece reading reference rhyme Rollins seems sense sexual Shakespeare Shakespeare’s Sonnets Sonnet 15 Sonnet 27 Sonnet 31 Sonnet 44 soul spirit summer’s sweet thee theme thine things Thorpe’s thou art thought Tilley Time’s true truth Tucker variant form Venus and Adonis verse words worth youth