Shakespeare's Sonnets Re-doneAuthor House, 14/01/2005 - 160 páginas SHAKESPEARE’S SONNETS RE-DONE consists of all 154 of the sonnets William Shakespeare sent down to us; however, those items have been given some evident rewritings -- between ‘translations’ and ‘adaptations’. Stylistic compromises infest the now perhaps final versions. For instance, some definite splittings of infinitives and some very findable examples of the expletive ‘there’ and the expletive ‘it’--along with such probably major solecisms as Enjambment--might be seen as real detractors. After an Editorial While had elapsed a giving up occurred. [Bruce Hamilton had intended to reduce to zero the occurrences of the word “wow,” but he somehow retained all such occurrences.] SHAKESPEARE’S SONNETS RE-DONE reflects an abiding wish to produce highly accessible Modern Versions of Shakespeare’s ‘originals.’ |
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... serve to cure all future ills life couldn't feel defiled. Thus, you'd be so new-made when you'd grown old your blood might never have to grow quite cold. [Redone by Bruce Hamilton] Gaze in your glass, and tell Shakespeare's Sonnet #2.
... , since, kept unused, life quickly gets destroyed. No love toward others sits in any breast that thoroughly destroys its own sweet zest. [Redone by Bruce Hamilton] Don't dare proclaim you feel great Shakespeare's Sonnet #9.
Bruce Hamilton. [Redone by Bruce Hamilton] Don't dare proclaim you feel great love for some, when toward yourself you stay improvident; nay, grant that you're adored by life's main hum yet still view every world as “virulent.” You're so ...
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