Shakespeare: The SonnetsMacmillan Education UK, 31/07/2007 - 254 páginas The appearance in 1609 of Shakespeare's Sonnets is cloaked in mystery and controversy, while the poems themselves are masterpieces of silence and deception. The intervening 4 centuries have done little to diminish either their mystique or their appeal, and recent years have witnessed an upsurge in interest in these brilliant and contentious lyrics. |
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... have noted that time is both creative and destructive , and this is the crucial point of the poet / speaker's argument to the Young Man , his immediate audience . Time is represented as the dominant Time : to Posterity and Beyond 39.
... audience more explicitly to time's enormous truth : nothing is invincible against time's destruction . The only recourse is to breed ( though , again , this is not an exact defence ) . The couplet reverses the chiming of ' When / And ...
... audience is not clear . But that there is an audience seems apparent from the opening line and line 5 , and from the general discursive nature of the syntax . ' Minds ' is a surprising word here , however , where we might have expected ...
Índice
Love or What You Will | 3 |
Further Research | 30 |
time | 42 |
Direitos de autor | |
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