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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John Blades. The patron is also declared ' fair ' and Shakespeare continues to make these fertile words work fulltime . He is ' fair ' in that he is just , open - minded , without any moral tinge ( see line 2 again ) yet graced too with ...
... fair ' in its sense of ' being reasonable ' or ' just ' . First , Shakespeare affirms his true dedication to a ' fair subject ' ( 4 ) , then the patron is identified as that fair subject , being described as a ' fair ' friend ' ( 11 ) ...
... fair ' . It is , he believes , an a priori truth , a point manifested essentially in the pun on ' fair ' ( fair is fair ; compare Astrophel and Stella , 5 : 9–10 ) . By this definition then , a dark woman cannot possibly be fair , or ...
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Love or What You Will | 3 |
Further Research | 30 |
time | 42 |
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