Goodness must be praised in sonnets and lyrical monologues, pointing out that should evil prevail, badness will happen. |
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These began, very simply, by being 10 sonnets, all with the same rhyme scheme. |
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The book abounds with sonnets, villanelles, a pantoum, sonatinas and what in my opinion is the most difficult of forms, sestinas. |
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Concealed inside its villanelles, ghazals, canzones, sonnets, and prose poems are that country's unheard voices. |
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Pamphilia to Amphilanthus then closes with a series of four songs and nine sonnets. |
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These lines are in fact the final couplets from five sonnets in Benson's 1640 edition of Shakespeare's poems. |
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I looked forward to that, and began reading avidly, but soon the sonnets went off into a very cheapjack self parody, and I thought oh, how easy! |
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He prefers to make use of old verse forms like sonnets and pantun, a four-line stanza. |
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Ostensibly, the title designates the thematic qualities of the sonnets, but it also announces their formal qualities as well. |
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The iambic pentameter of Shakespeare's sonnets mimics the beat of the human heart. |
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By Wroth's day, such Petrarchan sonnets would have been considered standard, established, sanctioned, and, primarily, conservative. |
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Among the hardy perennials, quatrains and sonnets, we encounter such exotic metrical cultivars as sapphics and cretics. |
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Imagine writing a book about the Lord's Prayer, or the Ave Maria, or one of Shakespeare's sonnets. |
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An appendix also supplies phonetic transcriptions for five sonnets and fifteen speeches or scenes from the plays. |
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While most sonnets conform to the usual rules of prosody, with their decasyllables and 14 rhymed lines, there are exceptions throughout the set. |
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He quotes from the incandescent love sonnets of Louise Labe and Maurice Sceve with a startling but unaccountable urgency. |
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Sidestepping the spoken word label, she even pens three sonnets, written in loose pentameter lines. |
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They could eat roast beef, drink warm cloudy beer, recite Shakespearian love sonnets, and perhaps even do a bit of morris dancing. |
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I wanted to write a million words, a thousand sonnets to her eyes, a hundred villanelles to her lips. |
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Her work ranges from poems of fantasy and verses for the young to ballads, love lyrics, sonnets, and religious poetry. |
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The poems being compared are sonnets, and this formal choice deserves attention. |
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And unlike the elegies the sonnets are predominantly poems of invocation, apostrophe and direct address, he writes. |
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Edmund Spenser in his Amoretti sonnets compares his love with a spotted panther who attracts with beauty but shows no mercy and is cruel. |
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Another Milton scholar present announced that while rhyme was no ornament to verse, the return of odes and sonnets was inevitable. |
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He wanted to speak beautiful words, whispering sonnets of his own design into her ear. |
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There are varied poetic forms, including narratives, jazz poems, slam poems, sestina, haiku, couplets and sonnets. |
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I wrote poems, sonnets in blank verse and long, narrative poems about people I knew, descriptive pieces. |
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The whole sequence ends with two sonnets allegorizing the poet's love by means of fables about Cupid. |
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Shakespeare's last two sonnets are variations on an anacreontic epigram from The Greek Anthology. |
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In the journey of life, those hours spent scrambling your memory for all you can remember about Shakespeare, sonnets and seismology marks an important milestone. |
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The important thing to a student of Shakespeare is that he wrote the tragedies and the comedies and the sonnets. |
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Taking inspiration from sonnets, story fragments, and human sensation, Antonio Vivaldi was a master at creating atmosphere. |
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It prints Lock's sonnets in old-spelling and very lightly annotated texts. |
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This series of sonnets instantiates the physical nearness and reality of that satisfied love, rather than the distant longing of the courtly tradition. |
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Yet the fact that Michelangelo left a large number of sonnets but only very few madrigals unfinished suggests that he preferred the latter form. |
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Adapting some of the most celebrated, sexual, raw, bitter and vitriolic love poems ever written, the drama explores the inspiration behind the sonnets. |
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I have endeavoured to show that Shakespeare cooperated with this derision of forced love-sighs, writing certain of his sonnets in ridicule of their windy suspiration. |
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Back in the 1930s the sonnet had been declared dead, though it's interesting how many of E. E. Cummings's poems, when typographically regularized, turn out to be sonnets. |
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The piece on the sonnets has a lovely description of a sonnet's action, but descends into mumpish fact and opinion, like lecture notes put into a compactor. |
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Of the writers under review, she is the only formalist and writes sonnets, villanelles, and sestinas so fluently she can make you forget, say, that you've just read a sonnet. |
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Why not produce an anthology of Aussie sonnets for the sheer pleasure of yarning amongst ourselves, without bothering to care who else may or may not be listening? |
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You will find below the first four original sonnets along with their French translation. |
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All I had to do was read a couple of sonnets in English, and listen to some lovely renaissance tunes played on a recorder. |
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He is not afraid to write in tightly controlled stanzas, to rhyme his lines or use sonnets and ballads. |
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Wroth highlights and intensifies the complex, highly-structured nature of the corona by composing it of fourteen sonnets, mirroring the fourteen lines of the sonnet itself. |
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Indeed, by this time I'd gone off his work in a big way, largely because of his sonnets, which I thought were atrocious and boring, somewhat catchpenny. |
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It's the same kind of aesthetic that goes for sonnets or haikus. |
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Wyatt took subject matter from Petrarch's sonnets, but his rhyme schemes make a significant departure. |
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Most of these poems are in free verse, some in uniform stanzas or in long, loose stanzas, except for a prose poem and eleven sonnets. |
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The forms of the poems range from sonnets, villanelles, and pantoums, to haiku, ballad, and free verse. |
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The first three books of The Faerie Queene were duly published in 1590, together with a dedication to her and commendatory sonnets to notables of the court. |
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In distinction to these sonnets, other sonnets from the Burguillos collection demonstrate a far more parodic or ludic intent. |
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The book is divided into forms that include sestinas, villanelles, sonnets and pantoums. |
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All Sorrentino's poems point to a bittersweet vision depicted in broken lines, shaky enjambments, expert sestinas, and beautiful sonnets. |
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At one point, we spoke of collaborating on a series of anagrammatic poems taking as their source material the opening lines of Mallarmé's sonnets, but sadly that project came to nought. |
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This project has been inspired by Henri Meschonnic's book Poétique du traduire, and it aims at rendering the sonnets in French while keeping the decasyllabic metrics of the English source text. |
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The argument that Shakespeare participated in Thorpe's publication of the sonnets has become newly fashionable: we are told that Thorpe was far from being a pirate, that the manuscript seems closely proofed, etc. |
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In Shakespeare's sonnets, an awareness of how clusters of sounds echo or play off against each other can help to bring the poems sensuously alive. |
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To modern ears they seem tediously complaining and conventional, catching brief fire only when he tries to imitate Petrarch, whose sonnets he helped to popularise in England. |
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Encouraged by her parents and her teachers, Shields began writing at an early age, producing articles and sonnets for her high-school paper and literary journal. |
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The sonnets by Michelangelo are intense and wonderfully written. |
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The single theme of the sonnets is the passage of time and its harm on the love that, as we have learned through experience, never doth runs smooth. |
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William Shakespeare is too notorious to add anything new about him, but his sonnets and poems in general are certainly the least known part of his work. |
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In 1881, Rossetti published a second volume of poems, Ballads and Sonnets, which included the remaining sonnets from The House of Life sequence. |
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The only evidence for this is two supposed puns within the sonnets themselves. |
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The editor decided that repunctuating Shakespeare's sonnets risked damaging their meaning. |
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He had one close friend at the time, a boy named Robert Jameson, not a fellow student, to whom he afterwards addressed a series of sonnets. |
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Petrarchan sonnets are typically composed of an octave and sestet rhyme pattern. |
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Young has interesting treatments of irenical, ecumenical elements, and even humility in some later sonnets. |
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The First Folio of Shakespeare's plays is dedicated to Pembroke and many scholars believe he is also the mysterious 'Mr W H', dedicatee of the writer's sonnets. |
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Guy points out that the letters are disjointed, and that the French language and grammar employed in the sonnets are too poor for a writer with Mary's education. |
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A collection of 154 by sonnets, dealing with themes such as the passage of time, love, beauty and mortality, were first published in a 1609 quarto. |
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While a significant amount of his literary output consists of translations and imitations of sonnets by the Italian poet Petrarch, he also wrote sonnets of his own. |
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His works are noted for their strong, sensual style and include sonnets, love poems, religious poems, Latin translations, epigrams, elegies, songs, satires and sermons. |
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Petrarchan sonnets were often used by men to exaggerate the beauty of women who were impossible for them to attain, as in Romeo's situation with Rosaline. |
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However, an early Portuguese expression of Romanticism is found already in Manuel Maria Barbosa du Bocage, especially in his sonnets dated at the end of the 18th century. |
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Over the centuries, some readers have posited that Shakespeare's sonnets are autobiographical, and point to them as evidence of his love for a young man. |
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Scholars are not certain when each of the 154 sonnets was composed, but evidence suggests that Shakespeare wrote sonnets throughout his career for a private readership. |
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In 1599, two early drafts of sonnets 138 and 144 appeared in The Passionate Pilgrim, published under Shakespeare's name but without his permission. |
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From the beginning there were public and private readings of individual sonnets and canzoni, with commentary on phrases and single words as well as discussion of whole poems. |
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His extant works, including collaborations, consist of approximately 38 plays, 154 sonnets, two long narrative poems, and a few other verses, some of uncertain authorship. |
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In the judgement of Guido Almansi, sexuality in the sonnets in Roman dialect is haunted by blennorrhea and eurotophobia, and is thus a wholly negative thing. |
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But some are composed in traditional metres and stanzas, including ottava rima, tetrameter couplets, Spenserian stanzas, sonnets and Onegin-stanzas. |
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The reader is probably familiar with Shakespearean sonnets and Petrarchan sonnets, which require fourteen lines and specific rhyme-scheme possibilities. |
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