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    performed in daylight whereas in 21st Century theatre plays are shown during the day and night‚ although they did not have lighting back then so therefore had no choice but to use natural lighting which makes the focus more upon their acting‚ hence why Shakespeare used such descriptive language for his plays. It is performed on a simple thrust stage of an Elizabethan playhouse where the audience would surround the actors horizontally and vertically. However‚ most people associated Elizabethan theatres with

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    INTRODUCTION TO MACBETH William Shakespeare was born to a wealthy family in 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon‚ England. He married and had several children but died in 1616 at the age of 52. Shakespeare authored thirty-seven plays and 154 sonnets. The legacy of this body of work is immense. A number of Shakespeare’s plays seem to have transcended even the category of brilliance‚ becoming so influential as to affect profoundly the course of Western literature and culture ever after. Shakespeare’s shortest

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    Candice Mullen April 1 2013 Dr. Paul Farkas Memorial Scholarship Chaucer‚ Shakespeare‚ and Eunuchs Chaucer and Shakespeare have created literature that has lasted for centuries by no coincidental matter. Many similarities link the two men together‚ but I believe that the most prominent characteristic that the men share is their innovativeness. More specifically their innovative construction of gender confused characters. Dinshaw’s examination of the eunuch Pardoner in her essay “Eunuch Hermeneutics”

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    things it is very difficult for a person to be happy. “Sonnet 29‚” by William Shakespeare‚ and “Sonnet LIV‚” by Edmund Spenser‚ explain the sadness and depression that comes with rejection. The narrators try to change themselves in search for attention and approval from the people around them‚ but no matter how hard they try to fit in‚ they fail. In both “Sonnet 29” and “Sonnet LIV” the narrators feel outcast and rejected‚ however in “Sonnet 29” the narrator is able to able to bounce back from his

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    William Shakespeare‚ one of the most influential writers of 17th century‚ was very well known for his work in theatre and as a poet. In his sonnetsShakespeare uses imagery and objects of nature as metaphor in describing beauty through contrast and aging. Sonnets were the pop songs of Shakespeare’s era‚ a very fashionable poetic; all gentlemen were required to learn them as a discipline and a sign of one’s education. A good sonnet alluded to a good education‚ conveying one’s upbringing as one

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    In the last four lines of the sonnet‚ Wyatt’s diction encompasses a more personal tone and reveals that the “deer” is an extended metaphor for his beloved “deare.” In the lines “And graven with diamond in letters plain / There is written‚ her fair neck round about‚ / “Noli me tangere‚ for Caesar’s I am‚ / And wild for to hold‚ though I seem tame (11-14).” At first glance‚ it is absurd to think that a wild animal would be wearing a diamond-encrusted necklace. But this “necklace” is a symbol of possession

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    Essay: The Motif of Time in Shakespeare’s Sonnet 19 Time may well be the most confusing‚ incomprehensible and paradox matter in our universe. There seems to be no possibility of influencing it in any way and we have to accept that it will always follow its own course. While most would agree‚ William Shakespeare - in his own way - was different. In his Sonnet 19‚ his lyrical I even tries to stop it‚ this unstoppable force that alters and consumes everything‚ this "Devouring time"1‚ as it is called

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    Elizabeth Barrett Browning wrote the poem Sonnet 43. The word sonnet means a verse form consisting of 14 lines with a fixed rhyme scheme. This sonnet is about how the author loves her lovely without limits and boundaries‚ with all her forces and her soul and how she will love him even after death. Love can be strong as faith. The author sends a message that love can be just as strong as faith in a religious figure head. She compares him to her childlike faith‚ like how a child has a very forgiving

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    Lloyd Schwartz’s sonnet In Emily Dickinson’s Bedroom”‚ tells about the self-reflection needed to find one’s inspiration even through the simple things around us like in Emily Dickinson’s room‚ the speaker talks about how it felt to be in Emily Dickinson’s room: explaining it was a very simple room with very little if not any furniture. The speaker develops this theme by introducing the room and explaining how his experience of being in it alone like Emily Dickinson; the speaker addresses it by using

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    ne’s Holy Sonnet 10: Death Be Not Proud Donne’s Holy Sonnet 10‚ “Death‚ be not proud” expresses the speaker feelings towards death. He uses personification by addressing death as if it was a human. In the first stanza the author says: Death‚ be not proud‚ though some have called thee Mighty and dreadful‚ for thou art not so; For those‚ whom thou think’s thou dost overthrow‚ Die not‚ poor Death‚ nor yet canst thou kill me. (1-4) From the tone of the stanza it may seem like the speaker is talking

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