Not Marble‚ Nor The Gilded Monument - William Shakespeare ABOUT THE AUTHOR- William Shakespeare (baptized 26 April 1564; died 23 April 1616) was an English poet and playwright‚ widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and the world’s pre-eminent dramatist. He is often called England’s national poet and the "Bard of Avon". His surviving works‚ including some collaborations‚ consist of about 38plays‚ 154 sonnets‚ two long narrative poems‚ and several other poems. His plays
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Edna St. Vincent Millay’s "What Lips My Lips Have Kissed‚ and Where and Why" is an effective short poem‚ which feeds on the dissonance between the ideal of love and its reality‚ heartbreak. In William Shakespeare’s "Let Me Not to The Marriage of True Minds‚" the effectiveness is weakened by its idealiality and metaphysical stereotype. In contrast to Millay‚ Shakespeare paints a genuine portrait of what love should be but unfortunately never really is. This factor is what makes his poem difficult
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William Shakespeare sonnets are easily identified by the diversity of tones that he uses to express the speakers emotions to an audience‚ such is case of Sonnet 71 that contains lines that have totally different meanings among each other. According to the first 4 lines of this Sonnet it can inferred that what the speaker is trying to express to the audience is not to grieve for him when dies. “No Longer mourn for me when I am dead‚ Than you shall hear the surly sullen bell Give warning to
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Development of Sonnets The development of the sonnet form was originally made as a love poem by the Renaissance Italian poet‚ Francesco Petrarch. It is always the case with immortal writers that they invent forms in response to their strong need to express ideas and emotions for which they cannot find an existing form. Petrarch had an overwhelming need for a new way of expressing the various aspects of his love for his Laura. He adapted a mediaeval song form to his purpose and
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When‚ in disgrace with fortune and men’s eyes‚ When I’ve fallen out of favor with fortune and men‚ I all alone beweep my outcast state All alone I weep over my position as a social outcast‚ And trouble deaf heaven with my bootless cries And pray to heaven‚ but my cries go unheard‚ And look upon myself and curse my fate‚ And I look at myself‚ cursing my fate‚ Wishing me like to one more rich in hope‚ Wishing I were like one who had more hope‚ Featured like him‚ like him with friends possess’d
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How does the prologue to Shakespeare’s ’Romeo and Juliet’ prepare the audience for the play? The prologue to Shakespeare’s ’Romeo and Juliet’ prepares the audience by making a short summary of the play so it gets the audience thinking about what the story is about. The prologue is a sonnet which is a 14 line poem‚ it is also known as an english‚ elizabethan sonnet which contains 3 quatrains and a rhyming couplet. A sonnet is usually a love poem and that is exactly what ’Romeo and Juliet’ is
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The purity of love appears as pure as the actors that are required to perform it. Donne borrows inspiration from the Homeric epic The Odyssey and patterns of Ovidian lyric to express both disappointment and frustration due to its impurity‚ stemming from the goal accomplished through bodily reality. While Donne is able to attain love through its consummation‚ he expresses conflict in attempting to avoid deviation from the pursuit of love caused by a woman’s features in Love’s Progress‚ which draw
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Frank O’Hara’s poem “A True Account of Talking to the Sun at Fire Island” is a fun account of the speaker’s encounter with the actual sun. This poem is not only fun‚ but a great comic pat on the back for both the speaker and even the reader. It’s nice to think that the Sun took time out of its busy schedule of waking up the earth’s inhabitants to give the speaker some words of encouragement and to let him know that his work is appreciated. The opening line‚ “The sun woke me up this morning loud /
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“Romanticism” Clearly defines key elements of the Romantic Era by describing things such the Era’s Folklore and Popular Art‚ Nationalism‚ Shakespeare‚ The Gothic Romance‚ Medievalism‚ Emotion‚ Exoticism‚ Religion‚ Individualism‚ Victorianism‚ Reactions‚ and two subjects that I find support my claim that “Tartuffe” belonged here‚ the Romantic’s aspect of Nature and Emotions. When describing Nature within this article pertaining to the Romantic Era it states that “The Romantics‚ just as they cultivated
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Carole A Johnson Professor Mary Lounsbory CTC English Composition II 30 June 2013 Use of a Literary Device in “Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day” William Shakespeare’s sonnet “Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day” is a fourteen line poem that contains three quatrains followed by a couplet. The poem is also known as Sonnet 18‚ and is a beautiful poem describing just that‚ a summer’s day. If one wishes to be technical‚ Shakespeare does more than describe a summer’s day‚ he is comparing
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