Shakespeare and the Poet's LifeUniversity Press of Kentucky, 21.11.2021 - 248 Seiten Shakespeare and the Poet's Life explores a central biographical question: why did Shakespeare choose to cease writing sonnets and court-focused long poems like The Rape of Lucrece and Venus and Adonis and continue writing plays? Author Gary Schmidgall persuasively demonstrates the value of contemplating the professional reasons Shakespeare—or any poet of the time—ceased being an Elizabethan court poet and focused his efforts on drama and the Globe. Students of Shakespeare and of Renaissance poetry will find Schmidgall's approach and conclusions both challenging and illuminating. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 81
Seite
... writing for the stage during his last two London decades. Why did the blossoming young poet cease writing sonnets and epyllions, cease. Introduction.
... writing for the stage during his last two London decades. Why did the blossoming young poet cease writing sonnets and epyllions, cease. Introduction.
Seite
Gary Schmidgall. the blossoming young poet cease writing sonnets and epyllions, cease in his efforts to combine the professions of courting poet and dramatist, and turn more exclusively to the world of the theater? We shall never know ...
Gary Schmidgall. the blossoming young poet cease writing sonnets and epyllions, cease in his efforts to combine the professions of courting poet and dramatist, and turn more exclusively to the world of the theater? We shall never know ...
Seite
... write? was not ignored by the wisest Renaissance poets: “Come, let me write, 'And to what end?' ” Thus Sidney begins his psychomachia-inverse, Astrophil and Stella Sonnet 34 (quoted in full on page 25). Renaissance poets had frequent ...
... write? was not ignored by the wisest Renaissance poets: “Come, let me write, 'And to what end?' ” Thus Sidney begins his psychomachia-inverse, Astrophil and Stella Sonnet 34 (quoted in full on page 25). Renaissance poets had frequent ...
Seite
... writer's career, its beginnings, when the pressures and anxieties experienced are most volatile. All writers, Shakespeare surely included, are keenly subject at the inception of their careers to the kind of preoccupation described in a ...
... writer's career, its beginnings, when the pressures and anxieties experienced are most volatile. All writers, Shakespeare surely included, are keenly subject at the inception of their careers to the kind of preoccupation described in a ...
Seite
... his careerist bets. Jorge Luis Borges has observed, “The fate of a writer is strange. At first he is baroque—ostentatiously baroque—and after many years he may attain, if the stars are auspicious, not simplicity, which in.
... his careerist bets. Jorge Luis Borges has observed, “The fate of a writer is strange. At first he is baroque—ostentatiously baroque—and after many years he may attain, if the stars are auspicious, not simplicity, which in.
Inhalt
Chameleon Muse The Poets Life in Shakespeares Courts | |
Fearful Meditation The Young Man and the Poets Life | |
Exemplary Front Matter | |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
appears aristocratic Armado artistic audience authors Berowne Berowne’s Boyet chameleon chapter Cleopatra comedy conceit Coriolanus courtier courtiership courtly Daniel dedications dedicatory Donne Donne’s doth Earl elaborate Elizabethan eloquence English epistle expressed eyes false Falstaff fashion favor figure front matter Harington hath Henry Henry’s Holofernes Iago John Jonson King ladies language letter lines Lord Love’s Labour’s Lost men’s muse never observed one’s ornate style patron patronage perhaps Petrarchan phrase play play’s poem poet poet’s poetical poetry praise present Prince Princess Proteus Puttenham Rape of Lucrece reader Renaissance Renaissance poet rhetorical rhyme Richard role satire satirist scene Shakespeare Shakespeare’s Sonnets Sidney Sidney’s Sonnet 29 Sonnet 35 Sonnet 58 Sonnet 94 Sonnets 124 Southampton speaker speech sprezzatura suggest suitor sweet thee Thomas thou Timon of Athens Venus and Adonis Venus’s verse words write wrote Wyatt Young Man sonnets Young Man’s