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Shakespeare's sonnets

William Shakespeare (1564–1616) wrote sonnets on a variety of themes. When discussing or referring to Shakespeare's sonnets, it is almost always a reference to the 154 sonnets that were first published all together in a quarto in 1609.[1] However, there are six additional sonnets that Shakespeare wrote and included in the plays Romeo and Juliet, Henry V and Love's Labour's Lost. There is also a partial sonnet found in the play Edward III.

Shakespeare's Sonnets
Thorpe edition of the sonnets (1609)
AuthorWilliam Shakespeare
CountryEngland
LanguageEarly Modern English
GenreRenaissance poetry
PublisherThomas Thorpe
Publication date
1609
TextShakespeare's Sonnets at Wikisource

Context edit

Shakespeare's sonnets are considered a continuation of the sonnet tradition that swept through the Renaissance from Petrarch in 14th-century Italy and was finally introduced in 16th-century England by Thomas Wyatt and was given its rhyming metre and division into quatrains by Henry Howard. With few exceptions, Shakespeare's sonnets observe the stylistic form of the English sonnet—the rhyme scheme, the 14 lines, and the metre. But, Shakespeare's sonnets introduce significant departures of content.[2]

Instead of expressing worshipful love for an almost goddess-like yet unobtainable female love-object, as Petrarch, Dante, and Philip Sidney had done, Shakespeare introduces a young man. He also introduces the Dark Lady. Shakespeare explores themes such as lust, homoeroticism, misogyny, infidelity, and acrimony.[2]

The quarto of 1609 edit

The primary source of Shakespeare's sonnets is a quarto published in 1609 titled Shake-speare's Sonnets. It contains 154 sonnets, which are followed by the long poem "A Lover's Complaint". Thirteen copies of the quarto have survived in fairly good shape. There is evidence in a note on the title page of one of the extant copies that the great Elizabethan actor Edward Alleyn bought a copy in June 1609 for one shilling.[3][2]: 6 

The sonnets cover such themes as the passage of time, love, infidelity, jealousy, beauty and mortality. The first 126 are addressed to a young man; the last 28 are either addressed to, or refer to, a woman. (Sonnets 138 and 144 had previously been published in the 1599 miscellany The Passionate Pilgrim.)

The title of the quarto, Shake-speare's Sonnets, is consistent with the entry in the Stationers' Register. The title appears in upper case lettering on the title page, where it is followed by the phrase "Neuer before Imprinted". The title also appears every time the quarto is opened. That the author's name in a possessive form is part of the title sets it apart from all other sonnet collections of the time, except for one—Sir Philip Sidney's posthumous 1591 publication that is titled, Syr. P.S. his Astrophel and Stella, which is considered one of Shakespeare's most important models. Sidney's title may have inspired Shakespeare, particularly if the "W.H." of Shakespeare's dedication is Sidney's nephew and heir, William Herbert. The idea that the persona referred to as the speaker of Shakespeare's sonnets might be Shakespeare himself, is aggressively repudiated by scholars; however, the title of the quarto does seem to encourage that kind of speculation.[2]: 85 

The first 17 poems, traditionally called the procreation sonnets, are addressed to the young man—urging him to marry and have children in order to immortalize his beauty by passing it to the next generation.[4] Other sonnets express the speaker's love for the young man; brood upon loneliness, death, and the transience of life; seem to criticise the young man for preferring a rival poet; express ambiguous feelings for the speaker's mistress; and pun on the poet's name. The final two sonnets are allegorical treatments of Greek epigrams referring to the "little love-god" Cupid.

The publisher, Thomas Thorpe, entered the book in the Stationers' Register on 20 May 1609:[5]

Tho. Thorpe. Entred for his copie under the handes of master Wilson and master Lownes Wardenes a booke called Shakespeares sonnettes vjd.

Whether Thorpe used an authorised manuscript from Shakespeare or an unauthorised copy is unknown. George Eld printed the quarto, and the run was divided between the booksellers William Aspley and John Wright.[citation needed]

Dedication edit

 
Dedication page from The Sonnets

Shakespeare's Sonnets include a dedication to "Mr. W.H.":

TO.THE.ONLIE.BEGETTER.OF.
THESE.INSUING.SONNETS.
Mr.W.H.   ALL.HAPPINESSE.
AND.THAT.ETERNITIE.
PROMISED.
BY.
OUR.EVER-LIVING.POET.
WISHETH.
THE.WELL-WISHING.
ADVENTURER.IN.
SETTING.
FORTH.

T.T.

The upper case letters and the stops that follow each word of the dedication were probably intended to resemble an ancient Roman lapidary inscription or monumental brass, perhaps accentuating the declaration in Sonnet 55 that the work would confer immortality to the subjects of the work:[6]

Not marble, nor the gilded monuments
Of princes shall outlive this pow'rful rhyme

The initials "T.T." are taken to refer to the publisher, Thomas Thorpe. Thorpe usually signed prefatory matter only if the author was out of the country or dead, which suggests that Shakespeare was not in London during the last stage of printing.[7] However, Thorpe's entire corpus of such consists of only four dedications and three prefaces.[8] It has been suggested that Thorpe signing the dedication, rather than the author, might indicate that Thorpe published the work without obtaining Shakespeare's permission.[9] Though Thorpe's taking on the dedication may be explained by the great demands of business and travel that Shakespeare was facing at this time, which may have caused him to deal with the printing production in haste before rushing out of town.[10] After all, May 1609 was an extraordinary time: That month saw a serious outbreak of the plague, which shut down the theatres, and also caused many to flee London. Plus Shakespeare's theatre company was on tour from Ipswich to Oxford. In addition, Shakespeare had been away from Stratford and in the same month, May, was being called on to tend to family and business there,[11] and deal with the litigation of a lawsuit in Warwickshire that involved a substantial amount of money.[12]

Mr. W. H., the dedicatee edit

The identity of Mr. W.H., "the only begetter of Shakespeare's Sonnets", is not known for certain. His identity has been the subject of a great amount of speculation: That he was the author's patron, that he was both patron and the "faire youth" who is addressed in the sonnets, that the "faire youth" is based on Mr. W.H. in some sonnets but not others, and a number of other ideas.[13][2]: 51–55, 63–68 [14]

 
William Herbert, 3rd Earl of Pembroke
 
Henry Wriothesley, 3rd Earl of Southampton

William Herbert, the Earl of Pembroke, is seen as perhaps the most likely identity of Mr. W.H. and the "young man". He was the dedicatee of the First Folio. Thorpe would have been unlikely to have addressed a lord as "Mr",[15] but there may be an explanation, perhaps that form of address came from the author, who wanted to refer to Herbert at an earlier time—when Herbert was a "younger man".[16] There is a later dedication to Herbert in another quarto of verse, Ben Jonson's Epigrammes (1616), in which the text of Jonson's dedication begins, "MY LORD, While you cannot change your merit, I dare not change your title … " Jonson's emphasis on Pembroke's title, and his comment, seem to be chiding someone else who had the audacity to use the wrong title, as perhaps is the case in Shakespeare's dedication.[2]: 60 

Henry Wriothesley (the Earl of Southampton), with initials reversed, has received a great deal of consideration as a likely possibility. He was the dedicatee of Shakespeare's poems Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece. Southampton was also known for his good looks.[citation needed]

Other suggestions include:

  • A simple printing error for Shakespeare's initials, "W.S." or "W. Sh". This was suggested by Bertrand Russell, Jonathan Bate, and Donald W. Foster.[17][18]
  • William Hall, a printer who had worked with Thorpe.[19][9] It is noted that "ALL" following "MR. W. H." spells "MR. W. HALL". Using his initials W.H., Hall had edited a collection of the poems of Robert Southwell that was printed by George Eld, the printer of the 1609 Sonnets.[20]
  • Sir William Harvey, Southampton's stepfather.[15][21]
  • William Haughton, a contemporary dramatist.[22][23]
  • William Hart, Shakespeare's nephew and male heir.[24]
  • Who He. It has been argued that the dedication is deliberately ambiguous, possibly standing for "Who He", a conceit also used in a contemporary pamphlet. It might have been created by Thorpe to encourage speculation and discussion (and hence, sales).[25]
  • Willie Hughes. The 18th-century scholar Thomas Tyrwhitt proposed "William Hughes", based on puns on the name in the sonnets (notably Sonnet 20). This idea is expressed in Oscar Wilde's short story "The Portrait of Mr. W. H.", and that the sonnets were written to a young actor who played female roles in Shakespeare's plays.[26]

Form and structure of the sonnets edit

 
Sonnet 30 as a wall poem in Leiden

The sonnets are almost all constructed using three quatrains (four-line stanzas) followed by a final couplet. The sonnets are composed in iambic pentameter, the metre used in Shakespeare's plays.

The rhyme scheme is ABAB CDCD EFEF GG. Sonnets using this scheme are known as Shakespearean sonnets, or English sonnets, or Elizabethan sonnets. Often, at the end of the third quatrain occurs the volta ("turn"), where the mood of the poem shifts, and the poet expresses a turn of thought.[27]

The exceptions are sonnets 99, 126, and 145. Number 99 has fifteen lines. Number 126 consists of six couplets, and two blank lines marked with italic brackets; 145 is in iambic tetrameters, not pentameters. In one other variation on the standard structure, found for example in sonnet 29, the rhyme scheme is changed by repeating the second (B) rhyme of quatrain one as the second (F) rhyme of quatrain three.

Apart from rhyme, and considering only the arrangement of ideas, and the placement of the volta, a number of sonnets maintain the two-part organization of the Italian sonnet. In that case the term "octave" and "sestet" are commonly used to refer to the sonnet's first eight lines followed by the remaining six lines. There are other line-groupings as well, as Shakespeare finds inventive ways with the content of the fourteen-line poems.[28]

Characters of the sonnets edit

When analysed as characters, the subjects of the sonnets are usually referred to as the Fair Youth, the Rival Poet, and the Dark Lady. The speaker expresses admiration for the Fair Youth's beauty, and—if reading the sonnets in chronological order as published—later has an affair with the Dark Lady, then so does the Fair Youth. Current linguistic analysis and historical evidence suggests, however, that the sonnets to the Dark Lady were composed first (around 1591–95), the procreation sonnets next, and the later sonnets to the Fair Youth last (1597–1603). It is not known whether the poems and their characters are fiction or autobiographical; scholars who find the sonnets to be autobiographical have attempted to identify the characters with historical individuals.[29]

Fair Youth edit

The "Fair Youth" is the unnamed young man addressed by the devoted poet in the greatest sequence of the sonnets (1126). The young man is handsome, self-centred, universally admired and much sought after. The sequence begins with the poet urging the young man to marry and father children (sonnets 1–17). It continues with the friendship developing with the poet's loving admiration, which at times is homoerotic in nature. Then comes a set of betrayals by the young man, as he is seduced by the Dark Lady, and they maintain a liaison (sonnets 133, 134 & 144), all of which the poet struggles to abide. It concludes with the poet's own act of betrayal, resulting in his independence from the fair youth (sonnet 152).[30][2]: 93 [31]

The identity of the Fair Youth has been the subject of speculation among scholars. One popular theory is that he was Henry Wriothesley, the 3rd Earl of Southampton; this is based in part on the idea that his physical features, age, and personality might fairly match the young man in the sonnets.[32] He was both an admirer and patron of Shakespeare and was considered one of the most prominent nobles of the period.[33] It is also noted that Shakespeare's 1593 poem Venus and Adonis is dedicated to Southampton and, in that poem a young man, Adonis, is encouraged by the goddess of love, Venus, to beget a child, which is a theme in the sonnets. Here are the verses from Venus and Adonis:[34]

Torches are made to light, jewels to wear,
Dainties to taste, fresh beauty for the use,
Herbs for their smell, and sappy plants to bear;
Things growing to themselves are growth's abuse,
 Seeds spring from seeds, and beauty breedeth beauty;
 Thou wast begot; to get it is thy duty.

Upon the earth's increase why shouldst thou feed,
Unless the earth with thy increase be fed?
By law of nature thou art bound to breed,
That thine may live when thou thyself art dead;
 And so in spite of death thou dost survive,
 In that thy likeness still is left alive.
Venus and Adonis[35]

A problem with identifying the fair youth with Southampton is that the most certainly datable events referred to in the Sonnets are the fall of Essex and then the gunpowder plotters' executions in 1606, which puts Southampton at the age of 33, and then 39 when the sonnets were published, when he would be past the age when he would be referred to as a "lovely boy" or "fair youth".[2]: 52 

Authors such as Thomas Tyrwhitt[36] and Oscar Wilde proposed that the Fair Youth was William Hughes, a seductive young actor who played female roles in Shakespeare's plays. Particularly, Wilde claimed that he was the Mr. W.H.[37] referred to in the dedication attached to the manuscript of the Sonnets.[32]

The Dark Lady edit

The Dark Lady sequence (sonnets 127–152) is the most defiant of the sonnet tradition. The sequence distinguishes itself from the Fair Youth sequence with its overt sexuality (Sonnet 151).[38] The Dark Lady is so called because she has black hair and "dun" skin. The Dark Lady suddenly appears (Sonnet 127), and she and the speaker of the sonnets, the poet, are in a sexual relationship. She is not aristocratic, young, beautiful, intelligent or chaste. Her complexion is muddy, her breath "reeks", and she is ungainly when she walks. The relationship strongly parallels Touchstone's pursuit of Audrey in As You Like It.[39] The Dark Lady presents an adequate receptor for male desire. She is celebrated in cocky terms that would be offensive to her, not that she would be able to read or understand what is said. Soon the speaker rebukes her for enslaving his fair friend (sonnet 133). He can't abide the triangular relationship, and it ends with him rejecting her.[2][31] As with the Fair Youth, there have been many attempts to identify her with a real historical individual. Lucy Negro,[40] Mary Fitton, Emilia Lanier, Elizabeth Wriothesley, and others have been suggested.

The Rival Poet edit

The Rival Poet's identity remains a mystery. If Shakespeare's patron and friend was Pembroke, Shakespeare was not the only poet who praised his beauty; Francis Davison did in a sonnet that is the preface to Davison's quarto A Poetical Rhapsody (1608), which was published just before Shakespeare's Sonnets.[41] John Davies of Hereford, Samuel Daniel, George Chapman, Christopher Marlowe, and Ben Jonson are also candidates that find support among clues in the sonnets.[42][43]

It may be that the Rival Poet is a composite of several poets through which Shakespeare explores his sense of being threatened by competing poets.[44] The speaker sees the Rival Poet as competition for fame and patronage. The sonnets most commonly identified as the Rival Poet group exist within the Fair Youth sequence in sonnets 7886.[44]

"A Lover's Complaint" edit

"A Lover's Complaint" is part two of the quarto published in 1609. It is not written in the sonnet form, but is composed of 47 seven-line stanzas written in rhyme royal. It is an example of a normal feature of the two-part poetic form, in which the first part expresses the male point of view, and the second part contrasts or complements the first part with the female's point of view. The first part of the quarto, the 154 sonnets, considers frustrated male desire, and the second part, "A Lover's Complaint", expresses the misery of a woman victimized by male desire. The earliest Elizabethan example of this two-part structure is Samuel Daniel's Delia ... with the Complaint of Rosamund (1592)—a sonnet sequence that tells the story of a woman being threatened by a man of higher rank, followed by the woman's complaint. This was imitated by other poets, including Shakespeare with his Rape of Lucrece, the last lines of which contain Lucrece's complaint. Other examples are found in the works of Michael Drayton, Thomas Lodge, Richard Barnfield, and others.[45]

The young man of the sonnets and the young man of "A Lover's Complaint" provide a thematic link between the two parts. In each part the young man is handsome, wealthy and promiscuous, unreliable and admired by all.[2]: 89 

Like the sonnets, "A Lover's Complaint" also has a possessive form in its title, which is followed by its own assertion of the author's name. This time the possessive word, "Lover's", refers to a woman, who becomes the primary "speaker" of the work.[2]: 85 

Story of "A Lover's Complaint" edit

"A Lover's Complaint" begins with a young woman weeping at the edge of a river, into which she throws torn-up letters, rings, and other tokens of love. An old man nearby approaches her and asks the reason for her sorrow. She responds by telling him of a former lover who pursued, seduced, and finally abandoned her. She recounts in detail the speech her lover gave to her which seduced her. She concludes her story by conceding that she would fall for the young man's false charms again.

Dates edit

  • 1597 – Shakespeare's tragedy Romeo and Juliet is published. The spoken prologue to the play, and the prologue to Act II are both written in sonnet form, and the first meeting of the star-crossed lovers is written as a sonnet woven into the dialogue.[46]
  • 1598 – Love's Labour's Lost is published as a quarto; the play's title page suggests it is a revision of an earlier version. The comedy features the King of Navarre and his lords who express their love in sonnet form for the Queen of France and her ladies. This play is believed to have been performed at the Inns of Court for Queen Elizabeth I in the mid-1590s.[47]
  • 1598 – Francis Meres published his quarto Palladis Tamia, which was entered on the Stationers' Register on 7 September that year. In it he mentions that sonnets by Shakespeare were being circulated privately:[48]

As the soule of Euphorbus was thought to live in Pythagoras: so the sweete wittie soule of Ouid liues in mellifluous & hony-tongued Shakespeare, witnes his Venus and Adonis, his Lucrece, his sugred Sonnets among his private friends, &c.[49]

  • 1599 – William Jaggard published an octavo volume called The Passionate Pilgrime. By W. Shakespeare. It is an anthology of 20 poems. This small publication contained some spurious content falsely ascribed to Shakespeare; it also contained four sonnets that can be said to be by Shakespeare: Two of the four appear to be early versions of sonnets that were later published in the 1609 quarto (numbers 138 and 144); the other two were sonnets lifted from Shakespeare's play Love's Labour's Lost. Sonnets 138 and 144 are anything but the sweet sonnets hinted at by Francis Meres' comment. They are instead harshly frank, ironic and recriminative regarding the relationship of the speaker and the Dark Lady. The two sonnets that were taken from Love's Labour's Lost, were, in the context of the play, written by comic characters who were intended to be seen as amateur sonneteers. Jaggard's piracy sold well—a second printing was quickly ordered—but it, including poetry falsely ascribed to Shakespeare, must have been a disappointment to Shakespeare's readers.[50]
  • January 1600 – an entry in the Stationers' Register is for a work that will include "certain other sonnets by W.S." This may suggest that Shakespeare planned to respond right away and correct the impression left by Jaggard's book with Shakespeare's own publication, or the entry may have been merely a "staying entry" not regarding an upcoming publication, but intended to prevent Jaggard from publishing any more sonnets by Shakespeare.[2]: 1–5 
  • 14 August 1600 – Shakespeare's play The Chronicle History of Henry the fifth is entered into the Register of the Stationers' Company. The spoken epilogue is written in the form of a sonnet.[51]
  • 20 May 1609 – The entry in the Stationers' Register announces Shakespeare's Sonnets. The contents include a collection of 154 sonnets followed by the poem "A Lover's Complaint". This publication was greeted with near silence in the documentary record, especially when compared with the lively reception that followed the publication of Venus and Adonis.
  • 1612 – Jaggard issues an expanded edition of his piratical anthology, The Passionate Pilgrim, which had been published in 1599. Thomas Heywood protests this piracy in his Apology for Actors (1612), writing that Shakespeare was "much offended" with Jaggard for making "so bold with his name." Jaggard withdraws the attribution to Shakespeare from unsold copies of the 1612 edition.
  • 1640 – The publisher John Benson publishes an anthology of poems; some are by Shakespeare, and about 30 are not, but all are ascribed to Shakespeare. It is titled "Poems: Written by Wil. Shakespeare Gent". Benson is even more wildly piratical than Jaggard. Benson draws on The Passionate Pilgrim and other sources, including Shakespeare's Sonnets (1609), which he rewrites and rearranges. Benson imperfectly rewrites the sonnets to make them appear to be addressing a woman—the pronoun "he" is often replaced by "she". This edition is unfortunately influential and resulted in confusing and confounding various critical understanding and response for more than a century. Deliberate misgendering is also a feature of 17th-century commonplace books which include Sonnet 2, the most popular sonnet to appear in such collections. In Margaret Bellasys' commonplace book the poem appears with the non-gendered title, 'Spes Altera'. In IA's commonplace book, the gender of the addressee is explicitly changed with the title, 'To one that would die a mayd'.[52]
  • 1780 – Edmond Malone, in his two volume supplement to the 1778 Johnson-Stevens edition of the plays, finally instates the 1609 quarto edition of Shakespeare's Sonnets as the sole authoritative text.[53]
  • 1986 – The New Penguin Shakespeare’s edition of the sonnets restores "A Lover's Complaint" as an integral part of Shakespeare's Sonnets.[2]: 44 [54]

Criticism edit

In his plays, Shakespeare himself seemed to be a satiric critic of sonnets—the allusions to them are often scornful. Then he went on to create one of the longest sonnet-sequences of his era, a sequence that took some sharp turns away from the tradition.[2]: 44 

He may have been inspired out of literary ambition, and a desire to carve new paths apart from the well-worn tradition. Or he may have been inspired by biographical elements in his life. It is thought that the biographical aspects have been over-explored and over-speculated on, especially in the face of a paucity of evidence.[2]: 45  The critical focus has turned instead (through New Criticism and by scholars such as Stephen Booth[55] and Helen Vendler)[56] to the text itself, which is studied and appreciated linguistically as a "highly complex structure of language and ideas".[57]

Besides the biographic and the linguistic approaches, another way of considering Shakespeare's sonnets is in the context of the culture and literature that surrounds them.[58]

Gerald Hammond, in his book The Reader and the Young Man Sonnets, suggests that the non-expert reader, who is thoughtful and engaged, does not need that much help in understanding the sonnets: though, he states, the reader may often feel mystified when trying to decide, for example, if a word or passage has a concrete meaning or an abstract meaning; laying that kind of perplexity in the reader's path for the reader to deal with is an essential part of reading the sonnets—the reader doesn't always benefit from having knots untangled and double-meanings simplified by the experts, according to Hammond.[59]

During the eighteenth century, The Sonnets' reputation in England was relatively low; in 1805, The Critical Review credited John Milton with the perfection of the English sonnet. Towards the end of the nineteenth century, Shakespeare and Milton seemed to be on an equal footing,[60] but critics, burdened by an over-emphasis on biographical explorations, continued to contend with each other for decades on this point.[2]: 78–79 

Editions edit

Like all Shakespeare's works, Shakespeare's Sonnets have been reprinted many times. Prominent editions include:

First edition and facsimile
  • Shakespeare, William (1609). Shake-speares Sonnets: Never Before Imprinted. London: Thomas Thorpe.
  • Lee, Sidney, ed. (1905). Shakespeares Sonnets: Being a reproduction in facsimile of the first edition. Oxford: Clarendon Press. OCLC 458829162.
Variorum editions
Modern critical editions

Zinman, Ira, ed. (2009). Shakespeare's Sonnets and the Bible. foreword by HRH Charles Prince of Wales. Bloomington. World Wisdom. ISBN 978-1933316758

Sonnets that occur in the plays edit

There are sonnets written by Shakespeare that occur in his plays, and these include his earliest sonnets.[61] They differ from the 154 sonnets published in the 1609, because they may lack the deep introspection, for example, and they are written to serve the needs of a performance, exposition or narrative.[62]

Early comedies edit

In Shakespeare's early comedies, the sonnets and sonnet-making of his characters are often objects of satire. In Two Gentlemen of Verona, sonnet-writing is portrayed cynically as a seduction technique.[63] In Love's Labour's Lost, sonnets are portrayed as evidence that love can render men weak and foolish.[64] In Much Ado About Nothing, Beatrice and Benedick each write a sonnet, which serves as proof that they have fallen in love.[65] In All’s Well that Ends Well, a partial sonnet is read, and Bertram comments, "He shall be whipp'd through the army with this rhyme in's forehead."[66] In Henry V, the Dauphin suggests he will compose a sonnet to his horse.[67]

The sonnets that Shakespeare satirizes in his plays are sonnets written in the tradition of Petrarch and Sidney, whereas Shakespeare's sonnets published in the quarto of 1609 take a radical turn away from that older style, and have none of the lovelorn qualities that are mocked in the plays. The sonnets published in 1609 seem to be rebelling against the tradition.[2]: 44–45 

In the play Love's Labour's Lost, the King and his three lords have all vowed to live like monks, to study, to give up worldly things, and to see no women. All of them break the last part of the vow by falling in love. The lord Longaville expresses his love in a sonnet ("Did not the heavenly rhetoric of thine eye…"),[68] and the lord Berowne does, too—a hexameter sonnet ("If love make me forsworn, how shall I swear to love?")–a form Sidney uses in six of the sonnets in Astrophel and Stella (Numbers 1, 6, 8, 76, and 102).[69][70] These sonnets contain comic imperfections, including awkward phrasing, and problems with the meter. After Berowne is caught breaking his vow, and exposed by the sonnet he composed, he passionately renounces speech that is affected, and vows to prefer plain country speech. Ironically, when proclaiming this he demonstrates that he can't seem to avoid rich courtly language, and his speech happens to fall into the meter and rhyme of a sonnet. ("O, never will I trust to speeches penned…")[71][72]

Henry V edit

The epilogue at the end of the play Henry V is written in the form of a sonnet ("Thus far with rough, and all-unable pen…").[73] Formal epilogues were established as a theatrical tradition, and occur in 13 of Shakespeare's plays. In Henry V, the character of Chorus, who has addressed the audience a few times during the play, speaks the wide-ranging epilogue/sonnet. It begins by allowing that the play may not have presented the story in its full glory. It points out that the next king would be Henry VI, who was an infant when he succeeded Henry V, and who "lost France, and made his England bleed/ Which oft our stage hath shown." It refers to the three parts of Henry VI and to Richard III — connecting the Lancastrian and the Yorkist cycles.[74]

Romeo and Juliet edit

Three sonnets are found in Romeo and Juliet: The prologue to the play ("Two households, both alike in dignity…"), the prologue to the second act ("Now old desire doth in his death-bed lie…"), and set in the form of dialogue at the moment when Romeo and Juliet meet:

ROMEO
If I profane with my unworthiest hand
This holy shrine, the gentle fine is this:
My lips, two blushing pilgrims, ready stand
To smooth that rough touch with a tender kiss.
JULIET
Good pilgrim, you do wrong your hand too much,
Which mannerly devotion shows in this;
For saints have hands that pilgrims' hands do touch,
And palm to palm is holy palmers' kiss.
ROMEO
Have not saints lips, and holy palmers too?
JULIET
Ay, pilgrim, lips that they must use in prayer.
ROMEO
O, then, dear saint, let lips do what hands do;
They pray, grant thou, lest faith turn to despair.
JULIET
Saints do not move, though grant for prayers' sake.
ROMEO
Then move not, while my prayer's effect I take.[75]

Much Ado About Nothing edit

Two sonnets are mentioned in Much Ado About Nothing—sonnets by Beatrice and Benedick—and though not committed to paper, they were in Shakespeare's mind. The first one, revealed by Claudio, is described as "A halting sonnet of his own pure brain/Fashion'd to Beatrice". The second, found by Hero, was "Writ in my cousin's hand, stolen from her pocket/Containing her affection unto Benedick".[76]

Edward III edit

The play Edward III has recently become accepted as part of Shakespeare's canon of plays. It was considered an anonymous work, and that is how it was first published, but in the late 1990s it began to be included in publications of the complete works as co-authored by Shakespeare.[77] Scholars who have supported this attribution include Jonathan Bate, Edward Capell, Eliot Slater,[78] Eric Sams,[79] Giorgio Melchiori,[80] Brian Vickers, and others. The play, printed in 1596, contains language and themes that also appear in Shakespeare's sonnets, including the line: "Lilies that fester smell far worse than weeds", which occurs in sonnet 94 and the phrase "scarlet ornaments", which occurs in sonnet 142.[81] The scene of the play that contains those quotations is a comic scene that features a poet attempting to compose a love poem at the behest of his king, Edward III.[82] At the time Edward III was published, Shakespeare's sonnets were known by some, but they had not yet been published.[79]

The king, Edward III, has fallen in love with the Countess of Salisbury, and he tells Lodowick, his secretary, to fetch ink and paper. Edward wants Lodowick's help in composing a poem that will sing the praises of the countess. Lodowick has a question:

LODOWICK
Write I to a woman?

KING EDWARD
What beauty else could triumph over me,
Or who but women do our love lays greet?
What, thinkest thou I did bid thee praise a horse?

The king then expresses and dictates his passion in exuberant poetry, and asks Lodowick to read back to him what he has been able to write down. Lodowick reads:

LODOWICK.
'More fair and chaste'—

KING EDWARD.
I did not bid thee talk of chastity ...

When the countess enters, the poetry-writing scene is interrupted without Lodowick having accomplished much poetry—only two lines:

More fair and chaste than is the queen of shades,
More bold in constance ... Than Judith was.[81]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "First edition of Shakespeare's Sonnets, 1609". The British Library. Retrieved 18 February 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Shakespeare, William (2010). Duncan-Jones, Katherine (ed.). Shakespeare's Sonnets. Bloomsbury Arden. ISBN 978-1408017975.
  3. ^ Shakespeare, William. Callaghan, Dympna, editor. Shakespeare's Sonnets. John Wiley & Sons, 2008. p. x. ISBN 978-0470777510.
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External links edit

Full collections edit

Study resources edit

  • Self-referential concordance to The Sonnets
  • The Sonnets – Compare two sonnets side-by-side, see all of them together on one page, or view a range of sonnets on Open Source Shakespeare
  • Explore the Sonnets yourself, with Gramener's tool helps readers explore Shakespeare's Sonnets

Commentaries edit

  • The Sonnets at About.com
  • Discussion of the identification of Emily Lanier as the Dark Lady 8 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  • Quick reference facts about The Sonnets
  • Bowley, Roger. . Numberphile. Brady Haran. Archived from the original on 1 February 2016. Retrieved 2 April 2013.
  • Banerjee, Subhrasleta. "William Shakespeare's Sonnets: Relooking at the Characters". Yearly Shakespeare ISSN 0976-9536, 17 (April 2019): 177–181.
  • Roy, Pinaki. "Shakespeare and Celan: A very brief comparative Study". Yearly Shakespeare (ISSN 0976-9536), 18 (2020): 118–24.

shakespeare, sonnets, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, william, shakespeare, 1564, 1616, wrote, sonnets, variety, themes, when, discussing, referring, almost, always, reference, sonnets, that, were, first, published, together, quarto, 1609, howeve. T T redirects here For other uses see TT disambiguation William Shakespeare 1564 1616 wrote sonnets on a variety of themes When discussing or referring to Shakespeare s sonnets it is almost always a reference to the 154 sonnets that were first published all together in a quarto in 1609 1 However there are six additional sonnets that Shakespeare wrote and included in the plays Romeo and Juliet Henry V and Love s Labour s Lost There is also a partial sonnet found in the play Edward III Shakespeare s SonnetsThorpe edition of the sonnets 1609 AuthorWilliam ShakespeareCountryEnglandLanguageEarly Modern EnglishGenreRenaissance poetryPublisherThomas ThorpePublication date1609TextShakespeare s Sonnets at Wikisource Contents 1 Context 2 The quarto of 1609 2 1 Dedication 2 1 1 Mr W H the dedicatee 2 2 Form and structure of the sonnets 2 3 Characters of the sonnets 2 3 1 Fair Youth 2 3 2 The Dark Lady 2 3 3 The Rival Poet 2 4 A Lover s Complaint 2 4 1 Story of A Lover s Complaint 3 Dates 4 Criticism 5 Editions 6 Sonnets that occur in the plays 6 1 Early comedies 6 2 Henry V 6 3 Romeo and Juliet 6 4 Much Ado About Nothing 6 5 Edward III 7 See also 8 References 9 External links 9 1 Full collections 9 2 Study resources 9 3 CommentariesContext editShakespeare s sonnets are considered a continuation of the sonnet tradition that swept through the Renaissance from Petrarch in 14th century Italy and was finally introduced in 16th century England by Thomas Wyatt and was given its rhyming metre and division into quatrains by Henry Howard With few exceptions Shakespeare s sonnets observe the stylistic form of the English sonnet the rhyme scheme the 14 lines and the metre But Shakespeare s sonnets introduce significant departures of content 2 Instead of expressing worshipful love for an almost goddess like yet unobtainable female love object as Petrarch Dante and Philip Sidney had done Shakespeare introduces a young man He also introduces the Dark Lady Shakespeare explores themes such as lust homoeroticism misogyny infidelity and acrimony 2 The quarto of 1609 editThe primary source of Shakespeare s sonnets is a quarto published in 1609 titled Shake speare s Sonnets It contains 154 sonnets which are followed by the long poem A Lover s Complaint Thirteen copies of the quarto have survived in fairly good shape There is evidence in a note on the title page of one of the extant copies that the great Elizabethan actor Edward Alleyn bought a copy in June 1609 for one shilling 3 2 6 The sonnets cover such themes as the passage of time love infidelity jealousy beauty and mortality The first 126 are addressed to a young man the last 28 are either addressed to or refer to a woman Sonnets 138 and 144 had previously been published in the 1599 miscellany The Passionate Pilgrim The title of the quarto Shake speare s Sonnets is consistent with the entry in the Stationers Register The title appears in upper case lettering on the title page where it is followed by the phrase Neuer before Imprinted The title also appears every time the quarto is opened That the author s name in a possessive form is part of the title sets it apart from all other sonnet collections of the time except for one Sir Philip Sidney s posthumous 1591 publication that is titled Syr P S his Astrophel and Stella which is considered one of Shakespeare s most important models Sidney s title may have inspired Shakespeare particularly if the W H of Shakespeare s dedication is Sidney s nephew and heir William Herbert The idea that the persona referred to as the speaker of Shakespeare s sonnets might be Shakespeare himself is aggressively repudiated by scholars however the title of the quarto does seem to encourage that kind of speculation 2 85 The first 17 poems traditionally called the procreation sonnets are addressed to the young man urging him to marry and have children in order to immortalize his beauty by passing it to the next generation 4 Other sonnets express the speaker s love for the young man brood upon loneliness death and the transience of life seem to criticise the young man for preferring a rival poet express ambiguous feelings for the speaker s mistress and pun on the poet s name The final two sonnets are allegorical treatments of Greek epigrams referring to the little love god Cupid The publisher Thomas Thorpe entered the book in the Stationers Register on 20 May 1609 5 Tho Thorpe Entred for his copie under the handes of master Wilson and master Lownes Wardenes a booke called Shakespeares sonnettes vjd Whether Thorpe used an authorised manuscript from Shakespeare or an unauthorised copy is unknown George Eld printed the quarto and the run was divided between the booksellers William Aspley and John Wright citation needed Dedication edit nbsp Dedication page from The Sonnets Shakespeare s Sonnets include a dedication to Mr W H TO THE ONLIE BEGETTER OF THESE INSUING SONNETS Mr W H ALL HAPPINESSE AND THAT ETERNITIE PROMISED BY OUR EVER LIVING POET WISHETH THE WELL WISHING ADVENTURER IN SETTING FORTH T T The upper case letters and the stops that follow each word of the dedication were probably intended to resemble an ancient Roman lapidary inscription or monumental brass perhaps accentuating the declaration in Sonnet 55 that the work would confer immortality to the subjects of the work 6 Not marble nor the gilded monuments Of princes shall outlive this pow rful rhyme The initials T T are taken to refer to the publisher Thomas Thorpe Thorpe usually signed prefatory matter only if the author was out of the country or dead which suggests that Shakespeare was not in London during the last stage of printing 7 However Thorpe s entire corpus of such consists of only four dedications and three prefaces 8 It has been suggested that Thorpe signing the dedication rather than the author might indicate that Thorpe published the work without obtaining Shakespeare s permission 9 Though Thorpe s taking on the dedication may be explained by the great demands of business and travel that Shakespeare was facing at this time which may have caused him to deal with the printing production in haste before rushing out of town 10 After all May 1609 was an extraordinary time That month saw a serious outbreak of the plague which shut down the theatres and also caused many to flee London Plus Shakespeare s theatre company was on tour from Ipswich to Oxford In addition Shakespeare had been away from Stratford and in the same month May was being called on to tend to family and business there 11 and deal with the litigation of a lawsuit in Warwickshire that involved a substantial amount of money 12 Mr W H the dedicatee edit The identity of Mr W H the only begetter of Shakespeare s Sonnets is not known for certain His identity has been the subject of a great amount of speculation That he was the author s patron that he was both patron and the faire youth who is addressed in the sonnets that the faire youth is based on Mr W H in some sonnets but not others and a number of other ideas 13 2 51 55 63 68 14 nbsp William Herbert 3rd Earl of Pembroke nbsp Henry Wriothesley 3rd Earl of Southampton William Herbert the Earl of Pembroke is seen as perhaps the most likely identity of Mr W H and the young man He was the dedicatee of the First Folio Thorpe would have been unlikely to have addressed a lord as Mr 15 but there may be an explanation perhaps that form of address came from the author who wanted to refer to Herbert at an earlier time when Herbert was a younger man 16 There is a later dedication to Herbert in another quarto of verse Ben Jonson s Epigrammes 1616 in which the text of Jonson s dedication begins MY LORD While you cannot change your merit I dare not change your title Jonson s emphasis on Pembroke s title and his comment seem to be chiding someone else who had the audacity to use the wrong title as perhaps is the case in Shakespeare s dedication 2 60 Henry Wriothesley the Earl of Southampton with initials reversed has received a great deal of consideration as a likely possibility He was the dedicatee of Shakespeare s poems Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece Southampton was also known for his good looks citation needed Other suggestions include A simple printing error for Shakespeare s initials W S or W Sh This was suggested by Bertrand Russell Jonathan Bate and Donald W Foster 17 18 William Hall a printer who had worked with Thorpe 19 9 It is noted that ALL following MR W H spells MR W HALL Using his initials W H Hall had edited a collection of the poems of Robert Southwell that was printed by George Eld the printer of the 1609 Sonnets 20 Sir William Harvey Southampton s stepfather 15 21 William Haughton a contemporary dramatist 22 23 William Hart Shakespeare s nephew and male heir 24 Who He It has been argued that the dedication is deliberately ambiguous possibly standing for Who He a conceit also used in a contemporary pamphlet It might have been created by Thorpe to encourage speculation and discussion and hence sales 25 Willie Hughes The 18th century scholar Thomas Tyrwhitt proposed William Hughes based on puns on the name in the sonnets notably Sonnet 20 This idea is expressed in Oscar Wilde s short story The Portrait of Mr W H and that the sonnets were written to a young actor who played female roles in Shakespeare s plays 26 Form and structure of the sonnets edit nbsp Sonnet 30 as a wall poem in Leiden The sonnets are almost all constructed using three quatrains four line stanzas followed by a final couplet The sonnets are composed in iambic pentameter the metre used in Shakespeare s plays The rhyme scheme is ABAB CDCD EFEF GG Sonnets using this scheme are known as Shakespearean sonnets or English sonnets or Elizabethan sonnets Often at the end of the third quatrain occurs the volta turn where the mood of the poem shifts and the poet expresses a turn of thought 27 The exceptions are sonnets 99 126 and 145 Number 99 has fifteen lines Number 126 consists of six couplets and two blank lines marked with italic brackets 145 is in iambic tetrameters not pentameters In one other variation on the standard structure found for example in sonnet 29 the rhyme scheme is changed by repeating the second B rhyme of quatrain one as the second F rhyme of quatrain three Apart from rhyme and considering only the arrangement of ideas and the placement of the volta a number of sonnets maintain the two part organization of the Italian sonnet In that case the term octave and sestet are commonly used to refer to the sonnet s first eight lines followed by the remaining six lines There are other line groupings as well as Shakespeare finds inventive ways with the content of the fourteen line poems 28 Characters of the sonnets edit When analysed as characters the subjects of the sonnets are usually referred to as the Fair Youth the Rival Poet and the Dark Lady The speaker expresses admiration for the Fair Youth s beauty and if reading the sonnets in chronological order as published later has an affair with the Dark Lady then so does the Fair Youth Current linguistic analysis and historical evidence suggests however that the sonnets to the Dark Lady were composed first around 1591 95 the procreation sonnets next and the later sonnets to the Fair Youth last 1597 1603 It is not known whether the poems and their characters are fiction or autobiographical scholars who find the sonnets to be autobiographical have attempted to identify the characters with historical individuals 29 Fair Youth edit The Fair Youth is the unnamed young man addressed by the devoted poet in the greatest sequence of the sonnets 1 126 The young man is handsome self centred universally admired and much sought after The sequence begins with the poet urging the young man to marry and father children sonnets 1 17 It continues with the friendship developing with the poet s loving admiration which at times is homoerotic in nature Then comes a set of betrayals by the young man as he is seduced by the Dark Lady and they maintain a liaison sonnets 133 134 amp 144 all of which the poet struggles to abide It concludes with the poet s own act of betrayal resulting in his independence from the fair youth sonnet 152 30 2 93 31 The identity of the Fair Youth has been the subject of speculation among scholars One popular theory is that he was Henry Wriothesley the 3rd Earl of Southampton this is based in part on the idea that his physical features age and personality might fairly match the young man in the sonnets 32 He was both an admirer and patron of Shakespeare and was considered one of the most prominent nobles of the period 33 It is also noted that Shakespeare s 1593 poem Venus and Adonis is dedicated to Southampton and in that poem a young man Adonis is encouraged by the goddess of love Venus to beget a child which is a theme in the sonnets Here are the verses from Venus and Adonis 34 Torches are made to light jewels to wear Dainties to taste fresh beauty for the use Herbs for their smell and sappy plants to bear Things growing to themselves are growth s abuse Seeds spring from seeds and beauty breedeth beauty Thou wast begot to get it is thy duty Upon the earth s increase why shouldst thou feed Unless the earth with thy increase be fed By law of nature thou art bound to breed That thine may live when thou thyself art dead And so in spite of death thou dost survive In that thy likeness still is left alive Venus and Adonis 35 A problem with identifying the fair youth with Southampton is that the most certainly datable events referred to in the Sonnets are the fall of Essex and then the gunpowder plotters executions in 1606 which puts Southampton at the age of 33 and then 39 when the sonnets were published when he would be past the age when he would be referred to as a lovely boy or fair youth 2 52 Authors such as Thomas Tyrwhitt 36 and Oscar Wilde proposed that the Fair Youth was William Hughes a seductive young actor who played female roles in Shakespeare s plays Particularly Wilde claimed that he was the Mr W H 37 referred to in the dedication attached to the manuscript of the Sonnets 32 The Dark Lady edit Main article Dark Lady Shakespeare The Dark Lady sequence sonnets 127 152 is the most defiant of the sonnet tradition The sequence distinguishes itself from the Fair Youth sequence with its overt sexuality Sonnet 151 38 The Dark Lady is so called because she has black hair and dun skin The Dark Lady suddenly appears Sonnet 127 and she and the speaker of the sonnets the poet are in a sexual relationship She is not aristocratic young beautiful intelligent or chaste Her complexion is muddy her breath reeks and she is ungainly when she walks The relationship strongly parallels Touchstone s pursuit of Audrey in As You Like It 39 The Dark Lady presents an adequate receptor for male desire She is celebrated in cocky terms that would be offensive to her not that she would be able to read or understand what is said Soon the speaker rebukes her for enslaving his fair friend sonnet 133 He can t abide the triangular relationship and it ends with him rejecting her 2 31 As with the Fair Youth there have been many attempts to identify her with a real historical individual Lucy Negro 40 Mary Fitton Emilia Lanier Elizabeth Wriothesley and others have been suggested The Rival Poet edit Main article Rival Poet The Rival Poet s identity remains a mystery If Shakespeare s patron and friend was Pembroke Shakespeare was not the only poet who praised his beauty Francis Davison did in a sonnet that is the preface to Davison s quarto A Poetical Rhapsody 1608 which was published just before Shakespeare s Sonnets 41 John Davies of Hereford Samuel Daniel George Chapman Christopher Marlowe and Ben Jonson are also candidates that find support among clues in the sonnets 42 43 It may be that the Rival Poet is a composite of several poets through which Shakespeare explores his sense of being threatened by competing poets 44 The speaker sees the Rival Poet as competition for fame and patronage The sonnets most commonly identified as the Rival Poet group exist within the Fair Youth sequence in sonnets 78 86 44 A Lover s Complaint edit A Lover s Complaint is part two of the quarto published in 1609 It is not written in the sonnet form but is composed of 47 seven line stanzas written in rhyme royal It is an example of a normal feature of the two part poetic form in which the first part expresses the male point of view and the second part contrasts or complements the first part with the female s point of view The first part of the quarto the 154 sonnets considers frustrated male desire and the second part A Lover s Complaint expresses the misery of a woman victimized by male desire The earliest Elizabethan example of this two part structure is Samuel Daniel s Delia with the Complaint of Rosamund 1592 a sonnet sequence that tells the story of a woman being threatened by a man of higher rank followed by the woman s complaint This was imitated by other poets including Shakespeare with his Rape of Lucrece the last lines of which contain Lucrece s complaint Other examples are found in the works of Michael Drayton Thomas Lodge Richard Barnfield and others 45 The young man of the sonnets and the young man of A Lover s Complaint provide a thematic link between the two parts In each part the young man is handsome wealthy and promiscuous unreliable and admired by all 2 89 Like the sonnets A Lover s Complaint also has a possessive form in its title which is followed by its own assertion of the author s name This time the possessive word Lover s refers to a woman who becomes the primary speaker of the work 2 85 Story of A Lover s Complaint edit A Lover s Complaint begins with a young woman weeping at the edge of a river into which she throws torn up letters rings and other tokens of love An old man nearby approaches her and asks the reason for her sorrow She responds by telling him of a former lover who pursued seduced and finally abandoned her She recounts in detail the speech her lover gave to her which seduced her She concludes her story by conceding that she would fall for the young man s false charms again Dates edit1597 Shakespeare s tragedy Romeo and Juliet is published The spoken prologue to the play and the prologue to Act II are both written in sonnet form and the first meeting of the star crossed lovers is written as a sonnet woven into the dialogue 46 1598 Love s Labour s Lost is published as a quarto the play s title page suggests it is a revision of an earlier version The comedy features the King of Navarre and his lords who express their love in sonnet form for the Queen of France and her ladies This play is believed to have been performed at the Inns of Court for Queen Elizabeth I in the mid 1590s 47 1598 Francis Meres published his quarto Palladis Tamia which was entered on the Stationers Register on 7 September that year In it he mentions that sonnets by Shakespeare were being circulated privately 48 As the soule of Euphorbus was thought to live in Pythagoras so the sweete wittie soule of Ouid liues in mellifluous amp hony tongued Shakespeare witnes his Venus and Adonis his Lucrece his sugred Sonnets among his private friends amp c 49 1599 William Jaggard published an octavo volume called The Passionate Pilgrime By W Shakespeare It is an anthology of 20 poems This small publication contained some spurious content falsely ascribed to Shakespeare it also contained four sonnets that can be said to be by Shakespeare Two of the four appear to be early versions of sonnets that were later published in the 1609 quarto numbers 138 and 144 the other two were sonnets lifted from Shakespeare s play Love s Labour s Lost Sonnets 138 and 144 are anything but the sweet sonnets hinted at by Francis Meres comment They are instead harshly frank ironic and recriminative regarding the relationship of the speaker and the Dark Lady The two sonnets that were taken from Love s Labour s Lost were in the context of the play written by comic characters who were intended to be seen as amateur sonneteers Jaggard s piracy sold well a second printing was quickly ordered but it including poetry falsely ascribed to Shakespeare must have been a disappointment to Shakespeare s readers 50 January 1600 an entry in the Stationers Register is for a work that will include certain other sonnets by W S This may suggest that Shakespeare planned to respond right away and correct the impression left by Jaggard s book with Shakespeare s own publication or the entry may have been merely a staying entry not regarding an upcoming publication but intended to prevent Jaggard from publishing any more sonnets by Shakespeare 2 1 5 14 August 1600 Shakespeare s play The Chronicle History of Henry the fifth is entered into the Register of the Stationers Company The spoken epilogue is written in the form of a sonnet 51 20 May 1609 The entry in the Stationers Register announces Shakespeare s Sonnets The contents include a collection of 154 sonnets followed by the poem A Lover s Complaint This publication was greeted with near silence in the documentary record especially when compared with the lively reception that followed the publication of Venus and Adonis 1612 Jaggard issues an expanded edition of his piratical anthology The Passionate Pilgrim which had been published in 1599 Thomas Heywood protests this piracy in his Apology for Actors 1612 writing that Shakespeare was much offended with Jaggard for making so bold with his name Jaggard withdraws the attribution to Shakespeare from unsold copies of the 1612 edition 1640 The publisher John Benson publishes an anthology of poems some are by Shakespeare and about 30 are not but all are ascribed to Shakespeare It is titled Poems Written by Wil Shakespeare Gent Benson is even more wildly piratical than Jaggard Benson draws on The Passionate Pilgrim and other sources including Shakespeare s Sonnets 1609 which he rewrites and rearranges Benson imperfectly rewrites the sonnets to make them appear to be addressing a woman the pronoun he is often replaced by she This edition is unfortunately influential and resulted in confusing and confounding various critical understanding and response for more than a century Deliberate misgendering is also a feature of 17th century commonplace books which include Sonnet 2 the most popular sonnet to appear in such collections In Margaret Bellasys commonplace book the poem appears with the non gendered title Spes Altera In IA s commonplace book the gender of the addressee is explicitly changed with the title To one that would die a mayd 52 1780 Edmond Malone in his two volume supplement to the 1778 Johnson Stevens edition of the plays finally instates the 1609 quarto edition of Shakespeare s Sonnets as the sole authoritative text 53 1986 The New Penguin Shakespeare s edition of the sonnets restores A Lover s Complaint as an integral part of Shakespeare s Sonnets 2 44 54 Criticism editIn his plays Shakespeare himself seemed to be a satiric critic of sonnets the allusions to them are often scornful Then he went on to create one of the longest sonnet sequences of his era a sequence that took some sharp turns away from the tradition 2 44 He may have been inspired out of literary ambition and a desire to carve new paths apart from the well worn tradition Or he may have been inspired by biographical elements in his life It is thought that the biographical aspects have been over explored and over speculated on especially in the face of a paucity of evidence 2 45 The critical focus has turned instead through New Criticism and by scholars such as Stephen Booth 55 and Helen Vendler 56 to the text itself which is studied and appreciated linguistically as a highly complex structure of language and ideas 57 Besides the biographic and the linguistic approaches another way of considering Shakespeare s sonnets is in the context of the culture and literature that surrounds them 58 Gerald Hammond in his book The Reader and the Young Man Sonnets suggests that the non expert reader who is thoughtful and engaged does not need that much help in understanding the sonnets though he states the reader may often feel mystified when trying to decide for example if a word or passage has a concrete meaning or an abstract meaning laying that kind of perplexity in the reader s path for the reader to deal with is an essential part of reading the sonnets the reader doesn t always benefit from having knots untangled and double meanings simplified by the experts according to Hammond 59 During the eighteenth century The Sonnets reputation in England was relatively low in 1805 The Critical Review credited John Milton with the perfection of the English sonnet Towards the end of the nineteenth century Shakespeare and Milton seemed to be on an equal footing 60 but critics burdened by an over emphasis on biographical explorations continued to contend with each other for decades on this point 2 78 79 Editions editLike all Shakespeare s works Shakespeare s Sonnets have been reprinted many times Prominent editions include First edition and facsimile Shakespeare William 1609 Shake speares Sonnets Never Before Imprinted London Thomas Thorpe Lee Sidney ed 1905 Shakespeares Sonnets Being a reproduction in facsimile of the first edition Oxford Clarendon Press OCLC 458829162 Variorum editions Alden Raymond Macdonald ed 1916 The Sonnets of Shakespeare Boston Houghton Mifflin Harcourt OCLC 234756 Rollins Hyder Edward ed 1944 A New Variorum Edition of Shakespeare The Sonnets 2 Volumes Philadelphia J B Lippincott amp Co OCLC 6028485 Volume I and Volume II at the Internet Archive Modern critical editions Atkins Carl D ed 2007 Shakespeare s Sonnets With Three Hundred Years of Commentary Madison Fairleigh Dickinson University Press ISBN 978 0 8386 4163 7 OCLC 86090499 Booth Stephen ed 2000 1st ed 1977 Shakespeare s Sonnets Rev ed New Haven Yale Nota Bene ISBN 0 300 01959 9 OCLC 2968040 Burrow Colin ed 2002 The Complete Sonnets and Poems The Oxford Shakespeare Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0192819338 OCLC 48532938 Duncan Jones Katherine ed 2010 1st ed 1997 Shakespeare s Sonnets Arden Shakespeare third series Rev ed London Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1 4080 1797 5 OCLC 755065951 1st edition at the Internet Archive Evans G Blakemore ed 1996 The Sonnets The New Cambridge Shakespeare Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521294034 OCLC 32272082 Kerrigan John ed 1995 1st ed 1986 The Sonnets and A Lover s Complaint New Penguin Shakespeare Rev ed Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 070732 8 OCLC 15018446 Mowat Barbara A Werstine Paul eds 2006 Shakespeare s Sonnets amp Poems Folger Shakespeare Library New York Washington Square Press ISBN 978 0743273282 OCLC 64594469 Orgel Stephen ed 2001 The Sonnets The Pelican Shakespeare Rev ed New York Penguin Books ISBN 978 0140714531 OCLC 46683809 Vendler Helen ed 1997 The Art of Shakespeare s Sonnets Cambridge Massachusetts The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 63712 7 OCLC 36806589 Zinman Ira ed 2009 Shakespeare s Sonnets and the Bible foreword by HRH Charles Prince of Wales Bloomington World Wisdom ISBN 978 1933316758Sonnets that occur in the plays editThere are sonnets written by Shakespeare that occur in his plays and these include his earliest sonnets 61 They differ from the 154 sonnets published in the 1609 because they may lack the deep introspection for example and they are written to serve the needs of a performance exposition or narrative 62 Early comedies edit In Shakespeare s early comedies the sonnets and sonnet making of his characters are often objects of satire In Two Gentlemen of Verona sonnet writing is portrayed cynically as a seduction technique 63 In Love s Labour s Lost sonnets are portrayed as evidence that love can render men weak and foolish 64 In Much Ado About Nothing Beatrice and Benedick each write a sonnet which serves as proof that they have fallen in love 65 In All s Well that Ends Well a partial sonnet is read and Bertram comments He shall be whipp d through the army with this rhyme in s forehead 66 In Henry V the Dauphin suggests he will compose a sonnet to his horse 67 The sonnets that Shakespeare satirizes in his plays are sonnets written in the tradition of Petrarch and Sidney whereas Shakespeare s sonnets published in the quarto of 1609 take a radical turn away from that older style and have none of the lovelorn qualities that are mocked in the plays The sonnets published in 1609 seem to be rebelling against the tradition 2 44 45 In the play Love s Labour s Lost the King and his three lords have all vowed to live like monks to study to give up worldly things and to see no women All of them break the last part of the vow by falling in love The lord Longaville expresses his love in a sonnet Did not the heavenly rhetoric of thine eye 68 and the lord Berowne does too a hexameter sonnet If love make me forsworn how shall I swear to love a form Sidney uses in six of the sonnets in Astrophel and Stella Numbers 1 6 8 76 and 102 69 70 These sonnets contain comic imperfections including awkward phrasing and problems with the meter After Berowne is caught breaking his vow and exposed by the sonnet he composed he passionately renounces speech that is affected and vows to prefer plain country speech Ironically when proclaiming this he demonstrates that he can t seem to avoid rich courtly language and his speech happens to fall into the meter and rhyme of a sonnet O never will I trust to speeches penned 71 72 Henry V edit The epilogue at the end of the play Henry V is written in the form of a sonnet Thus far with rough and all unable pen 73 Formal epilogues were established as a theatrical tradition and occur in 13 of Shakespeare s plays In Henry V the character of Chorus who has addressed the audience a few times during the play speaks the wide ranging epilogue sonnet It begins by allowing that the play may not have presented the story in its full glory It points out that the next king would be Henry VI who was an infant when he succeeded Henry V and who lost France and made his England bleed Which oft our stage hath shown It refers to the three parts of Henry VI and to Richard III connecting the Lancastrian and the Yorkist cycles 74 Romeo and Juliet edit Three sonnets are found in Romeo and Juliet The prologue to the play Two households both alike in dignity the prologue to the second act Now old desire doth in his death bed lie and set in the form of dialogue at the moment when Romeo and Juliet meet ROMEO If I profane with my unworthiest hand This holy shrine the gentle fine is this My lips two blushing pilgrims ready stand To smooth that rough touch with a tender kiss JULIET Good pilgrim you do wrong your hand too much Which mannerly devotion shows in this For saints have hands that pilgrims hands do touch And palm to palm is holy palmers kiss ROMEO Have not saints lips and holy palmers too JULIET Ay pilgrim lips that they must use in prayer ROMEO O then dear saint let lips do what hands do They pray grant thou lest faith turn to despair JULIET Saints do not move though grant for prayers sake ROMEO Then move not while my prayer s effect I take 75 Much Ado About Nothing edit Two sonnets are mentioned in Much Ado About Nothing sonnets by Beatrice and Benedick and though not committed to paper they were in Shakespeare s mind The first one revealed by Claudio is described as A halting sonnet of his own pure brain Fashion d to Beatrice The second found by Hero was Writ in my cousin s hand stolen from her pocket Containing her affection unto Benedick 76 Edward III edit The play Edward III has recently become accepted as part of Shakespeare s canon of plays It was considered an anonymous work and that is how it was first published but in the late 1990s it began to be included in publications of the complete works as co authored by Shakespeare 77 Scholars who have supported this attribution include Jonathan Bate Edward Capell Eliot Slater 78 Eric Sams 79 Giorgio Melchiori 80 Brian Vickers and others The play printed in 1596 contains language and themes that also appear in Shakespeare s sonnets including the line Lilies that fester smell far worse than weeds which occurs in sonnet 94 and the phrase scarlet ornaments which occurs in sonnet 142 81 The scene of the play that contains those quotations is a comic scene that features a poet attempting to compose a love poem at the behest of his king Edward III 82 At the time Edward III was published Shakespeare s sonnets were known by some but they had not yet been published 79 The king Edward III has fallen in love with the Countess of Salisbury and he tells Lodowick his secretary to fetch ink and paper Edward wants Lodowick s help in composing a poem that will sing the praises of the countess Lodowick has a question LODOWICK Write I to a woman KING EDWARD What beauty else could triumph over me Or who but women do our love lays greet What thinkest thou I did bid thee praise a horse The king then expresses and dictates his passion in exuberant poetry and asks Lodowick to read back to him what he has been able to write down Lodowick reads LODOWICK More fair and chaste KING EDWARD I did not bid thee talk of chastity When the countess enters the poetry writing scene is interrupted without Lodowick having accomplished much poetry only two lines More fair and chaste than is the queen of shades More bold in constance Than Judith was 81 See also editGeorge Bernard Shaw s The Dark Lady of the Sonnets Sonnet 1 to Sonnet 154 full list References edit First edition of Shakespeare s Sonnets 1609 The British Library Retrieved 18 February 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Shakespeare William 2010 Duncan Jones Katherine ed Shakespeare s Sonnets Bloomsbury Arden ISBN 978 1408017975 Shakespeare William Callaghan Dympna editor Shakespeare s Sonnets John Wiley amp Sons 2008 p x ISBN 978 0470777510 Stanley Wells and Michael Dobson eds The Oxford Companion to Shakespeare Oxford University Press 2001 p 439 Dautch Aviva 30 March 2017 Shakespeare sexuality and the Sonnets British Library Retrieved 20 May 2019 Burrow 2002 380 Burrow Colin 2002 Complete Sonnets and Poems Oxford University Press p 99 ISBN 0 19 818431 X Foster 1984 43 a b Vickers Brian 2007 Shakespeare A lover s complaint and John Davies of Hereford Cambridge University Press p 8 ISBN 978 0 521 85912 7 Honigmann E A J There is a World Elsewhere William Shakespeare Businessman Habitcht W editor Images of Shakespeare 1988 ISBN 978 0874133295 p 45 Chambers The Elizabethan Stage vol 2 p 214 1923 ISBN 978 0199567478 Schoenbaum Samuel William Shakespeare a Documentary Life Oxford 1975 ISBN 978 0195051612 p 183 Rollins H E A New Variorum Edition of Shakespeare The Sonnets Lippincott amp Co 1944 pp 174 185 Schoenbaum S S Shakespeare s Lives Oxford University Press 1991 p 566 ISBN 978 0198186182 a b Schoenbaum S 1977 William Shakespeare a compact documentary life 1st ed New York Oxford University Press pp 270 271 ISBN 0 19 502211 4 OL 21295405M Burrow Colin William Shakespeare Complete Sonnets and Poems Oxford University Press 2002 p 98 Bate Jonathan The Genius of Shakespeare 1998 61 62 Foster Donald W January 1987 Master W H R I P PMLA 102 1 42 49 Lee Sidney Sir A Life of William Shakespeare 1898 Cambridge University Press 2012 ISBN 978 1108048194 Collins John Churton Ephemera Critica Westminster Constable and Co 1902 p 216 Appleby John C 2008 Hervey William Baron Hervey of Kidbrooke and Baron Hervey of Ross d 1642 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford England Oxford University Press Berryman John 2001 Haffenden John ed Berryman s Shakespeare essays letters and other writings London Tauris Parke p xxxvi ISBN 978 1 86064 643 0 Neil Samuel 27 April 1867 Moffat N B Shakespeare s birthday 1867 Athenaeum Vol 1867 no 2061 London p 552 hdl 2027 uc1 l0063569123 via HathiTrust Neil Samuel 1863 Shakespere a critical biography London Houlston and Wright pp 105 106 OCLC 77866350 Colin Burrow ed The Complete Sonnets and Poems Oxford UP 2002 pp 98 102 103 Hyder Edward Rollins The Sonnets New Variorum Shakespeare vol 25 II Lippincott 1944 pp 181 184 Glossary of Poetic Terms Poetry Foundation Retrieved 12 February 2018 Vendler Helen The Art of Shakespeare s Sonnets Harvard University Press 1999 ISBN 978 0674637122 p 50 The International Literary Quarterly Interlitq org Retrieved 2 April 2014 Hammond The Reader and the Young Man Sonnets Barnes amp Noble 1981 p 2 ISBN 978 1 349 05443 5 a b Hubler Edward Shakespeare s Songs and Poems McGraw HIll 1964 p xl a b Sarker Sunil 2006 Shakespeare s Sonnets New Delhi Atlantic Publishers amp Distributors pp 87 89 ISBN 8171567258 Rollett John 2015 William Stanley as Shakespeare Evidence of Authorship by the Sixth Earl of Derby Jefferson NC McFarland amp Company Inc Publishers p 108 ISBN 978 0786496600 Feldman Sabrina 2011 The Apocryphal William Shakespeare Book One of A Third Way Shakespeare Authorship Scenario Indianapolis IN Dog Ear Publishing p 110 ISBN 978 1457507212 Duncan Jones Katherine Woudhuysen H R eds Shakespeare William Shakespeare s Poems Third Series Arden Shakespeare 28 September 2007 lines 163 174 ISBN 978 1903436875 Shakespeare William Bell Robert 1855 The Poems of William Shakespeare London John W Parker and Son West Strand p 163 Wilde Oscar 2018 Lord Arthur Savile s Crime The Portrait of Mr W H and other Stories Main Germany Outlook pp 82 83 87 ISBN 978 3732658817 Matz Robert 2008 The World of Shakespeare s Sonnets An Introduction p 111 ISBN 978 0 7864 3219 6 Shakespeare William As You Like It Act 3 scene 3 lines 1 57 Furness Hannah 8 January 2013 Has Shakespeare s dark lady finally been revealed Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 2 April 2014 Brown Henry Shakespeare s Patrons and other essays Forgotten Books 19 April 2018 ISBN 978 1331296171 Halliday F E A Shakespeare Companion 1564 1964 Baltimore Penguin 1964 pp 52 127 141 ISBN 978 0715603093 Wells Stanley Dobson Michael Sharpe Will Sullivan Erin editors The Oxford Companion to Shakespeare Oxford 2015 ISBN 978 0191058158 a b MacD P Jackson 1 April 2005 Francis Meres and the Cultural Contexts of Shakespeare s Rival Poet Sonnets The Review of English Studies 56 224 Res oxfordjournals org 224 246 doi 10 1093 res hgi050 Roche Thomas P Petrarch and the English Sonnet Sequences AMS Press New York 1989 ISBN 978 0404622886 p 343 Shakespeare William Gibbons Brian ed 1980 Romeo and Juliet The Arden Shakespeare second series London Thomson Learning ISBN 978 1903436417 Woudhuysen H R ed Love s Labours Lost London Arden Shakespeare 1998 61 Wells Stanley and Gary Taylor with John Jowett and William Montgomery 1987 1997 William Shakespeare A Textual Companion Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 812914 9 p 90 Meres Francis Paladis Tamia Wit s Treasury Being the Second Part of Wits Commonwealth 1598 Duncan Jones Katherine Woudhuysen H R eds 2007 Shakespeare s Poems The Arden Shakespeare Third Series ISBN 978 1903436868 Shakespeare William 2008 Gary Taylor ed Henry V Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199536511 Dautch Aviva Shakespeare sexuality and the Sonnets The British Library Retrieved 13 September 2019 Schoenfeldt Michael Carl Schoenfeldt Michael A Companion to Shakespeare s Sonnets John Wiley amp Sons 2010 p 150 ISBN 978 1444332063 Shakespeare William Kerrigan John editor The Sonnets and A Lover s Complaint The New Penguin Shakespeare Harmondsworth 1986 ISBN 978 0140436846 Booth Stephen Essay on Shakespeare s Sonnets Yale University Press 1969 Vendler Helen The Art of Shakespeare s Sonnets Harvard University Press 1999 ISBN 978 0674637122 Hammond The Reader and the Young Man Sonnets Barnes amp Noble 1981 p 1 ISBN 978 1 349 05443 5 Sloan Thomas O editor Waddington Raymond B editor Shakespeare s Sonnet 15 and the Art of Memory The Rhetoric of Renaissance Poetry from Wyatt to Milton University of California Press 1974 pp 96 122 ISBN 978 0520025011 Hammond The Reader and the Young Man Sonnets Barnes amp Noble 1981 p 7 ISBN 978 1 349 05443 5 Sanderlin George June 1939 The Repute of Shakespeare s Sonnets in the Early Nineteenth Century Modern Language Notes 54 6 The Johns Hopkins University Press 462 466 doi 10 2307 2910858 JSTOR 2910858 Emerson Oliver Farrar Shakespeare s Sonneteering Studies in Philology Vol 20 No 2 University of North Carolina Press 1923 pp 111 136 Vendler Helen The Art of Shakespeare s Sonnets Harvard University Press 1999 ISBN 978 0674637122 pp 5 9 Shakespeare William Two Gentlemen of Verona Act 3 sc 2 line 68 Shakespeare William Love s Labours Lost Act 4 sc 3 Shakespeare William Much Ado About Nothing Act 5 sc 4 line 86 Shakespeare William All s Well that Ends Well Act 4 scene 3 line 203 225 Shakespeare William Henry V Act 3 scene 7 line 42 Shakespeare William Love s Labour s Lost IV iii 56 59 Emerson Oliver Farrar Shakespeare s Sonneteering Studies in Philology Vol 20 No 2 University of North Carolina Press 1923 p 121 124 Shakespeare William Love s Labour s Lost IV ii 104 117 Shakespeare William Love s Labour s Lost V ii 405 419 Sarker Sunil Kumar Shakespeare s Sonnets Atlantic Publishers 1998 ISBN 978 8171567256 pp 54 56 Law Robert Adger The Choruses in Henry the Fifth The University of Texas Studies in English Vol 35 1956 University of Texas Press p 11 McNeir Waldo Shakespeare s Epilogues CEA Critic Vol 47 No 1 2 The Johns Hopkins University Press 1984 pp 7 16 Romeo and Juliet I v 91 104 Emerson Oliver Farrar Shakespeare s Sonneteering Studies in Philology Vol 20 No 2 University of North Carolina Press 1923 p 121 Dunton Downer Leslie Riding Alan Essential Shakespeare Handbook Publisher DK 2004 P 97 ISBN 978 0789493330 Stater Elliot The Problem of the Reign of King Edward III A Statistical Approach Cambridge University Press 1988 pp 7 9 a b Sams Eric Shakespeare s Edward III An Early Play Restored to the Canon Yale UP 1996 ISBN 978 0300066265 Melchiori Giorgio ed The New Cambridge Shakespeare King Edward III 1998 p 2 a b Sams Eric Shakespeare s Edward III An Early Play Restored to the Canon Yale UP 1996 ISBN 978 0300066265 Act 2 scene 1 Edward III Act 2 scene 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Shakespeare s Sonnets nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Shakespeare s Sonnets nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to The Sonnets Full collections edit Complete Sonnets at Standard Ebooks The Sonnets at Project Gutenberg Complete sonnets of William Shakespeare Archived 14 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine Listed by number and first line nbsp Shakespeare s Sonnets public domain audiobook at LibriVox Study resources edit Self referential concordance to The Sonnets The Sonnets Compare two sonnets side by side see all of them together on one page or view a range of sonnets on Open Source Shakespeare Explore the Sonnets yourself with Gramener s tool helps readers explore Shakespeare s Sonnets Commentaries edit The Sonnets at About com Discussion of the identification of Emily Lanier as the Dark Lady Archived 8 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine William Shakespeare Sonnets facts Quick reference facts about The Sonnets Bowley Roger 14 Shakespeare s Sonnets Numberphile Brady Haran Archived from the original on 1 February 2016 Retrieved 2 April 2013 Banerjee Subhrasleta William Shakespeare s Sonnets Relooking at the Characters Yearly Shakespeare ISSN 0976 9536 17 April 2019 177 181 Roy Pinaki Shakespeare and Celan A very brief comparative Study Yearly Shakespeare ISSN 0976 9536 18 2020 118 24 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shakespeare 27s sonnets amp oldid 1220907543, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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