英国文学 |
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poetry<-Shakespeare<-chapter 3<-contents<-position |
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The initials T.T. at the bottom evidently refer to Thomas Thorpe, the publisher. But who is Mr. W. H.? If he is "the only begetter of these ensuing sonnets," then he might be the young man. Hence, if there is a biographical basis for the sonnet sequence, we need to find a young, single, rich, handsome, noble young man with the initials W.H. and with some connection (if possible) to William Shakespeare. Depending on when we date the composition of these sonnets about the young man, our candidates for the role will change. There is not time to rehearse all the suggestions, which range from Henry Wriothesley, Third Earl of Southampton, to Willie Hughes, a homosexual ship's cook or boy actor. The initials may be a misprint for Mr. W. S. referring to the author.
The Shakespearean sonnet,
the form of sonnet utilized throughout Shakespeare's sequence, is divided
into four parts. The first three parts are each four lines long, and are
known as quatrains, rhymed abab; the fourth part is called the couplet, and
is rhymed cc. The Shakespearean sonnet is often used to develop a sequence
of metaphors or ideas, one in each quatrain, while the couplet offers either
a summary or a new take on the preceding images or ideas. In Shakespeare's
Sonnet 147, for instance, the speaker's love is compared to a disease. In
the first quatrain, the speaker characterizes the disease; in the second, he
describes the relationship of his love-disease to its "physician," his
reason; in the third, he describes the consequences of his abandonment of
reason; and in the couplet, he explains the source of his mad, diseased
love--his lover's betrayal of his faith:
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