THE SONNETS by
William Shakespeare - FULL AudioBook |
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Shakespeare's sonnets are a collection of
154 sonnets, dealing with themes such as the passage of time, love, beauty and mortality, first published in a 1609 quarto entitled SHAKE-SPEARES SONNETS.
Never before imprinted. (although sonnets 138 and
144 had previously been published in the 1599 miscellany
The Passionate Pilgrim). The quarto ends with "
A Lover's Complaint", a narrative poem of 47 seven-line stanzas written in rhyme royal.
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More on
The Sonnets by William Shakespeare:
The first 17 poems, traditionally called the procreation sonnets, are addressed to a young man urging him to marry and have children in order to immortalize his beauty by passing it to the next generation. Other sonnets express the speaker's love for a 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 sonnets are almost all constructed from three quatrains, which are four-line stanzas, and a final couplet composed in iambic pentameter.[19] This is also the meter used extensively in
Shakespeare's plays.
The rhyme scheme is abab cdcd efef gg. Sonnets using this scheme are known as
Shakespearean sonnets.
Often, the beginning of the third quatrain marks the volta ("turn"), or the line in which the mood of the poem shifts, and the poet expresses a revelation or epiphany.
There are a few exceptions: 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. There is one other variation on the standard structure, found for example in sonnet 29. The normal rhyme scheme is changed by repeating the b of quatrain one in quatrain three, where the f should be.
Shakespeare's sonnets can be seen as a prototype, or even the beginning, of a new kind of "modern" love poetry. During the eighteenth century, the sonnets' reputation in
England was relatively low; as late as 1805,
The Critical Review could still credit
John Milton with the perfection of the
English sonnet. As part of the renewed interest in
Shakespeare's original work that accompanied
Romanticism, the sonnets rose steadily in reputation during the nineteenth century.
The sonnets have great cross-cultural importance and influence. There is no major written language into which the sonnets have not been translated. (Summary adapted by
Wikipedia.org - Attribution: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index
.php?title=
Shakespeare%27s_sonnets&action;=history)
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Chapter listing and length:
01 Sonnets 1-10
00:08:59
02 Sonnets 11-20
00:09:06
03 Sonnets 21-30
00:08:52
04 Sonnets 31-40
00:09:29
05 Sonnets 41-50
00:09:14
06 Sonnets 51-60
00:08:47
07 Sonnets 61-70
00:08:46
08 Sonnets 71-80
00:08:53
09 Sonnets 81-90
00:09:20
10 Sonnets 91-100
00:09:35
11 Sonnets 101-110
00:09:08
12 Sonnets 111-120
00:09:07
13 Sonnets 121-130
00:09:
10
14 Sonnets 131-140
00:09:14
15 Sonnets 141-154
00:12:27
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- published: 22 Jul 2014
- views: 12040