Sonnet 147
978-613-3-56640-8
613356640X
80
2010-11-16
34,00 €
eng
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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. In William Shakespeare's Sonnet 147, the poet describes his love for the addressee of the sonnet as a 'fever'. His reason and lust have been at war, but lust has ignored all advice and now all is lost. The poet is becoming mad with passion for a lady whom he knows is no good for him. He had convinced himself the one he loved was good when the opposite was true. Sonnet 147 falls in the realm of the Dark Lady sonnets (Sonnets 127-154). It falls towards the end of the Dark Lady sequence. These sonnets, unlike the sonnets which refer to the young man, are typically angrier and are usually referring to either the Dark Lady specifically, her relationship with the speaker, or the love triangle between the speaker, the Dark Lady, and her additional lovers. In the second grouping of sonnets in which sonnet 147 falls, the speaker's feelings toward to dark lady change several times. Sonnet 147 is another turning point in which the speaker reverts back to anger towards the Dark Lady.
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