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  2. Sonnet 2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonnet_2

    Sonnet 2 begins with a military siege metaphor, something that occurs often in sonnets and poetry — from Virgil (‘he ploughs the brow with furrows’) and Ovid (‘furrows which may plough your body will come already’) to Shakespeare's contemporary, Drayton, “The time-plow’d furrows in thy fairest field.” The image is used here as a ...

  3. Shakespeare's sonnets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shakespeare's_sonnets

    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.

  4. Death Be Not Proud - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_Be_Not_Proud

    "Sonnet X", also known by its opening words as "Death Be Not Proud", is a fourteen-line poem, or sonnet, by English poet John Donne (1572–1631), one of the leading figures in the metaphysical poets group of seventeenth-century English literature. Written between February and August 1609, it was first published posthumously in 1633.

  5. Love Is Not All: It Is Not Meat nor Drink - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Love_Is_Not_All:_It_Is_Not...

    Love Is Not All: It Is Not Meat nor Drink is a 1931 poem by Edna St. Vincent Millay, written during the Great Depression. [1]The poem was included in her collection Fatal Interview, a sequence of 52 sonnets, appearing alongside other sonnets such as "I dreamed I moved among the Elysian fields," and "Love me no more, now let the god depart," rejoicing in romantic language and vulnerability. [2]

  6. Sonnet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonnet

    He also introduced variations in the proportions of the sonnet, from the 10 1 ⁄ 2 lines of the curtal sonnet "Pied Beauty" to the amplified 24-line caudate sonnet "That Nature is a Heraclitean Fire". Though they were written in the later Victorian era, the poems remained virtually unknown until they were published in 1918.

  7. Ozymandias - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ozymandias

    Shelley's "Ozymandias" is a sonnet, written in loose iambic pentameter, but with an atypical rhyme scheme, [19] which violates the Italian sonnet rule that there should be no connection in rhyme between the octave and the sestet. Two themes of the "Ozymandias" poems are the inevitable decline of rulers and their hubris. [20]

  8. Sonnet 135 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonnet_135

    Stephen Booth notes "Sonnets 135 and 136 are festivals of verbal ingenuity in which much of the fun derives from the grotesque lengths the speaker goes to for a maximum number and concentration of puns on will." [3] He notes the following meanings used in these two sonnets: [4] (a) what one wishes to have or do

  9. Sonnet 55 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonnet_55

    According to Fontana, Shakespeare intended the second meaning, personifying and assigning gender to time, making the difference between the young man sonnets and the dark lady sonnets all the more obvious. Shakespeare had used the word "slut" nearly a year before he wrote sonnet 55 when he wrote Timon of Athens. In the play, Timon associates ...