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Papers On Sonnets
Page 6 of 8
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Shakespeare’s Sonnet 118
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This 5 page report discusses
Shakespeare’s Sonnet 118 that begins with the words “Like as, to
make our appetites more keen.” Sonnet 118 may be dismissed as
only dealing with appetites associated with sexual obsession and
gluttony. The imagery of food such as “being full,” “sweetness,”
“bitter sauces,” and “feeding” establishes a sense of satiation
or over-indulgence. As a result of that over-indulgence, the poet
compares the need to purge in order to avoid getting sick to the
need to escape the “cloying sweetness” of the person with whom he
is obsessed. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: BWson118.wps
Sonnet CXVI: “Let Me Not to the Marriage of True Minds”
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This 3 page paper discusses the themes, imagery and symbolism in Shakespeare’s Sonnet 116. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: HVSoCXVI.rtf
THE CONCEPT OF TIME IN SHAKESPEARE’S SONNETS II, LV, AND LX
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This 5 page paper analyzes Shakespeare's Sonnet 2, 55, 60 for concepts, themes and images of Time. Examples and quotes cited from texts. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: MBsontime.rtf
The Dark Lady
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5 pages. Who was the Dark Lady in William Shakespeare's Sonnet 127? This paper examines Sonnet 127 and considers what she must symbolize and who she might be. There are references to her in many of his sonnets, and just as many different theories about her. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: JGAdkldy.rtf
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