Sonnet 129
978-613-3-56438-1
6133564385
76
2010-11-16
34,00 €
eng
https://images.our-assets.com/cover/230x230/9786133564381.jpg
https://images.our-assets.com/fullcover/230x230/9786133564381.jpg
https://images.our-assets.com/cover/2000x/9786133564381.jpg
https://images.our-assets.com/fullcover/2000x/9786133564381.jpg
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Shakespeare's Sonnet #129 draws the reader into exhorting against the pursuit of love. The first twelve verses of the poem all qualify the first: “The expense of spirit in a waste of shame”. The second verse pins the most general frame around the first “Is lust in action; and till action, lust”. The first packet of information within this verse shows that the “expense of spirit” referred to is the pursuit of carnal love—one expends their spirit lusting after the prospect of getting action. It is, however, the second packet of information within the second verse, “and till action, lust”, that the remaining six lines of the first octet inveigh against, that is to say, unconsummated lust. These lines are brutal in their opinion of unconsummated lust—the following two lines list how a man acts in this pursuit, that is: “Perjured, murderous, savage, etc...”.
https://www.morebooks.shop/books/de/published_by/betascript-publishing/1/products
Sprach- und Literaturwissenschaft
https://www.morebooks.shop/store/de/book/sonnet-129/isbn/978-613-3-56438-1