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The sonneteer's love cannot even be ended by the "confined doom."
Or would you have me turn a sonneteer, And warble those brief-sighted eyes of hers?
Especially poets - there's a sonneteer in our chests; we walk around to the beat of iambs.
He was known as a skilled sonneteer.
Yet this well-meaning little sonneteer sincerely felt that his verses were issued in the cause of humanity.
He is chiefly a sonneteer working over spiritual themes and the universal subjects of love and death.
As a sonneteer he showed much grace and sweetness, and English poets borrowed freely from him.
Like the disciplines the sonneteer is bound by, the schedule is part of the framework he is committed to work within.
- you will find Shakespeare the sonneteer deliciously tiresome, horrifyingly attractive, infuriatingly seductive.
He is also a Goat, and I might ask you girls if we have ever had a great Goat sonneteer or balladeer?
Such lines as this did not prevent Lord Alfred Douglas from being regarded by some of his contemporaries as the greatest sonneteer since Shakespeare.
In the Amoretti, Spenser proposes "that a resolution to the sonneteer's conventional preoccupations with love may be found within the bounds of Christian marriage."
He even claimed that Alfred Douglas (Oscar Wilde's "Bosie") was a better sonneteer than Shakespeare.
And a minor Victorian sonneteer, Edward Cracroft Lefroy: "I have always had my own, individual darling in literature and this curate-poet is one of them."
However, his biggest influences were the 18th century poet Robert Fergusson and the Italian dialect sonneteer Giuseppe Gioachino Belli.
Like a sonneteer addressing his lady in the seventeenth century, he seems to use the word "cold" almost as a eulogium, and the word "heartless" as a kind of compliment.
Other true poets are the sonneteer João Penha, the Parnassian Goncalves Crespo, and the symbolist Eugenio de Castro.
Sonneteer With the Sonneteer Bronte amplifier were amongst the earliest adopters and the first to present it to Audiophiles.
This portrait of the beautiful young man whose achievements as a sonneteer were overshadowed by his betrayal of his lover, Oscar Wilde, was published when the author was 20 years old.
The sonnet employs the Petrarchan conceit of "tyranny" to imply the power the object's beauty imposes over the sonneteer and argues for her beauty based on the power she exerts over him.
However, he then interprets his statistics in rather dubious socio-literary historical terms, seeing Shakespeare as 'breaking with the tradition of the sonneteer as a court poet or an aristocrat' by involving 'his interlocutors.in debate'and dialogue.
Three years later, Copeland and Day published (again privately) The Deserted City, "nineteen lyrical and finely disciplined sonnets on faith and love, described by Roberts as the work of a 'master sonneteer'."
Many critics, in light of what they see as his overworking of old themes, view Spenser as being a less original and important sonneteer than contemporaries such as Shakespeare and Sir Philip Sidney.
Smith is sometimes erroneously confused with another writer who signed his name W. Smith, the sonneteer William Smith who published a sonnet sequence entitled Chloris, or the Complaint of the Passionate Despised Shepherd in 1596.
Delage-Toriel also notes that the names of Laura and Flora, possibly refer to well-known High Renaissance portraits of women by Titian and Giorgione, both evoking the Italian sonneteer Petrarch's unconsummated obsession with a woman named Laura.