Sonnet 81: Or I Shall Live Your Epitaph to Make
SONNETCAST | William Shakespeare's Sonnets Recited, Revealed, Relived
by Sebastian Michael
5d ago
Sonnet 81, although it appears right in the middle of the Rival Poet group of sonnets, does not concern itself with any poet other than Shakespeare at all, and so it either marks a detour deliberately taken by Shakespeare from his preoccupation with his rival, or it presents an instance in which a sonnet has in fact slipped from its position and been mislaid here accidentally. On the surface, it doesn't do anything other sonnets have not done before: it promises and predicts an everlasting memorial to the young man in the form of itself – the poetry that Shakespeare composes for him – while do ..read more
Visit website
Sonnet 80: O How I Faint When I of You Do Write
SONNETCAST | William Shakespeare's Sonnets Recited, Revealed, Relived
by Sebastian Michael
5d ago
With his amazingly brazen Sonnet 80, William Shakespeare metaphorically pushes the boat out in more sense than one and comes close to mocking not only his rival, but also – albeit gently – his young lover whom he insinuates being drawn to this other writer not only by his compelling poetry but by a prowess of an altogether more physical nature too. The poem, for all its theatricality on the one hand and its finely layered wit on the other, still ends on a pensive, even melancholy and for this quite devastating note of self-awareness ..read more
Visit website
Sonnet 79: Whilst I Alone Did Call Upon Thy Aid
SONNETCAST | William Shakespeare's Sonnets Recited, Revealed, Relived
by Sebastian Michael
2w ago
With Sonnet 79, William Shakespeare continues his lament, begun with Sonnet 78, that he no longer enjoys the exclusive privilege of writing poetry to and for his young lover, constructing an – objectively speaking fairly tenuous – argument why the young man should not be overly grateful to this Rival Poet for his efforts. With a transactional tone taking over the second half of the sonnet, it pushes our perception further towards a possibility that Shakespeare is losing not only the appreciation and affection of his young lover but also his patronage, which, if the case, would possibly have se ..read more
Visit website
Sonnet 78: So Oft Have I Invoked Thee for My Muse
SONNETCAST | William Shakespeare's Sonnets Recited, Revealed, Relived
by Sebastian Michael
2w ago
Sonnet 78 is the first in a group of nine sonnets that concern themselves almost entirely with the apparent arrival on the scene of someone else who is now writing poetry for Shakespeare's young lover, vying for his attention and possibly obtaining his patronage, which is why these poems are collectively known as the Rival Poet Sonnets. Strictly speaking, Sonnet 81 does not mention this rival and could therefore in theory be excluded from the group, but as it sits where it does and, like the others, talks about Shakespeare's own poetic powers, it is generally accepted as part of it. Sonne ..read more
Visit website
The Halfway Point Summary
SONNETCAST | William Shakespeare's Sonnets Recited, Revealed, Relived
by Sebastian Michael
1M ago
This special episode summarises what we have learnt so far from the first 77 sonnets by William Shakespeare. It recaps the principal pointers that allow us to put together a profile of the young man they were written for or about and outlines the phases of his relationship with our poet, and it also dismantles some of the misconceptions that are sometimes put forward when discussing these poems, especially in relation to potential addressees ..read more
Visit website
Sonnet 77: Thy Glass Will Show Thee How Thy Beauties Wear
SONNETCAST | William Shakespeare's Sonnets Recited, Revealed, Relived
by Sebastian Michael
1M ago
The curiously didactic Sonnet 77 marks the halfway point of the collection of 154 sonnets contained in the 1609 Quarto Edition and it stands out for several reasons. What most immediately catches the eye is that it seems to be written into or so as to accompany a book of empty pages for its recipient to collect their thoughts and notes in a book of commonplaces, as would have been widely in use at the time. And owing to its tone, it does pose the question whether it is in fact addressed to the same young man as the other sonnets in this large group known as the Fair Youth Sonnets, and if it is ..read more
Visit website
Sonnet 76: Why Is My Verse so Barren of New Pride
SONNETCAST | William Shakespeare's Sonnets Recited, Revealed, Relived
by Sebastian Michael
1M ago
The deceptively unsensational Sonnet 76 asks a simple question and provides to this a straightforward enough answer that will hardly come as a surprise: how is it that I write one sonnet after another and they all sound the same? Because "I always write of you."  With this one declaration it settles a debate that – in view of its very existence bafflingly – has more recently reappeared in scholarly circles: are these sonnets, such as we have them in the collection originally published in the Quarto Edition of 1609, addressed to or written about principally one person, or co ..read more
Visit website
Sonnet 75: So Are You to My Thoughts as Food to Life
SONNETCAST | William Shakespeare's Sonnets Recited, Revealed, Relived
by Sebastian Michael
1M ago
Sonnet 75 marks a moment of comparative calm in the turbulent relationship between William Shakespeare and his young lover. With its sober assessment of a continuously conflicted world of emotions that oscillate between abundant joy at being allowed to bask in the presence of the young man and utter dejection at missing him when he is absent, the sonnet seems to reconcile its poet with the reality of loving a person who is, in matters of the heart and most likely others too, a law unto himself ..read more
Visit website
Sonnet 74: But Be Contented When That Fell Arrest
SONNETCAST | William Shakespeare's Sonnets Recited, Revealed, Relived
by Sebastian Michael
1M ago
Sonnet 74 continues the argument from Sonnet 73, and now reflects on what will happen when I, the poet, William Shakespeare, am dead. My body will be buried and return to earth, but my spirit will live on in this poetry that I write for you, the young man, which is why the loss you experience at my death will be insignificant: it only entails my passing physical presence, not my essence. In this, the poem proves prophetic not only in relation to the young lover, but also in relation to the world as a whole, since we still very much possess the spirit of William Shakespeare in his writing, and ..read more
Visit website
Sonnet 73: That Time of Year Thou Mayst in Me Behold
SONNETCAST | William Shakespeare's Sonnets Recited, Revealed, Relived
by Sebastian Michael
2M ago
Sonnet 73 is the first in a second pair of poems to meditate on the poet's age and mortality and to reflect on the point of his very existence. But while Sonnets 71 & 72 focus on Shakespeare's reputation, which he perceives as poor and which he fears might also tarnish the young man were he to show his love and mourning for Shakespeare after his death, Sonnet 73 concentrates on the wondrous realisation – or possibly hope – that in spite of Shakespeare's age and his approaching what he believes to be his twilight years, the young man not only continues to love him, but appears to appreciate ..read more
Visit website

Follow SONNETCAST | William Shakespeare's Sonnets Recited, Revealed, Relived on FeedSpot

Continue with Google
Continue with Apple
OR