hey,
i need help analyzing this sonnet by Shakespeare...and i need it real fast.
Thnx
It's not a sonnet.
[tinyurl.com] />
[www.cs.rice.edu] />
Does that help?
yeah...it does help a bit...not much tho
thnx n e way
The wild regrets, and the bloody sweats, None knew so well as I... For he who lives more lives than one, More deaths than one must die...
Fear no more the heat o' the sun,
Nor the furious winter's rages;
Thou thy worldly task hast done,
Home art gone, and ta'en thy wages;
Golden lads and girls all must,
As chimney-sweepers, come to dust.
Willie always did like a good pun. Chimney sweepers come to dust - what a gas, har har! Makes me consider writing one on too-frequent masturbation.
Anyway, if we are all gonna come to dust (die in the end), why be afraid? Nobody escapes, ya know. Or hasn't yet. What with advances in the fileds of how life really works, we could be the last generation that has to die. Yuck, what a thought. Now where did I put that bottle of Wild Turkey?
yep...u r rite...its a yucky yucky thought indeed....
oh...n thnx again ...i'll spend my entire mornin writing its analysis...a detailed one
The wild regrets, and the bloody sweats, None knew so well as I... For he who lives more lives than one, More deaths than one must die...
i have to do paper comparing this poem with William Blake's "The Tigers" if any one has any helpful advice it would be much appreciated.
.
The puns in this one are part of the evidence cited in defence against theories that WS's works were really penned by other authors. See for example-
[www.findarticles.com] />
Extract: 'In one of his loveliest songs the dramatist writes, "Golden lads and girls all must, /As chimney-sweepers, come to dust." In Warwickshire vernacular dialect, a dandelion is a "golden lad" when in flower, a "chimney-sweeper" when ready to be blown to the wind. This does not feel like a lord's memory. It belongs to a local country boy in a Warwickshire field.'
I have to admit I have chased this topic around a bit myself, so I found the pages interesting. Not entirely compelling, but quite interesting nevertheless, thanks for the link.