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SHAKSPER 2000: Sonnet 129
From: Hardy M. Cook (editor@ws.bowiestate.edu) Date: 04/21/00
The Shakespeare Conference: SHK 11.0878 Friday, 21 April 2000. From: Larry Weiss <pgw@idt.net> Date: Thursday, 20 Apr 2000 12:55:28 -0400 Subject: Sonnet 129 Martin Green observes that Sonnet 129 >is more than a meditation upon sex as "before a joy proposed, behind a >dreame"; >it is a statement that the sexual drive - - lust - - is capable of >anything to achieve satisfaction: it is "perjurd, murdrous, blouddy >full of blame,/ Savage, extreame, rude, cruell, not to trust,/ . . . >Past reason hunted . . . . /Mad in pursut . . . . / . . . the heaven >that leads men to this hell." Right. And has anyone else noticed that the sonnet is an extended crescendo climaxing on the word "proof" followed by a dramatic decrescendo, thus illustrating as well as explaining its theme, the same point made by Horace's epigram "Omni animal post coitum triste est, praeter gallumque et mullierem."
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