The Sonnets and Other Poems

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The Sonnets and Other Poems Page 24

by William Shakespeare


  Booth, Stephen, An Essay on Shakespeare’s Sonnets (1969). Excellent close reading. See also the extraordinarily (excessively?) rich annotation in Booth’s Yale edition of Shakespeare’s Sonnets (1977).

  Dubrow, Heather, Captive Victors: Shakespeare’s Narrative Poems and Sonnets (1987). Very good on oxymoronic language.

  Edmondson, Paul, and Stanley Wells, Shakespeare’s Sonnets (2004). Sane introductory study.

  Empson, William, numerous passages in Seven Types of Ambiguity (1930) and an essay on Sonnet 94 (“They that have power to hurt”) in Some Versions of Pastoral (1935). Unsurpassed as readings of the sonnets.

  Fineman, Joel, Shakespeare’s Perjured Eye: the Invention of Poetic Subjectivity in the Sonnets (1986). Dense and challenging theoretical study, strongly influenced by the psychoanalytic theory of Jacques Lacan.

  Hammond, Paul, Figuring Sex between Men from Shakespeare to Rochester (2002). Thoughtful readings of a cross section of poets.

  Keach, William, Elizabethan Erotic Narratives: Irony and Pathos in the Ovidian Poetry of Shakespeare, Marlowe and Their Contemporaries (1977). Equally good on both Shakespeare and his poetic contemporaries.

  Kerrigan, John, Motives of Woe: Shakespeare and “Female Complaint” (1991). Critical anthology placing “A Lover’s Complaint” in its tradition.

  Smith, Bruce, Homosexual Desire in Shakespeare’s England (1991). Valuable context, especially good on Barnfield’s “Ganymede” poems.

  Vendler, Helen, The Art of Shakespeare’s Sonnets (1997). An edition with rich commentary.

  Vickers, Brian, Shakespeare, “A Lover’s Complaint” and John Davies of Hereford (2007). The powerful case against Shakespeare’s authorship of the “Complaint.” But see also Macdonald P. Jackson’s response in Review of English Studies, September 2007.

  Vickers, Nancy, “‘The blazon of sweet beauty’s best’: Shakespeare’s Lucrece,” in Shakespeare and the Question of Theory, ed. Patricia Parker and Geoffrey Hartman (1985), pp. 95–115. Strong feminist reading.

  Wilde, Oscar, The Portrait of Mr. W. H., in Complete Short Fiction, ed. Ian Small (1995). Brilliantly provocative fantasy.

  THE MODERN LIBRARY EDITORIAL BOARD

  Maya Angelou

  •

  A. S. Byatt

  •

  Caleb Carr

  •

  Christopher Cerf

  •

  Harold Evans

  •

  Charles Frazier

  •

  Vartan Gregorian

  •

  Jessica Hagedorn

  •

  Richard Howard

  •

  Charles Johnson

  •

  Jon Krakauer

  •

  Edmund Morris

  •

  Azar Nafisi

  •

  Joyce Carol Oates

  •

  Elaine Pagels

  •

  John Richardson

  •

  Salman Rushdie

  •

  Oliver Sacks

  •

  Carolyn See

  •

  Gore Vidal

  Copyright © 2007, 2009 by The Royal Shakespeare Company

  All rights reserved.

  Published in the United States by Modern Library, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.

  “Royal Shakespeare Company,” “RSC,” and the RSC logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of The Royal Shakespeare Company.

  The versions of the sonnets and other poems and the corresponding footnotes that appear in this volume were originally published in William Shakespeare Complete Works, edited by Jonathan Bate and Eric Rasmussen, published in 2007 by Modern Library, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc.

  eISBN: 978-1-58836-835-5

  www.modernlibrary.com

  v3.0

  Vilia … aqua “Let the rabble admire worthless things, / May golden Apollo supply me with cups full of water from the Castalian spring” (from Ovid, Amores 1.15.35–6; Apollo is the sun god, and the Castalian spring on Mount Parnassus was sacred to him and to the Muses)

  HENRY WRIOTHESLEY poets commonly sought noble patrons for their work; the Earl of Southampton was nineteen in 1593 when the poem was published

  idle hours a conventionally modest disclaimer, but may refer to the closure of the theaters due to an outbreak of plague

  some graver labour Shakespeare may be thinking of The Rape of Lucrece, published the following year and also dedicated to Wriothesley

  graver more important, substantial

  first … invention i.e. first published work/first poetic work (deemed more literary than a play)

  ear plow

  survey literary examination, evaluation

  1 EVEN as just when/in the same way as

  purple-coloured red (with connotations of regality or of the flush of dawn)

  3 hied him hurried

  chase hunt

  5 Sick-thoughted lovesick

  makes amain hastens

  9 Stain to eclipsing, making tarnished (the beauty of)

  nymphs beautiful young women/female spirits

  lovely beautiful (usually used of a woman)

  10 white and red i.e. in terms of complexion

  12 Saith says

  13 Vouchsafe deign, condescend

  alight dismount from

  14 proud splendid/high-spirited

  saddle-bow the arched front of a saddle

  15 meed reward

  16 honey secrets sexual sweets (secrets has vaginal connotations)

  18 set seated

  19 satiety excess

  24 wasted spent/diminished

  sport sexual entertainment

  25 sweating a moist, warm palm was thought to be a sign of an amorous, sexually vigorous nature

  26 precedent … livelihood indicator of sexual vitality

  27 balm soothing ointment

  28 sovereign superlative/healing

  29 enraged inflamed, ardent

  30 Courageously boldly/lustfully

  31 lusty lively/lustful

  courser large powerful horse

  32 tender youthful

  34 leaden dull, inert (with phallic implications)

  appetite sexual appetite, desire

  unapt not inclined/not able

  toy engage in sexual play

  37 studded ornamented with studs, a sign of luxury

  ragged rough

  39 stallèd up confined, secured

  40 prove try

  41 would wished to

  thrust penetrated sexually

  42 governed … lust was stronger than him but unable to arouse him sexually

  43 So … down she lay down beside him as soon as he was down

  46 chide rebuke (her)

  47 broken interrupted

  50 maiden virginal/girlish

  53 miss wrongdoing, misbehavior

  55 empty unfed

  sharp by fast made hungry by lack of food

  56 Tires pulls, tears

  58 gorge crop, gullet in which partially digested food is stored

  61 content please/be content

  63 pray prayer (puns on “prey”)

  66 distilling falling in minute drops

  69 awed awestruck, terrified

  fret annoyed, vexed

  71 rank full

  72 Perforce of necessity

  73 prettily ingeniously/coaxingly (sense then shifts to “attractive”)

  75 lours frowns, looks angry

  76 ’Twixt between

  79 Look … can however he looks

  81 remove withdraw (from a siege)

  82 contending striving, antagonistic

  84 countless numberless/infinitely valuable

  86 dive-dapper dabchick, a small diving waterfowl

  90 winks shuts his eyes/winces

  91 pass
enger traveler on foot

  92 turn favor (plays on sense of “sexual act”)

  94 bathes in water i.e. weeps

  96 coy shy/reserved/disdainful

  98 god of war i.e. Mars, with whom Venus had an adulterous affair

  99 sinewy muscular

  bow acknowledge defeat

  100 jar fight

  104 uncontrollèd unconquered

  crest feathers on the top of a helmet

  105 sport … dally all terms that can also signify “have sex”

  107 churlish harsh, because it signifies war; red suggests blood and anger, but in line 110 the color signifies passion

  ensign battle flag

  108 arms plays on sense of “weapons”

  field battlefield

  109 overswayed ruled, exercised power over

  111 Strong-tempered made strong by tempering (heating steel and then immersing it in cold water)

  his … obeyed submitted to his superior strength

  114 foiled defeated

  119 there … lies i.e. reflected in the pupils of her eyes

  121 wink close your eyes

  123 keeps his revels holds his festivities/has sex (the erotic sense continues in play and sport)

  but twain only two

  124 bold courageous/sexually immodest

  in sight observed

  125 blue-veined suggestive of closed eyes (and perhaps with connotations of the erect penis)

  127 tender spring youthful growth (of stubble)

  133 hard-favoured harsh-featured

  foul ugly

  134 Ill-nurtured coarse, ill-bred

  crooked deformed

  135 O’erworn worn out by age or work

  rheumatic afflicted by catarrh or by the watering eyes of old age

  cold afflicted by a cold/dispirited/sexually passionless

  136 Thick-sighted poor-sighted

  juice vigor/vaginal moisture

  140 grey regarded as a particularly beautiful eye color

  142 marrow vitality/sexual essence

  146 trip dance lightly

  147 nymph female spirit who lived in the sea

  148 footing footprint

  149 spirit may play on sense of “penis”

  compact composed

  150 gross heavy, earthy

  light may play on sense of “unchaste, lustful”

  aspire rise/be ambitious/grow erect

  152 forceless powerless

  154 list please, choose

  155 light unimportant/weightless/ unchaste

  156 heavy serious/troublesome/weighty

  157 affected in love

  158 upon thy left i.e. by grasping your left hand

  160 on of

  161 Narcissus in Greek mythology, a beautiful young man who fell in love with his own reflection in a pool; in some versions of the tale he drowned attempting to embrace himself

  himself himself forsook abandoned himself (for himself)

  162 shadow reflection

  164 Dainties delicacies, sweetmeats

  the use enjoyment/sex

  165 sappy sap-filled

  bear bear fruit

  168 get beget, reproduce

  169 increase produce

  172 That thine so that your offspring

  175 this this time, now

  177 Titan another name for the Greek sun god

  tirèd weary/dressed, attired

  178 burning … hotly i.e. hotly/lasciviously

  179 his team i.e. Titan’s team of horses that drew the sun’s chariot

  180 So … him provided that Titan could be like Adonis

  181 lazy sprite sluggish spirit

  182 disliking disapproving, reluctant

  183 fair sight beautiful eyes/handsome appearance

  184 vapours clouds or noxious fogs rising from the ground

  185 Souring contracting, pursing

  188 bare poor, unconvincing

  197 done ended

  198 heavenly … sun the sun in the sky and Adonis himself

  202 want lack/desire

  203 thy mother Adonis was the incestuous product of his mother Myrrha’s love for her own father

  204 unkind cruel/unnatural

  205 contemn disdain, scorn

  this thus

  206 suit request/courtship

  213 Statue Adonis was a descendant of Pygmalion and the statue he had made, fallen in love with, and married after she had been brought to life by Aphrodite/ Venus

  215 complexion appearance

  216 by … direction of their own accord

  219 blaze forth proclaim/burn forth

  220 Being … cause i.e. even though she is the goddess of love and supreme judge of amorous affairs, she cannot determine matters in her own favor

  221 fain willingly

  222 intendments intentions

  226 would wants to (bind him)

  228 locks … one intertwines her fingers (so that he cannot escape her embrace)

  229 Fondling foolish one/one who is doted upon

  230 ivory pale i.e. fair-skinned arms encircling him (a pale is a fence; plays on sense of “white”)

  231 park enclosed tract of land reserved for keeping and hunting game

  deer puns on “dear”

  232 mountain … dale i.e. breasts and vagina (replete with pleasure-giving fountains)

  235 limit area defined by a boundary

  relief feeding, pasturing (hunting term)/sexual ease

  236 bottom-grass lush grass growing at the base of the valley/pubic hair (bottom signifies “lower regions,” not “buttocks/anus,” a sense not then in use)

  plain i.e. stomach (possibly pubic mound)

  237 hillocks i.e. buttocks (possibly breasts)

  brakes thickets, i.e. pubic hair

  obscure hidden, secret/dark

  240 rouse cause to issue forth from cover (hunting term); Adonis will instead be “roused” sexually by Venus

  243 if so that if he

  247 caves … pits i.e. dimples

  249 wits sanity

  250 Struck … first having already been smitten by love

  251 in … forlorn helpless and wretched under your own rules/unable to control your own area of authority

  257 remorse pity, compassion

  259 neighbours by is nearby

  260 breeding in heat

  jennet small Spanish horse

  lusty lively/lustful

  proud spirited/sexually aroused

  261 trampling courser stallion stamping on the ground

  264 straight directly/immediately

  266 girths straps that hold the saddle in place

  267 bearing carrying his weight/enduring his injuries/fertile

  272 compassed crest arched ridge of the neck

  275 glisters sparkles, glitters

  276 courage disposition/sexual desire

  277 told counted

  278 gentle noble/calm

  279 Anon shortly

  curvets springs, frisks

  280 As who should like one who might

  tried proven

  283 recketh he cares he for

  stir fuss, agitation

  284 flattering coaxing, wheedling

  Holla stop (used to a horse)

  285 curb restraining strap passing under the horse’s jaw and fastened to the bit

  286 caparisons decorated saddle cloths

  trappings gay colorful ornamental coverings

  290 limning out painting

  294 bone frame

  295 fetlocks the tufts of hair growing on parts of horses’ ankle joints

  shag rough, shaggy

  297 crest ridge of the neck

  passing surpassingly, exceedingly

  301 scuds darts nimbly

  303 bid … base challenge the wind to a chase (from the children’s game in which two teams occupy separate bases and chase opponents trying to leave their base)

  304 where possibly a contraction of “wheth
er”

  306 who which

  310 puts … strangeness makes a show of aloofness

  unkind cruel/ unaffectionate, not sexually interested

  311 Spurns at kicks out at/rejects

  312 kind embracements affectionate embraces (i.e. as the stallion mounts her for sex)

  heels mares often kick out as they’re mounted

  314 vails lowers in submission

  tail probably with phallic connotations

  plume feathers (here probably imagined in a military helmet)

  316 fume anger

  319 testy irritated

  320 unbacked unbroken/riderless

  breeder mare in heat

  321 Jealous of catching fearful of being caught

  forsake abandon

  323 As as if

  wood wordplay, since it could also mean “mad”

  hie them hasten

  325 swoll’n with chafing bursting with anger

  326 Banning cursing

  327 happy … fits moment is opportune again

  328 lovesick love i.e. Venus

  330 aidance assistance

  331 stopped stopped up, closed

  stayed dammed up

  333 So likewise

  334 vent uttering

  335 attorney i.e. the tongue

  336 client i.e. heart

  breaks may play on sense of “goes bankrupt”

  as i.e. being

  suit lawsuit/courtship

  339 bonnet hat

  341 nigh near

  342 all … eye he watches her out of the corner of his eye/he watches her mistrustfully

  343 wistly intently

  344 wayward willful, obstinate

  347 But just

  349 just before right in front of

  351 heaveth lifts

  354 apt receptively

  dint impression

  356 suing pressing their case

  357 as as though

  his its

  359 dumb play theatrical dumb show, mime

  made plain explained

  360 chorus-like like characters commenting on the action of a play or dumb show

  361 Full very

  362 prisoned imprisoned

  jail Shakespeare’s spelling “gaile” may pun on “gale”

  363 band bond, shackle

  364 engirts surrounds

  365 wilful willing/persistent/ desirous

  366 a-billing caressing one beak with the other

  367 engine instrument, i.e. tongue

  368 mover one in motion, i.e. mortal

  mortal round earth

  369 Would thou wert I wish you were

  370 wound i.e. profoundly wounded heart

  371 thy … thee I would assure you of my help

 

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