Read The Sonnets and Other Poems (Modern Library Classics) Page 25


  1082 Nor sun nor neither sun nor

  1083 fair pale complexion/beauty (puns on fear) 1088 gaudy brilliantly fine

  1091 straight straightaway

  1094 would not fear did not wish to frighten

  1095 To ... sung when he entertained himself by singing (the rhyme is stronger with the old spelling and pronunciation "song") 1098 silly defenseless

  1099 shadow reflection

  1101 by nearby

  1105 foul, grim ugly

  urchin-snouted with a snout like a hedgehog

  1106 downward directed to the ground (implies literal and moral lowness) still constantly

  1107 beauteous livery i.e. Adonis' physical beauty 1113 whet sharpen

  again in return

  1114 persuade him there win him over/persuade him to stay 1115 nuzzling rootling, burrowing with the snout/nestling affectionately 1119 bless ... his give himself to me (possibly "give me a child") 1127 coffer-lids lids of either a treasure chest or a coffin lids i.e. eyelids

  1129 glasses mirrors

  1131 virtue power

  1132 his its

  1139 Ne'er ... low never emotionally balanced, always swinging between elation and misery (or perhaps "never between social equals") 1142 blasted withered, as if by frost

  a breathing while the space of a mere breath

  1143 o'erstrawed strewn over, concealed

  1144 sweets delights

  beguile deceive

  1147 sparing frugal, modest

  riot revelry, debauchery, excess

  1148 tread the measures dance

  1149 staring bold-faced

  1151 silly helplessly, weakly

  1153 where is where there is

  1156 just honest, upright

  1157 Perverse self-willed, stubborn

  shows most toward appears most docile, willing to learn

  1158 to into

  1160 sire father

  1161 discontents grievances/malcontents

  1162 combustious combustible, easily kindled

  1163 Sith since

  1168 purple blood-red

  1174 reft stolen

  1175 breach break

  1177 guise manner

  1178 issue offspring

  1180 grow unto himself i.e. not produce offspring/mature, grow up 1184 next of blood next of kin/literally created from Adonis' blood 1185 hollow cradle i.e. the cleft between Venus' breasts 1189 hies hastens

  1193 Paphos coastal town in southwest Cyprus; sacred to Venus 1194 immure shut away

  1 made of truth all fidelity (made may pun on "maid") 2 lies quibbles on sense of "has sex (with other men)"

  That so that

  3 That ... think i.e. she thinks

  4 false forgeries deceitful stratagems/counterfeits 5 vainly in vain, pointlessly/foolishly/out of vanity 7 credit believe

  8 Outfacing defying/putting a brave face on (either way, the implication is of ignoring) love's ill rest a lover's uneasiness

  9 wherefore why

  11 habit usual behavior/dress, guise

  12 told counted/spoken aloud

  13 lie fib/have sex

  14 smothered kept silent

  1 loves lovers/kinds of love

  2 suggest tempt, incite

  still constantly

  3 fair pale-complexioned/beautiful/virtuous

  4 coloured ill of ugly complexion/of evil disposition (in terms of color, may suggest a dark complexion, considered unattractive, or use of cosmetics) 8 pride plays on sense of "sexual desire" (often used of female animals) 12 hell plays on the slang term for "vagina"

  14 fire ... out i.e. drive him out/infect him with venereal disease 1 rhetoric persuasive eloquence

  3 perjury in Love's Labour's Lost Longaville has vowed to see no woman for three years, but has fallen in love with Maria 5 forswore vowed to renounce

  8 grace favor/divine mercy

  11 Exhal'st draw up (and burn away, as the sun burns off mist) In ... is she, as the sun, has absorbed the vaporous vow

  1 Cytherea or Venus, the Roman goddess of love (from the Greek island of Cythera) 2 Adonis in classical mythology, the beautiful youth loved by Venus (Shakespeare tells their story in Venus and Adonis) green youthful, blooming

  3 lovely amorous/beautiful

  6 favours love tokens/her sexual parts

  8 still always

  9 unripe immature

  want conceit lack understanding

  10 figured proffer implied offer (of sex)

  11 tender young

  13 queen may pun on "quean," i.e. prostitute toward willing, yielding

  14 froward stubborn, contrary

  1 forsworn guilty of breaking an oath (Berowne had sworn to see no woman for three years) 4 osiers willows

  5 Study the student (i.e. Berowne himself, who has vowed to study for three years) his bias leaves leaves his rightful course (of learning); bias is a bowling term for the oblique course followed by a ball 6 art knowledge

  7 mark target, goal

  10 praise credit

  parts qualities/physical features

  11 Jove supreme Roman god; his weapons were thunder and lightning

  dreadful formidable, frightening

  12 bent directed

  3 Cytherea Venus, goddess of love

  4 tarriance waiting, sojourn

  Adonis the beautiful youth with whom Cytherea was in love 5 osier willow tree

  6 Adon i.e. Adonis

  spleen hot body/irritability

  7 hotter i.e. with lust

  look For await, expect

  9 Anon soon

  11 glorious splendid/shining

  12 wistly longingly

  13 bounced in threw himself into the water

  whereas where

  14 Jove supreme Roman god

  flood river

  2 dove the bird was proverbially faithful in love 5 damask the red of the damask rose

  grace adorn

  6 falser more deceitful

  deface spoil, make ugly

  9 coined created (with connotations of counterfeiting) 10 Dreading fearful of

  11 protestings declarations

  15 framed created

  foiled trampled on, destroyed

  16 fell plays on sense of "succumbed sexually"

  a-turning changing/having sex (with other men)

  17 whether which

  18 Bad ... neither i.e. she was certainly a bad lover, but wasn't even a particularly good lecher 2 needs necessarily

  3 thee this poem appears also in Poems in Diverse Humours (1598), where it is dedicated to "Master R. L." (thought to be Richard Lynch, a fellow poet) 5 Dowland John Dowland, lutenist and composer

  7 Spenser Edmund Spenser, poet, author of The Faerie Queen (1596) conceit ingenuity/imagination

  10 Phoebus Apollo, Greek and Roman god of music and poetry; often depicted carrying a lyre similar to a lute

  13 both i.e. music and poetry

  feign say in their poetry

  14 One knight seems to be a reference to a particular individual, perhaps a patron; no definitive identification has been made 1 queen of love i.e. Venus

  2 [ ] indicates a missing line

  4 Adon Adonis, the young man Venus loved; he died hunting when a boar wounded him 5 stand defensive position

  steep-up steeply inclined

  6 Anon soon

  7 silly foolish/helpless

  will plays on sense of "sexual desire"

  10 brakes bushes (with connotations of "pubic hair") 11 ruth pity

  13 more ... one i.e. her vagina, as well as the imaginary wound she showed him 3 orient pearl lustrous, most precious (literally, from the Indian Ocean) timely prematurely

  8 For why because

  1 Venus Roman goddess of love, enamored of Adonis

  2 myrtle evergreen shrub or small tree, sacred to Venus 3 youngling youngster

  Mars Roman god of war

  try her test her resistance

  fell succumbed sexually
>
  4 fell to assailed, tried to seduce

  6 clipped embraced

  7 unlaced i.e. undressed (literally, unlaced the corset--worn by Elizabethan ladies) 8 like similar

  9 seized on took possession of/fastened on

  11 fetched caught (her)

  12 take understand/possess sexually

  pleasure wish/sexual enjoyment

  13 at this bay holding me at bay (like a hunted animal that has been cornered and forced to turn on its pursuers) 14 clip embrace

  1 Crabbed bad-tempered

  2 pleasance pleasure, delight

  care troubles, anxiety

  4 brave finely dressed

  5 sport entertainments, activity, fun

  11 hie thee hurry

  12 stays delay

  1 vain conceited, self-regarding/empty, worthless/foolish 3 'gins begins

  4 presently immediately

  7 seld seldom

  12 physic medicine

  painting use of cosmetics

  pain effort

  3 daffed me cast me off

  cabin hut, humble dwelling

  hanged with care decorated with sorrow

  4 descant ... decay enlarge on fears for my death 6 Fare go/eat

  8 In ... whether whether in scorn or friendship I will not consider 12 As such as, who

  pluck the pelf take the spoils, seize the riches

  13 throw ... east i.e. look for the sunrise 14 charge the watch commands wakefulness, orders me to be on the lookout 15 cite summon

  16 office function

  17 Philomela the nightingale

  mark pay attention, take note

  18 lays songs

  21 packed dispatched, sent packing

  post hasten

  24 For why because

  27 moon month

  28 Yet if

  30 Short shorten

  length lengthen

  Sonnets ... Music a separate title within The Passionate Pilgrim; may indicate that these poems were intended for singing 1 lording lord

  2 master tutor

  5 doubtful of uncertain outcome

  7 spite vexation, source of grief

  8 silly foolish/helpless

  9 mickle great

  10 nothing ... gain no means could be employed to enjoy both of them 11 wounded with disdain rejected

  13 art scholarship

  15 lullaby good night

  3 passing surpassingly, exceedingly

  4 wanton playful/lascivious

  5 leaves petals (with labial suggestion)

  7 That so that

  sick to death made ill from longing (death possibly plays on sense of "orgasm") 9 Air plays on sense of "musical melody"

  12 pluck ... thorn plays on sense of "take your virginity"

  13 unmeet unfitting, unsuitable

  14 sweet i.e. flower

  15 Jove supreme Roman god

  16 Juno Jove's wife

  Ethiope Ethiopian (i.e. dark-complexioned, thought to be unattractive) 17 deny ... Jove deny that he was Jove

  2 speed flourish

  3 defying doubting

  4 Heart's denying her refusal to love me (is the) 6 wot knows

  8 without remove irremovably

  9 silly simple/foolish, trivial/deserving of pity cross mistake/misfortune

  14 in thrall enslaved

  16 speeding fortune

  fraughted with gall laden with bitterness

  17 no deal not at all

  18 wether castrated ram

  knell i.e. like a funeral bell

  19 curtal with a docked tail

  wont was accustomed

  21 procures manages

  22 wise manner

  23 heartless ground the desolate landscape

  26 dye color

  29 swains rustics

  35 Corydon in Virgil's second Eclogue, the name of a shepherd abandoned by his lover 2 stalled brought to a halt/confined

  deer puns on "dear"

  strike may play on sense of "have sex with"

  3 things worthy blame i.e. the blameworthy passions 4 fancy love/infatuation

  partial might the power of (amorous) inclination

  6 neither ... unwed not young and still unmarried (i.e. pick someone experienced) 8 filed polished

  9 subtle practice crafty ploy

  10 find a halt spot a limp, i.e. it takes one to know one 12 set ... sale list all her good points (as if you were a salesman) 14 spend money on gifts/words of love

  15 desert merit, deserving

  16 ringing proclaiming itself/jingling coins 18 golden bullet eloquence/money

  21 unjust unfaithful

  22 Press strive, be eager

  23 slack remiss (plays on the phallic sense of "flaccid, impotent") 24 put thee back refuse you

  26 ere before

  28 dissembled disguised

  30 put away rejected

  32 ban curse

  brawl shout

  39 toys whims, fancies

  40 cock plays on sense of "penis"

  treads has sex with (used of the male bird)

  42 naught plays on sense of "vagina"

  43 Think ... saint believe it, women always strive to outdo men in sin rather than virtue 45 There i.e. in women

  46 attaint spoil, make ugly

  49 soft hush

  51 stick hesitate

  round hit soundly

  54 bewrayed revealed, given away

  2 prove try out

  8 madrigals part-songs for several voices; often they had pastoral associations 11 kirtle skirt

  12 myrtle evergreen shrub sacred to Venus, hence symbolic of love 17 LOVE'S ANSWER this is the first stanza of "The Nymph's Reply," usually attributed to Sir Walter Ralegh 4 myrtles evergreen shrubs or small trees

  7 moan lament, sadness

  10 Leaned ... thorn in order to stay awake and sing of her sorrows all night, the nightingale supposedly rested her breast upon a sharp thorn (though the poem takes place in the day) 14 Tereu Philomel was raped by her brother-in-law, Tereus, and then metamorphosed into a nightingale 15 complain lament, express sorrow

  17 lively vividly

  23 King Pandion Philomel's father

  24 lapped in lead buried in lead coffins

  28 beguiled deceived

  35 crowns gold coins

  36 want lack/need

  37 prodigal lavish, extravagant

  40 'Pity ... king' what a pity he is not a king 43 bent inclined

  44 at commandement (women) at their disposal (commandement is tetrasyllabic, i.e. has four syllables metrically) 52 wake cannot sleep

  1 by Shakespeare, a version of Sonnet 138

  2 by Shakespeare, a version of Sonnet 144

  3 by Shakespeare, a version of Longaville's sonnet to Maria in Love's Labour's Lost (Act 4 Scene 3) 4 perhaps by Bartholomew Griffin, though conceivably by Shakespeare 5 by Shakespeare, a version of Berowne's sonnet to Rosaline in Love's Labour's Lost (Act 4 scene 2) 6 probably by Bartholomew Griffin, though conceivably by Shakespeare 7 authorship uncertain

  8 by Richard Barnfield

  9 authorship uncertain (possibly Bartholomew Griffin)

  10 authorship uncertain

  11 almost certainly by Bartholomew Griffin (a variant version appears in his Fidessa, published in 1596) 12 authorship uncertain; the poem is the first stanza of "A maiden's choice twixt age and youth," a poem in Thomas Deloney's collection Garland of Good Will (the earliest surviving edition of which is from 1631); it was probably first printed in the 1590s 13 authorship uncertain

  14 authorship uncertain

  15 authorship unknown

  16 by Shakespeare--Dumaine's poem to Katherine in Love's Labour's Lost (Act 4 scene 3); also printed, with slight variations, in England's Helicon (1600) 17 authorship uncertain--possibly by Richard Barnfield; also printed in Thomas Weelkes' Madrigals (1597) and in England's Helicon (1600) 18 authorship uncertain

  19 Sir Hugh Evans sings parts of this in The Merry Wives of Windsor
(Act 3 scene 1); in England's Helicon (1600) it is attributed to Christopher Marlowe 20 by Richard Barnfield; it first appeared in Poems in Diverse Humours (1598); a shorter version was printed in England's Helicon (1600) 1 dial clock

  11 Shrovetide the three days immediately preceding the season of Lent; this epilogue was written for a court performance by Shakespeare's company on Shrove Tuesday, 20 February 1599

  14 boards tables

  "LET ... LAY" untitled when originally published, this poem has been known since the early 1800s as "The Phoenix and Turtle"

  1 bird ... lay never positively identified within the poem; the following line suggests that it might refer to the mythological Arabian phoenix lay song

  3 trumpet trumpeter

  5 shrieking harbinger often identified as the screech owl, regarded as a bird of ill omen whose cry heralded death 6 precurrer precursor

  fiend devil

  7 Augur predictor (literally soothsayer who made predictions based on the behavior of birds) 9 session sitting (of court or parliament)

  interdict prohibit

  10 fowl ... wing bird of prey/usurper, despot

  11 Save except

  12 obsequy funeral rites

  strict restricted, exclusive/rigorously maintained

  13 surplice ecclesiastical garment (here, the swan's white feathers) 14 defunctive deathly, funereal

  can knows

  15 death-divining the swan was thought to know that its own death was coming, at which point it would sing 16 his right what is due (either to the swan or to the requiem; puns on "rite") 17 treble-dated living three times the normal span

  18 sable gender black offspring; the crow was thought to reproduce chastely through the touching of beaks and exchange of breath 21 anthem piece of music or song of praise

  23 Phoenix mythological Arabian bird which lived for five hundred years, was consumed by fire, and then reborn from the ashes; only one existed at a time turtle turtledove, a bird renowned for love and constancy

  fled have departed this life

  24 In ... flame together in one flame

  25 So ... as they so loved that

  twain two

  26 essence ... one essential irreducible quality of one thing 27 distincts separate things

  28 Number the concept of plurality

  29 remote apart

  asunder separated

  30 Distance distance and proximity was seen

  32 But ... wonder in anyone other than them it would have been extraordinary 34 right due, what belonged to him

  35 sight eyes, gaze

  36 Either ... mine they belonged to each other/each was the source of the other's wealth 37 Property ownership/self-possession

  38 the same itself

  39 Single ... called i.e. their nature was both separate and united, so it could not properly be called either one or two 41 confounded confused/overthrown

  42 division grow together separateness resolve into one

  43 To ... neither i.e. each one was nothing without the other 44 Simple a single unmixed substance

  compounded combined

  45 it i.e. Reason

  true truly/faithful

  46 concordant harmonious

  48 what ... remain separate elements remain so united

  49 threne threnody, song of lamentation for the dead

  51 Co-supremes joint rulers