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IV. Reading Comprehension The sonnets are Shakespeare’s contribution to a popular vogue, but his cycle is quite unlike the other sonnet sequence of his day. Shakespeare’s cycle suggests a story, though the details are vague, and there is doubt even whether the sonnets as published in 1609 are in the correct order. Certain motifs are clear: a series celebrating the beauty of a young man and urging him to marry; some sonnets to a lady; some sonnets (like 144) about a strange triangle of love involving two men and a woman; sonnets on the destructive power of time and the permanence of poetry; sonnets about a rival poet; and incidental sonnets of moral insight, like 129 and 146. The biographical background of the sonnets has aroused much speculation, but very little of it is convincing. The poems themselves are what is important. Though the vocabulary is often simple, the metaphorical style of the sonnets is rich. “Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day” is a question which might lead to a very ordinary conceit; instead it introduces a profound meditation on time, change and beauty. The structure of the sonnet frequently reinforces the power of the metaphors; each quatrain in 73 develops an image of lateness, of approaching extinction – of a season; of a day, and of a fire, but they also apply to a life. The three quatrains may be equally and successively at work preparing for the conclusion in the couplet, or the first eight lines may contain a catalogue and last six turn in quite a different direction, as in sonnet 29. The rhetorical strategy of the sonnets is also worth careful attention. Some begin with a purported reminiscence; some are imperative; others make an almost proverbial statement, then elaborate it. The imagery comes from a wide variety of sources: gardening, navigation, law, farming, business, pictorial art, astrology, domestic affairs. The moods are also not confined to what the Renaissance thought were those of the despairing Petrachan lover; they include delight, pride, melancholy, shame, disgust, fear. It is evident that the poet of the sonnets is also the author of the great plays.
【題組】46. Which of the following statements about Shakespearean sonnet NO. 29 is CORRECT?
(A)It contains a cataloguing of things in its first quatrain only.
(B)It can be analyzed by two parts: an octave and a sestet.
(C)It presents a twist in its ending couplet.
(D)The first three quatrains have not been successively at work.


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難度: 困難
1F
Misty Chan 高三上 (2016/04/14)
(B) octave 十四行詩的起首八行
         sestet 十四行詩的最後六行
or the first eight lines may contain a catalogue and last six turn in quite a 
different direction......

IV. Reading Comprehension The sonnets..-阿摩線上測驗