The Sonnets and Other Poems (45 page)

Read The Sonnets and Other Poems Online

Authors: William Shakespeare

BOOK: The Sonnets and Other Poems
8.33Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

1564
senseless
inanimate/unfeeling   

1565
unhappy
misfortune-bringing   

1567
gives o’er
desists   

1573
in … sustaining
when sorrow has to be endured   

1574
heavy
sorrowful/sleepy   

1575
watch
remain awake   

1576
overslipped
slipped unnoticed past   

1578
from
away from   

1579
detriment
grief, loss   

1580
shows
images   

1583
mindful
dutiful   

1586
tear-distainèd
tearstained   

1587
streamed
streamed out, were luminously visible   

1588
water-galls
secondary, imperfectly formed rainbows or other signs portending rain   

dim element
overcast sky, i.e. face   

1592
sod
sodden, soaked   

1596
each other’s chance
what had befallen the other   

1598
uncouth
unknown/strange   

1601
attired in discontent
wrapped in grief/dressed in mourning black   

1604
sighs … fire
i.e. as if blowing a smoldering wick prior to lighting and discharging artillery   

1606
addressed
prepared   

1609
consorted
accompanying/ associated, leagued   

1612
dirge
funeral song   

1611
swan … ending
swans were believed to sing before they died   

1615
depending
waiting for settlement (legal term)/hanging heavily   

1619
in … of
claiming, usurping   

1621
wont
accustomed   

1626
falchion
curved sword   

1629
entertain
receive (sexually)   

1632
hard-favoured groom
ugly manservant   

1633
yoke thy liking
submit yourself/unite your desire   

1643
still … record
be forever recorded in writing   

1645
Th’adulterate
the adulterous   

1648
bloody
cruel, bloodthirsty   

1650
scarlet
the color both of
lust
and of a judge’s robes   

evidence to swear
to present sworn testimony   

1651
purloined
stolen   

1655
gross
bodily (as opposed to spiritual)/corrupted   

1658
accessary yieldings
compliance   

1659
closet
private room or cabinet, i.e. body   

1660
merchant
i.e. Collatine   

1661
declined
lowered, drooping   

1662
across
folded, a conventional gesture of melancholy   

1663
new-waxen
newly grown   

1666
What … again
i.e. he tries to speak but his breath catches and he swallows his words   

1669
eddy
water that has had its course interrupted and runs contrary to the current   

boundeth in
restrains   

1670
strait
narrow channel of water   

1672
make a saw
works with a sawing motion, backward and forward   

1674
attendeth
observes   

1675
untimely frenzy
ill-timed madness   

1677
Another power
added strength   

1678
sensible
capable of feeling, painful   

1680
on
in   

1682
attend
pay attention to   

1683
suddenly
immediately   

1684
Thine … own
i.e. his actions have made Tarquin enemy to Collatine, Lucrece, and himself   

1690
plight … faiths
take an oath on your honors   

1691
venge
avenge   

1697
imposition
the task she imposed   

1698
bewrayed
exposed, accused   

1699
said
completed   

1700
protestation
declarations, avowals   

1702
quality
nature   

1704
with … dispense
be exonerated from the sinful deed   

1705
advance
raise up   

1706
terms
arguments   

chance
misfortune   

1714
no … giving
no woman who comes after will be able to cite my being excused as reason for her to be excused   

1720
Untimely
ill-timed, irregular   

assays
attempts (to speak)   

1725
bail
liberate, release   

1726
prison
i.e. her body   

1728
sprite
spirit, soul   

1729
Life’s … destiny
eternal life, which escapes the mortal life she has ended   

1731
crew
companions   

1734
Brutus
Lucius Junius Brutus, who went on to lead the overthrow of Tarquin’s father Tarquinius Superbus, an event that marked the end of Roman kingship and the establishment of the republic   

1736
held … chase
followed, came after it   

1740
late-sacked
recently plundered   

vastly
desolate, empty   

1745
wat’ry rigol
ring or circle of watery fluid (the blood-serum that separates from clotting blood)   

1751
Lucretius
Lucrece’s father   

1756
predecease progenitors
die before their parents   

1758
glass
mirror, in which her father saw himself young again   

1763
shivered
shattered   

1766
surcease
cease   

1773
place
precedence   

1774
key-cold
i.e. cold as metal   

1776
counterfeits
appears, seems   

1779
vexation
distress, torment   

1784
so thick come
coming in such a rush or so incomprehensibly   

1790
At … o’er
i.e. sighs and speech finally give way to tears   

1791
strife
pain, distress/contention   

1797
interest
entitlement/share   

1803
owed
owned   

1805
dispersed
a transferred epithet; it is the
clamors
that are scattered through the air   

1807
Brutus
Lucius Junius Brutus had pretended to be an idiot (Latin
brutus
) in order to escape the fate of his brother who had been murdered by Tarquin’s father   

1808
emulation
rivalry   

1809
wit
intellect   

1810
folly’s show
pretense of stupidity   

1814
habit
guise/accustomed manner   

1815
deep policy
farseeing strategy   

1819
unsounded
untested/not uttered   

1825
humour
mood, behavior   

1826
wretched
unhappy   

1828
steep
drench   

1829
relenting
softening, weakening   

1831
invocations
prayers for aid   

1832
suffer
allow   

1835
Capitol
hill in Rome, site of the great temple of Jupiter   

1837
fat
fertile   

1844
protestation
declared resolution   

1845
wond’ring
marveling   

allow
approve, accept   

1849
advisèd doom
considered judgment   

1851
thorough
throughout   

1854
plausibly
approvingly   

1371
conceited
ingenious (plays on sense of
proud
)   

ARGUMENT
summary, plot outline

20
a sonnet in which each line has a feminine ending (i.e. an extra, unstressed syllable)   

89
the argument continues from Sonnet 88   

99
the only poem in the collection with fifteen lines   

138
a version of this sonnet appears in
The Passionate Pilgrim
(1598/99)

144
a version of this sonnet also appears in
The Passionate Pilgrim
(1598/99)   

145
the only poem in the collection to have lines of only eight syllables   

BEGETTER
creator, father, author; could possibly mean “inspirer”   

MR. W. H.
often assumed to be the young man addressed in Sonnets 1–126, he has been variously identified—the most likely candidates are Henry Wriothesley, Earl of Southampton (to whom
Venus and Adonis
and
Lucrece
were dedicated), and William Herbert, Earl of Pembroke (to whom the First Folio was dedicated); however,
MR.
does not suggest an aristocrat, so it is possible that
W. H.
is a misprint for “W. S.,” and that this is the publisher’s dedication to the author   

ETERNITY
immortality   

OUR EVER-LIVING POET
Shakespeare (if a certain W. H. is the dedicatee)/God, via a pun on
poet
as “maker” (if “W. H.” should actually read “W. S.”)   

ADVENTURER
one who undertakes a commercial venture (i.e. the publisher)   

T. T.
Thomas Thorpe, the publisher of the sonnets   

1
increase
reproduction/offspring   

2
That
so that   

4
tender
young/loving   

bear his memory
be a reminder of him   

5
thou
in ordinary speech, “thou” was generally more intimate than “you” (like
tu
in French), but it was also the conventional pronoun for poetic address   

contracted
betrothed (plays on the sense of “diminished,” i.e. by not having children)   

eyes
perhaps puns on “I’S”   

6
Feed’st … fuel
i.e. like a candle, the young man feeds his
flame
(i.e. his life) with his own body   

9
fresh
young, lively, blooming   

10
herald
messenger (announcing the approach of
spring
)   

gaudy
bright (without connotations of vulgarity)   

11
bud
an image of youth, also of virginity; may additionally refer to the glans of the penis   

content
happiness/contents (i.e. potential children)   

Other books

After Dark by Beverly Barton
Eternity's Mind by Kevin J. Anderson
Waking Up with the Boss by Sheri WhiteFeather
Daniel's Desire by Sherryl Woods, Sherryl Woods
Ice Dreams Part 1 by Melissa Johns
The Wind and the Spray by Joyce Dingwell
Rio by Georgina Gentry
Elven Blood (Imp Book 3) by Dunbar, Debra