A close reading – Sonnet 130

In another post I spoke about the importance of close reading, and promised some examples. This is the first! Below you will find a colour-coded close reading of Sonnet 130. For the purpose of this post, and limited as I am by the blog format, I have omitted things that I don’t think are useful.

  1. An iamb is a metric foot made of two beats, it is often likened to a heartbeat ‘ba Dum’ having one unstressed [short] and then one stressed [long] syllable per foot. Much of Shakespeare’s work, and plenty of other Renaissance verse, was written in iambic meter. The ‘x-meter’ phrase tells us how many iambs occur per line. Pent means 5 – in Sonnet 130 5 iambic feet occur per line, therefore it is written in iambic pentameter. ↩︎
  2. This article https://www.bard.org/study-guides/courtly-love/ may be a useful starting point for more information about Courtly love in Shakespeare ↩︎
  3. A Petrarchan sonnet is made of 1 octave [an 8 line stanza] and 1 sestet [a 6 line stanza]. ↩︎

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