"A Certain Text": Close Readings and Textual Studies on Shakespeare and Others in Honor of Thomas ClaytonThis collection takes its title from 'Romeo and Juliet' (4.1.21.) when, meeting Paris in Friar Lawrence's cell, Juliet muses, What must be shall be, and the Friar completes her line with, That's a certain text. Where text means a received truth both Friar Lawrence and Clayton are interested skeptics. This essays gathered here reflect this attitude, questioning received ideas about the activities to which Clayton has devoted his professional life- literary editing and the close reading of literary works. |
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Page 114
... voice that dares assert how true love can be.8 Despite the first - person pro- nouns at the opening and close of the sonnet , however , the overall point of view is impersonal ; it is more general declaration than specific testimony.9 ...
... voice that dares assert how true love can be.8 Despite the first - person pro- nouns at the opening and close of the sonnet , however , the overall point of view is impersonal ; it is more general declaration than specific testimony.9 ...
Page 117
... voice by seeing the sonnet as a represen- tation of a single speaker's " decisive changes of mind about the experience it treats " ( 550 ) , but her exploration pays careful at- tention to how the impersonal mode is key in creating a ...
... voice by seeing the sonnet as a represen- tation of a single speaker's " decisive changes of mind about the experience it treats " ( 550 ) , but her exploration pays careful at- tention to how the impersonal mode is key in creating a ...
Page 163
... voice " of this translation . Again , there is space here only to sample : To bend a man now , at his fiftieth year , Too stubborn for commands so slack : Go where youth's soft entreaties call thee back . More timely hie thee to the ...
... voice " of this translation . Again , there is space here only to sample : To bend a man now , at his fiftieth year , Too stubborn for commands so slack : Go where youth's soft entreaties call thee back . More timely hie thee to the ...
Contents
Acknowledgments | 7 |
Modernizing the Printed PlayText in Jacobean | 18 |
The Dram of Eale | 29 |
Copyright | |
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A 'Certain Text': Close Readings and Textual Studies on Shakespeare and ... Linda Anderson,Janis Lull No preview available - 2002 |
Common terms and phrases
ablaut actor Æsir ANATOLY LIBERMAN appear Bardolph beauty Ben Jonson Buckingham Caius ceremonial Christian classical Clayton compositor defective double business dram dram of eale drinking dvergr dwarf dwarves dwezg echoes editor English etymology exit Falstaff flower Folio Germanic ghosts Greg Hamlet Hebrew Bible Hecuba Herrick Herrick's poem Hesperides Horace Horace's Horatian imagines impersonal Israelites Jewish Jews Jonson Kate Katherine King King's Leviticus lines literary lord lyric means metaphor modern Mucedorus Nashe Nashe's Noble Numbers noble substance offer Oxford pagan peasant slave Petruccio phrase play poet prayer present quarto reprints rhotacism Richard Richard III ritual rogue and peasant sacrifice says scene seems sense servants Shakespeare Shrew Sir John Suckling Slender soliloquy Song Sonnet 94 soul sour speech spelling spirit stage directions Stephen Booth suggests sweet thee thing thou tion Tom Clayton translation University Press visage wine word worship Zwerg