Appreciation of Spencer's 75 love sonnets

I. Appreciation

The use of images is the biggest highlight of the whole poem.

Metaphor and the echo of sensory perception of ocean movement present a fascinating scene for readers.

The poet creatively raised the question of love and answered the puzzles of lovers. True love is eternal.

Spencer's uniqueness is fully reflected in the use of rhetorical devices such as metaphor and personification juxtaposition structure.

The poet put forward a question about love through appropriate metaphor and found a successful solution.

The poem describes a man who wrote his lover's name on the beach by the sea, but his handwriting was washed away by the waves.

Man is competing with the sea.

The lover mocked his futility and wanted to turn worldly things into eternity, saying that one day she would disappear like a name washed away by the sea and death was inevitable.

The man skillfully answered the lover's question with the sentence at the end of the poem.

The poet thinks that the virtue of a girl will be preserved in his poems and everything will die. Only their love will be passed down from generation to generation.

"Our love will last forever." Perhaps the poet hinted that he and his lover would combine to raise children, so that their love would be passed on endlessly.

You got eternity.

Believing that poetry has immortal power has become one of the themes widely used in the Renaissance.

Here, the poet adopted a universal image: the ebb and flow of the tide symbolizes human life, and the cycle of birth, aging, illness and death is not a fixed and unchangeable thing.

Tide is the source of life, and the words written by people are swallowed up by the sea, which means that people must abide by the law of life cycle.

But the only constant is the love between the hero and heroine, because poetry makes it eternal.

Spencer compared the death of conquering the world, the embodiment of the sea, to a "beast looking for food". It easily turned a man's handwriting on the beach into a "prayer" and the handwriting was swallowed up by the waves.

Second, the original text:

Sonnet 75

Edmund spenser Spencer

One day, I wrote her name on the beach, and I intend to carve it on the beach.

But the waves came and washed it away: how could the tide disappear at once?

I wrote it in the second hand and kept writing it over and over again.

But here comes Ted. Let my Payne pray. The evil waves are rolling in, and the merits are boundless.

"Vayneman," she said, "in Vaine analysis, the Iraqis laughed at me for being stupid.

An immortal thing, "trying to make everything immortal,

Because if I like this decay myself, my body is still dead,

Watching my name torn to pieces. "Can the fine print stay in the sand?"

"That's not true," quodi said. "Let the meaner things split," and the rest will be at the expense of worldly things.

Die in the dust, but you will live by fame: only your fame is in harmony with heaven,

My poem Your harp is rare and will last forever. This poem is preserved because of its greatness.

Write your glorious name in heaven. Let the world know your name.

Where there is death, there is the world, and everything will return to dust.

Our love will last forever, and the afterlife will be renewed. "This love has come back to life."