The Poems: Venus and Adonis, The Rape of Lucrece, The Phoenix and the Turtle, The Passionate Pilgrim

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Cambridge University Press, Jan 9, 1992 - Drama - 301 pages
This is a fully annotated edition of all the poems which are now generally regarded as Shakespeare's, excluding The Sonnets. It contains Venus and Adonis, The Rape of Lucrece, The Phoenix and the Turtle, The Passionate Pilgrim, and A Lover's Complaint. The introduction to the two long narrative poems examines their place within the classical and Renaissance European traditions, an issue which also applies to The Phoenix and the Turtle. The Passionate Pilgrim is a miscellany of twenty sonnets and lyrics, containing only five poems which are certain to be Shakespeare's. John Roe analyses the conditions in which the collection was produced, and weighs the evidence for and against Shakespeare's authorship of A Lover's Complaint and the much-debated question of its genre. He demonstrates how in his management of formal tropes Shakespeare, like the best Elizabethans, fashions a living language out of handbook oratory.

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Contents

Introduction
1
Venus and Adonis
3
The Rape of Lucrece
22
The Phoenix and the Turtle
41
The Passionate Pilgrim
54
A Lovers Complaint
61
Note on the text
74
Principles of collation
75
THE RAPE OF LUCRECE
139
THE PHOENIX AND THE TURTLE
231
THE PASSIONATE PILGRIM
237
A LOVERS COMPLAINT
263
Supplementary notes
283
Textual analysis
287
Reading list
299
Copyright

VENUS AND ADONIS
77

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