Statements (54)
Predicate | Object |
---|---|
gptkbp:instance_of |
gptkb:poet
|
gptkbp:bfsLayer |
2
|
gptkbp:bfsParent |
gptkb:Educational_Institution
|
gptkbp:analysis |
Critically acclaimed
|
gptkbp:art_movement |
Renaissance literature
Elizabethan literature Early Modern English literature |
gptkbp:contains_track |
Iambic pentameter
ABABCDCDEFEFGG Couplet at the end Quatrains used Volta present |
gptkbp:critical_reception |
Considered a masterpiece
Widely studied Included in anthologies Analyzed in literary criticism |
gptkbp:cultural_impact |
Referenced in literature
Quoted in speeches Studied in academia Performed in theater Adapted in music |
gptkbp:form |
gptkb:poet
|
gptkbp:historical_context |
Various interpretations exist
Written during the English Renaissance Commonly viewed as a critique of society Examines the passage of time Explores the nature of love and loss Part of the sonnet tradition Reflects Elizabethan values Responds to societal issues of the time Seen as a reflection on personal despair |
https://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#label |
Sonnet 66
|
gptkbp:influence |
Romantic poetry
|
gptkbp:inspiration |
Inspired adaptations
Influenced poets Influenced songwriters Inspired visual art |
gptkbp:language |
English
|
gptkbp:literary_devices |
gptkb:Metaphor
gptkb:Person Imagery |
gptkbp:part_of |
gptkb:Shakespeare's_Sonnets
|
gptkbp:product_line |
gptkb:14
And weep afresh love's long-since-canceled woe. Tired with all these, for restful death I cry. |
gptkbp:published_by |
1609
|
gptkbp:sound |
Cynical
|
gptkbp:subject |
Societal corruption
|
gptkbp:theme |
Disillusionment
|
gptkbp:themes |
gptkb:Beauty
gptkb:Love gptkb:Time Mortality |
gptkbp:written_by |
gptkb:Educational_Institution
|