The Phoenix and Turtle (Vol. 38) | Brian Green (essay date 1980)

Brian Green (essay date 1980)

SOURCE: "'Single Natures Double Name': An Exegesis of The Phoenix and Turtle," in Generous Converse: English Essays in Memory of Edward Davis, edited by Brian Green, Oxford University Press, Cape Town, 1980, pp. 44-54.

[In the following excerpt, Green explicates The Phoenix and Turtle, calling it a love-elegy that muses on three attitudes toward sexual love: "the vulgar, the sublime, and the chaste. "]

Roman Jakobson once called The Phoenix and Turtle 'Shakespeare's masterpiece'.1 The poem is quite an astonishing one, a perplexing love-elegy, traditional and yet obscure. In the reading which follows, the poem dramatizes a critical view of two contrary kinds of sexual love. One is selfish and degrading; the other is sterile, cautious, and dogmatic. The poem implies a criticism of both these attitudes, and hints at an ideal of love, the due of a woman who is both chaste and...

[The entire page is 3975 words long]

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