Sonnets (Vol. 40) | Rosalie L. Colie (essay date 1974)

Rosalie L. Colie (essay date 1974)

SOURCE: "Mel and Sal: Some Problems in Sonnet-Theory," in Shakespeare 's Living Art, Princeton University Press, 1974, pp. 68-134.

[In the excerpt below, Colie regards Shakespeare's sequence as an exercise in reappraising the conventions and limitations of the traditional sonnet, calling attention to Shakespeare's innovative juxtaposition of mel and sal—sweetness and sharpnessand to his distinctly unconventional decision to address many of his sonnets to a young man rather than a woman.]

Edward Hubler's remark that "sweet" was Shakespeare's favorite epithet59 is in good part true—certainly his contemporaries found his poetry so. Weever, in his Epigrammes, remarked on "honie-tong'd Shakespeare," Meres on the parallel between "mellifluous and honytongued Shakespeare" and Ovid, Barnfield on his "honyflowing Vaine."60 Of course, some of this reference...

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