Venus and Adonis: Difference between revisions

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Although minor epics fell out of fashion long ago, ''Venus and Adonis'' commands appreciation for its dazzling verbal surface, as a piece of fine baroque art. It also lets us see the young Shakespeare exploring love in a way that later yielded his romantic comedies.<ref>Mowat, Barbara A., and Paul Werstine. ''Shakespeare's Sonnets and Poems''. New York: Washington Square, 2006, 2004.</ref>
Although minor epics fell out of fashion long ago, ''Venus and Adonis'' commands appreciation for its dazzling verbal surface, as a piece of fine baroque art. It also lets us see the young Shakespeare exploring love in a way that later yielded his romantic comedies.<ref>Mowat, Barbara A., and Paul Werstine. ''Shakespeare's Sonnets and Poems''. New York: Washington Square, 2006, 2004.</ref>
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== Early editions ==
== Early editions ==

Revision as of 08:17, 30 June 2014

The first of William Shakespeare's poems written as a minor epic, Venus and Adonis launched Shakespeare's career as a poet. The poem is a minor epic, a genre that many poets in the 1590s chose for their first efforts. Characters in a minor epic usually came from the periphery of myth or legend; its interest is in eroticism, sophistication, and wit. Within this genre, Venus and Adonis was so successful that it was Shakespeare's most popular published work throughout his lifetime.

In Ovid's Metamorphoses, the boy hunter Adonis is the willing lover of Venus, the goddess of love, and dies accidentally. Shakespeare has Adonis reject Venus—an ironic and comic development for early readers. Venus endlessly argues for making love, with Adonis uttering petulant protests.

For modern readers who might forget that Venus is a goddess, it is easy to focus on Adonis as the uneasy object of desire by a matron. In its terms, however, the poem is a deliberately artificial retelling of a then-familiar myth, playing with the notion of what would happen if the goddess of love were refused.

Although minor epics fell out of fashion long ago, Venus and Adonis commands appreciation for its dazzling verbal surface, as a piece of fine baroque art. It also lets us see the young Shakespeare exploring love in a way that later yielded his romantic comedies.[1]

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Early editions

Quarto

LUNA: 1599 Quarto
Hamnet: STC 4268 Bd.w. STC 22341.8

Modern editions

Venus and Adonis can be purchased from Simon and Schuster in Shakespeare's Sonnets & Poems.

Hamnet link to Folger Edition: PR2753 .M6 2004 copy 2 v.39

Translations

Other media

Notes

<references>

  1. Mowat, Barbara A., and Paul Werstine. Shakespeare's Sonnets and Poems. New York: Washington Square, 2006, 2004.