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  1. T

    t by the Italian sonnets, which had been introduced into the English language by Sir Thomas Wyatt (1503-1542) during the reign of Henry VIII, English poets began

  2. History Of The Sonnet And History Of Shakespeare

    the sonnet style grew so popular that centuries later, poets all over Europe were composing sonnets. The Italian sonnet that Petrarch used was probably invented by

  3. Wyatt

    sonnet cycle of a number of poems in other forms, including canzoni, madrigali, and ballate. The Italian texts are from Le Rime di Francesco Petrarca, ed. Giovanni

  4. Italian Renaissance Humanism In Art

    the use of characters. His most famous contributions to the world of literature were his string of sonnets addressed to ALaura,@ who appeared to be a real person

  5. Elizabethan Poetry

    who exerted the greatest influence over sixteenth-century English poetry was of course also an Italian, Francesco Petrarca (Francis Petrarch). Wyatt's "The long love

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T

Submitted by antdi on March 23, 2007

Category: Social Issues
Words: 545 | Pages: 3
Views: 276
Popularity Rank: 49,100
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by the Italian sonnets, which had been introduced into the English language by Sir Thomas Wyatt (1503-1542) during the reign of Henry VIII, English poets began to construct their own variations on the intricate, highly structured poetic form. Others, such as Edmund Spenser (1552-1599) in his extraordinarily ambitious poem of homage to gags for the peasant "groundlings" who stood at the foot of the stage, scenes of action and intrigue for the middle class spectators, or elevated language and characters to appeal to the more educated upper class citizens who sat in the tiered galleries around the outdoor stage.

Source 2 http://www.enotes.com/william-shakespeare/shakespeares-globe-theater

But while the Globe Theatre, and indeed, the entire Elizabethan theater scene opened its doors to the low life of the pits, it also accommodated an audience of higher-status, well-heeled, and better educated individuals. As Harry Levin notes in his general introduction to the Riverside Shakespeare (1974), the "Globe was truly a microcosm or little world of man". With its logo of Hercules holding up the earth (as a temporary replacement to Atlas), the Globe Theatre constituted a "little world" in which the social elite rubbed up against a cross-section of common vulgarians, drunken idlers, and other shady, street-wise sorts.

Source 3 http://www.springfield.k12.il.us/schools/springfield/eliz/costumes.html

The thrust stage may Accurate information concerning the clothes worn in the earliest production of Shakespeare plays is sadly deficient. Even in a play set in ancient Rome, the actors wore the dress of their own time.
English dress during the age of Shakespeare reflected the vitality and the high points of the period. Although the upper class and the even great merchants of earlier eras had also dressed in rich and colorful fabrics, the sixteenth century saw an elaboration in dress that had nor been common. The...

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