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Reviews for 1956

 1956 magazine reviews

The average rating for 1956 based on 2 reviews is 3.5 stars.has a rating of 3.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2020-02-10 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 3 stars Anthony BARTROP
Bullett, in the introduction, notes that “Surrey’s distinctive and historically most important achievement was the inivention of the English blank verse, the medium in which Shakespeare’s and Milton’s masterpieces were to be written.” Frankly, I wasn’t aware of the source of such an important innovation. That fact alone would make this collection worthy of study. You can see the kernel of Shakespeare in lines such as the following: Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey – “Poems of Love and Chivalry” From “XVII – A Lady Complains of Her Lover’s Absence” When other lovers, in arms across, Rejoice their chief delight, Drowned in tears, to mourn my loss, I stand the bitter night In my window, where I may see Before the winds how the clouds flee: Lo, what a mariner love that made of me! Sir Thomas Wyatt, a contemporary of Surrey’s, wrote remarkably beautiful poetry “Songs and Lyrics”. One can hear the rhythm and rhyming sequences even when simply reading. My favorite two included in this collection are: “XLI” If chance assign’d Were to my mind By very kind Of destiny, Yet would I crave Nought else to have But life and liberty. Then were I sure I might endure The displeasure Of cruelty: Where now I plain, Alas, in vain, Lacking my life for liberty. For without the one The other is gone, Ad there can none It remedy: If the one be past The other doth waste, And all for lack of liberty. And so I drive, As yet alive, Although I strive With misery: Drawing my breath, Looking for death And loss of life for liberty. But thou that still Mayst at thy will Turn all this ill Adversity: For the repair Of my welfare Grant me but life and liberty. And if not so, Then let all go To wretched woe, And let me die: For the one or the other, There is none other: My death, or life with liberty. “LXX” The knot which first my heart did strain, When that your servant I became, Doth bind me still for to remain Always your own as now I am. And if you find that I do feign, With just judgment myself I damn, To have disdain. If other thought in me do grow But still to love you steadfastly, If that the proof do not well show That I am yours assuredly, Let every wealth turn me to woe And you to be continually My chiefest foe. If other love or new request Do seize my heart but ony this, Or if within my wearied breast Be hid one thought that means amiss, I do desire that mine unrest May still increase, and I to miss That I love best. If in my love there be one spot Of false deceit or doubleness, Or if I mind to slip this knot By want of faith or steadfastness, Let all my service be forgot And when I would have chief redress Esteem me not. But if that I consume in pain Of burning sighs and fervent love And daily seek none other gain But with my deed these words to prove, Methink of right I should obtain That ye would mind for to remove Your great disdain. And for the end of this my song, Unto your hands I do submit My deadly grief and pains to strong Which in my heart be firmly shut, And when ye list, redress my wrong, Since well ye know this painful fit Hat last too long. Sir Philip Sidney’s masterful “Astrophel and Stella” is included in this volume. There are many quotable lines, some of my favorite and quite representative would be: “XLVIII” Soul’s joy, bend not those morning stars from me Where Virtue is made strong by Beauty’s might: Where Love is chasteness Pain doth learn delight, And Humbleness grows one with Majesty. Whatever may ensue, O let me be Co-partner of the riches of that sight. Let not mine eyes be hell-driv’n from that light: O look, O shine, O let me die, and see. For though I oft myself of them bemoan That through the heart their beamy darts be gone Whose cureless wounds even now most freshly bleed, Yet since my death-wound is already got, Dear killer, spare not they sweet-cruel shot: A kind of grace it is to slay with speed. Additionally, Sir Walter Ralegh’s poetry is included. “Petition to Anne of Denmark” includes ringing lines such as “Even such is Time”: Even such is Time, that takes in trust Our youth, our joys, our all we have, And pays us but with earth and dust; Who, in the dark and silent grave, When we have wandered all our ways, Shuts up the story of our days. But from this earth, this grave this dust, My God shall raise me up, I trust. In general, this is a remarkable collection. I would highly recommend any lover of literature to read this volume of the early poetry that so heavily influenced the later letters of western civilization. See my other reviews here!
Review # 2 was written on 2021-01-02 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 4 stars Brian Kearney
Great analysis! It mixes History, Sociology and theory of International Relations to help you understand the concept of "international society" and how it was applied to all known international systems. The analysis of the European System, in particular, is amazing.


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