Sonnets 153 and 154

Item

Title
Sonnets 153 and 154
Description
The following transcription of Demorest's annotations was selected and transcribed by Casper College student and Archives staff member Grace MacPherson in February of 2024.

SONNET 153
In myth of Venus + Adonis, Venus is wounded by one of arrows of her son Cupid and falls in love with Adonis. Then she roams disguised as Diana. Wild boar wounds him
John Clerk Bish. of Bath + Wells was among defenders of Cath. of Arag.
S. trying to leave country–can’t
153–needs cure for illness
154–love not extinguished
Bath–subversive action?
Dian = Bath goddess

SONNET 154
Essex dead ’04
Letter from Essex to Eliz. protesting her intentional destruction of him in Ireland
This is the summary: the true “conclusion”
Blood Bath? Southwell poem–Burning Babe “So will I melt into a bath to wash them in my blood.” [This is a line from the poem “The Burning Babe” by Robert Southwell; the speaker is the infant Christ.]
If the brand is his birth–perhaps he really is the secret son–bro to Essex and Bacon? [Essex and Bacon were not brothers, though they were acquainted through Elizabeth’s court.]
Cupid–like Stubbes–loses the hand that love held
But–one hand gone–he still loves her
Subject
Shakespeare, William, -- 1564-1616 -- Sonnets; Sonnets, English -- History and criticism
Is Part Of
Margaret Demorest Papers, CCA 10.2011.1. Casper College Archives and Special Collections.
Date Created
1968
Language
Primarily English; some Latin
Format
PDF
Identifier
CCA 10.2011.01._Sonnets_149_150