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Farewell Love Sir. Thomas Wyatt

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1 Farewell Love Sir. Thomas Wyatt
Esra AlJuhani Naema Alsharekh Sara Alqahtani Hawra’a Muhsin Maram

2 Farewell Love Farewell, Love, and all thy laws for ever:  Thy baited hooks shall tangle me no more.  Senec and Plato call me from thy lore,  To perfect wealth my wit for to endeavour.  In blind error when I did persever,  Thy sharp repulse, that pricketh aye so sore,  Hath taught me to set in trifles no store,  And scape forth, since liberty is lever.  Therefore farewell, go trouble younger hearts,  And in me claim no more authority;  With idle youth go use thy property,  And thereon spend thy many brittle darts.  For, hitherto though I've lost my time,  Me lusteth no longer rotten boughs to climb

3 Meanings thy- your thee- you lore- Knowledge persever –repeat
trifle-worthless brittle-weak lusteth -lust Thereon- from now on

4 Analysis Farewell, Love, and all thy laws for ever:  Thy baited hooks shall tangle me no more.  Senec and Plato call me from thy lore,  To perfect wealth my wit for to endeavor goodbye for love and all its laws forever. Love is not going to catch him He is not going to be an easy target He uses Seneca and Plato for (ALLUSION) The virtue is a man control his desire. The higher level is (reason) ,the lower level is (impulse). In blind error when I did persever,  Thy sharp repulse, that pricketh aye so sore,  Hath taught me to set in trifles no store,  And scape forth, since liberty is lever He is regretting that he was contrled by his emotions and this is a blind mistake, he admits that he insisted on his mistake by following his love. The pain he got from his love taught him not to be trifle. the pain taught him not to look at the silly things as love .

5 Therefore farewell, go trouble younger hearts,  And in me claim no more authority;  With idle youth go use thy property,  And thereon spend thy many brittle darts.  He is saying good bye to love. Love has no more authority on him now. He is controlled by reason. He asks love to go and use its hook to catch younger hearts. For, hitherto though I've lost my time,  Me lusteth no longer rotten boughs to climb Although he has lost time, now he has no desire to climb rotten trees. He is going to perfect his wit, he is going to learn more and more.

6 Images “Farewell Love” (personification “Baited hooks” (metaphor)
“Thy Baited hooks” (metaphor) “In blind error when I did persever” (metaphor) He uses his own culture (he is referring to Cupid the god of love in Greek mythology and his arrows of love)

7 Mood in My Galley the speaker knows that he has to be controlled by reason, his reason is drowned; it doesn’t exist anymore. But here the speaker knows that reason is the solution. He knows where he is going and he has made a decision; the poem here is decisive (He is going to educate and empower his reason

8 Theme The main theme is : Trial of romantic love .
The theme of this poem is love . When the poet falls in love , he becomes blind ( more of moral blindness ) so, love is insecure for him. Then he talks about his decision to leave his beloved and go to another world , which is the world of knowledge Sonnet: Italian , octave ( 8 line stanza ) , sestet ( 6 lines stanza ) Stanza = rhyme scheme for numbers of lines . Meter: Iambic pentameter ( consisting of an unrhymed line with five feet )

9 Tone Wyatt uses a lot of soft sounds like soft Os and Es. This allows the poem to move from line to line without much haste except for the given punctuation. The softer sound goes with the softer peaceful message of Farewell, Love

10 Rhyme Scheme a b b a a b b a c d d c e e
Rhyme Scheme is the pattern in which the last to words in lines of poetry rhyme. Rhyming lines are recorded with letters. The first two lines that rhyme would be A; the next two would be B; and so on. The rhyming lines do not have to come right after another.

11 Meter The meter : the poem is written in iambic pentameter. and we can noticed that in some words such as farewell/, love, and/ all thy/ laws for/ ever .

12 Form Thomas Wyatt was the first one to use the Italian forms of the sonnet . The Italian form, in some ways the simpler of the two, usually projects and develops a subject in the octave, then executes a turn at the beginning of the sestet, which means that the sestet must in some way release the tension built up in the octave . In this poem he used thePetrarchan sonnet , named after Francesco Petrarch the Italian poet .

13 Form And it consists of fourteen lines break into an octave (or octet), which usually rhymes Abba Abba , we can find this in the first eight lines . And the sestet, which may rhyme CDD CEE , we can find this in the last six lines .

14 Any Questions?

15

16 Refrences: www.poetryfoundation.org lfa.utsa.edu/english
Source: Poetry Criticism, ©2000 Gale Cengage


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