Literary Analysis Of Sir Thomas Wyatt's Poetry

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Sir Thomas Wyatt is credited as one of the first poets to bring the sonnet form into English literature, a form in which the speaker’s sincerity for, most commonly, a distant mysterious woman whom he loves, is believed to be the focal point of the poetry. From the selection of works which Wyatt wrote we can see many point in which the focal point is seemingly the earnestness of his love for his muse as authenticated by what he states in the poem itself. However, there is a sense of underlying meaning throughout his works which the reader must tease out themselves to see that that in fact is the focal point of his poetry. In many ways Wyatt’s poetry can be considered sincere as what is stated in the poem is genuine, however, it does so in a …show more content…

The sincerity that is shown to the reader can be seen in the use of the classic Petrarchan tropes found in Wyatt’s poem. For example, his use of opposites to convey the strength of his love such as the idea that she taught his to both ‘love and suffer’, or the idea that he shall both ‘live and die’ due to his love for the mysterious ‘she’. The use of these well-known sonnet tropes allows for the readers at the time of the poems creation to immediately understand that the poem is in fact a sincere display of the writer’s affection for his muse. This is because this was the norm in sonnet writing forms and were used to display the agonising sensation of the speaker’s feelings of loving a woman who is too distant for him to reach out right. However, from the perspective of a contemporary reader we may view this poem in another way. In the poem we can see that the ‘she’ in the poem is much more distant that other renderings of the poem, such as in Surrey’s translation of the poem as well as the original by Petrarch, which allows for the poem to focus much more on the speaker than the object of his affections. For example throughout the poem we can clearly see Wyatt’s use of words such as ‘me’, ‘mine’ and ‘my’ allows the reader to focus purely on the speaker and the way in which they

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