INTRODUCTION
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2010
Summary
THE CAVE AND THE SUN
Sir Walter Raleigh, who wrote the most human short life of William Shakespeare that we possess, began his section on the Sonnets as follows: ‘There are many footprints around the cave of this mystery, none of them pointing in the outward direction. No one has ever attempted a solution of the problem without leaving a book behind him; and the shrine of Shakespeare is thickly hung with these votive offerings, all withered and dusty.’ Raleigh's cave of mystery calls another to mind, Plato's cave of illusion, in which the human race sit chained with their backs to the sun without, and are condemned to accept the passing shadows on the wall before them for the truth–the real truth being only revealed to the few who are able to break their bonds and turn to face the light of day. Absorbed in our own attempts to solve the biographical puzzles that the individual sonnets offer us, we remain blind to the sun that casts these shadows but gives meaning to the whole. Begin by seeing that meaning and recognizing the whole as the greatest love-poem in the language, and the mystery of the detail becomes so unimportant as to fade away.
That this is the right approach to an understanding, apparently so obvious and so natural, has in point of fact only quite recently been realized; and realized independently and almost simultaneously by two critics, both driven by a wide study of the love-poetry of the Renaissance to admit the uniqueness of Shakespeare's.
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- The SonnetsThe Cambridge Dover Wilson Shakespeare, pp. xiii - cxxiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1966