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  2. Sonnet 26 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonnet_26

    Edward Massey and Sidney Lee, among others, accept the connection between sonnet and dedication; among the skeptics are Thomas Tyler, Nicolaus Delius, and Hermann Isaac. [ citation needed ] More specific arguments have been made that the poem's similarities to the Venus dedications indicate that the poem was written to Southampton.

  3. Sonnet 58 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonnet_58

    Modern critics accept that the poems were addressed to a young man, and they view the language of class in the sequence from 56–59 in terms of a complex dynamic of class difference and desire. The speaker's metaphoric description of love as enslavement is complicated and enriched by the fact that here, the speaker is literally as well as ...

  4. Shakespeare apocrypha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shakespeare_apocrypha

    The Shakespeare apocrypha is a group of plays and poems that have sometimes been attributed to William Shakespeare, but whose attribution is questionable for various reasons. The issue is not to be confused with the debate on Shakespearean authorship , which questions the authorship of the works traditionally attributed to Shakespeare.

  5. Apocrypha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apocrypha

    The word apocrypha has undergone a major change in meaning throughout the centuries. The word apocrypha in its ancient Christian usage originally meant a text read in private, rather than in public church settings. In English, it later came to have a sense of the esoteric, suspicious, or heretical, largely because of the Protestant ...

  6. File:Apocrypha-and-Pseudepigrapha-Charles-A.pdf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Apocrypha-and-Pseud...

    Original file (1,320 × 1,906 pixels, file size: 61.8 MB, MIME type: application/pdf, 712 pages) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.

  7. Biblical apocrypha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biblical_apocrypha

    The Anglican Communion accepts "the Apocrypha for instruction in life and manners, but not for the establishment of doctrine (Article VI in the Thirty-Nine Articles)", [13] and many "lectionary readings in The Book of Common Prayer are taken from the Apocrypha", with these lessons being "read in the same ways as those from the Old Testament". [14]

  8. Gospel of James - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gospel_of_James

    Annunciation to Joachim and Anna, fresco by Gaudenzio Ferrari, 1544–45 (detail). The Gospel of James (or the Protoevangelium of James) [Note 1] is a second-century infancy gospel telling of the miraculous conception of the Virgin Mary, her upbringing and marriage to Joseph, the journey of the couple to Bethlehem, the birth of Jesus, and events immediately following.

  9. Apocryphon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apocryphon

    Apocryphon ("secret writing"), plural apocrypha, was a Greek term for a genre of Jewish and Early Christian writings that were meant to impart "secret teachings" or gnosis (knowledge) that could not be publicly taught. Jesus briefly withheld his messianic identity from the public. [1]