Title - I think the title "White Daw" is related to animals. The only way I heard the word dodo is because it is in the background of a female. Perhaps this verse will touch the innocence of animals and circumstances. Because the word "white" symbolizes innocence and cleanliness. Interpretation - In this verse "The White Doe", the author talks about encounter with a female. This encounter occurred in the plaza of the forest.
Petrarch's Rime 190 represents a mistress impossible to realize through the image of "White Dough" (1), but Wyatt's "title" (1) represents his own love. That is the purpose of desire that can not be approached. Petrack uses the word "white" to describe a deer meaning "Candida" literally in Italian, but this word strongly suggests purity and purity. Therefore, the explanation of court hunting and court love clearly shows that danger. Wyatt also changed the honest deer of the Petrarch version into a more ethical animal. By using the original contents of Sonnet in his favor, Wyatt certainly guarantees that his poem will act as a translator on the surface while expressing his own message.
Francesco Petrarca, known in English as Petrarch, is an Italian scholar, poet and one of the first Renaissance humanists. Petrarch is often called "father of humanitarianism". In the 16th century, Pietrobenbo created a model of modern Italy based on Petrarch's work and works by Giovanni Boccaccio, especially Dante Alighieri. This will be recognized later by Accademia de la Cruca. In the Renaissance era, his sonnet was praised in Europe, imitated, and became a model of poetry of lyrics. Petrarch was also one of the first people mentioned in the dark era.
In the early stages of Italian Rinascimento (Renaissance), Francesco Petrarch (1304-1374) showed real humanism. Petrarch's view is influenced by his understanding of his love and secular perspectives on the classical Roman world. This religion is not mundane, and it does not exist at all. Secular is meant to be inherently not religious. Prior to the 18th century, secularism was also called secularism. The difference between secular classics and contemporary classics is that Petrarcha emphasizes that research on humanity and human achievement does not rule out religion.
Francsco Petrarca, also known as Petrarch in English, was born in Arezzo in Central Italy at the dawn of 20 July 1304 in southern Florence. Petrarch, a businessman and a notary public son of Ser Petracco, studied law with his elder at Montpellier in France in 1316 and then studied laws in Bologna, Italy. But his main interest is latin literature and writing. After his father died in 1326, Petrarch abandoned the law completely and later insisted that "I can not face the manufacture of my item." Literary research