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  1. Sonnet Of The Sweet Complaint’ by Federico Garcia Lorca is a fourteen-line sonnet that has been separated into four stanzas by the poet. The first two stanzas contain four lines and can be referred to as quatrains. The second and third stanzas contain three, making them tercets.

  2. Analysis (ai): This sonnet explores the speaker's intense yearning for a beloved, expressing fear of losing their connection. The imagery of a statue and a rose creates a sense of both permanence and fragility.

  3. sonnet of the sweet complaint. Never let me lose the marvel of your statue-like eyes, or the accent the solitary rose of your breath places on my cheek at night. I am afraid of being, on this shore, a branchless trunk, and what I most regret is having no flower, pulp, or clay for the worm of my despair.

  4. Paul Archer has translated into English Lorca's Sonetos del Amor Oscuro, Sonnets of Dark Love. Please click on the titles further down this page to read the poems. The sequence of poems were written in 1935, inspired by Lorca's love affair with Rafael Rodriguez Rapún.

  5. Federico García Lorca. Sonnet of the Sweet Complaint. Never let me lose the marvel. of your statue-like eyes, or the accent. the solitary rose of your breath. places on my cheek at night. I am afraid of being, on this shore, a branchless trunk, and what I most regret. is having no flower, pulp, or clay.

  6. May 13, 2011 · In 2008, a Spanish judge opened an investigation into Lorca's death. The García Lorca family eventually dropped objections to the excavation of a potential gravesite near Alfacar.

  7. May 13, 2011 · An analysis of the Sonnet of the Sweet Complaint poem by Federico García Lorca including schema, poetic form, metre, stanzas and plenty more comprehensive statistics.