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Essay on Shakespeare’s Sonnet 73

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Interpretation of Shakespeare’s Sonnet 73



Sonnet 73 is a meditation on mortality, and yet it can be interpreted in a number of ways. The first such interpretation is that the author of the poem is speaking to someone else about his own death that will inevitably come in the future. This interpretation has the poem focused on the author, and his focus and concern over himself. This makes him seem very selfish, because we are all going to die sooner or later, and it does not do any good to dwell on or complain about it. The only use that this interpretation really has is to evoke pity in the author, or the speaker of the Sonnet.



That is why it was this interpretation of Sonnet 73 that was used in a 1996 production of …show more content…

In Shakespeare' case, with all the talk about him and young men, he could be writing about any one of the Earls that he was "involved" with.



Another interpretation of Sonnet #73 is that instead of the Sonnet focusing on death, the theme of the Sonnet is the passing of youth. The Sonnet also twists in its view at the couplet, it goes from being about the speaker's life to the addressee's life. This interpretation is from a note in the June 1948 Explicator. In the article R.M. Lumiansky argues that the "young person to whom the poem is addressed must inevitably grow old and experience those things which the poet says, in the three quatrains, he is experiencing in his old age." So the focus is on the death of youth, and in the Sonnet, using the metaphor of the changing of seasons very adeptly, attributes this characteristic to the speaker, but more poignantly to the person being addressed being as how they are not yet in the fall of their life. In an article by John S. Prince, he says that the key to understanding the Sonnet lies in the interpretation of "that" in the final line of the Sonnet. "The problem with the common interpretation of the Sonnet, which insists on the consistency of the speaker's mortality as the topic, is the grammar of this final clause contradicts it. Why, if the speaker

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