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Shakespeare Sonnet 18 Comparison

Decent Essays

In this paper we will be analyzing and comparing some of Shakespeare’s famously known sonnets. William Shakespeare was an English poet, playwright and actor. He was widely referenced as the greatest English writer. I will start this paper giving you a brief summary of each sonnet individually, secondly I will then compare the sonnets drawing in on their similarities, and third I will then draw in on their differences.

William Shakespeare’s Sonnet 18 I would say is his best known and famous sonnets. It’s probably the most straight- forward as far as the language is concerned compared to his other work. In this poem he/the speaker is praising his loved one. He starts by questioning himself of comparing her to a summer’s day making it clear …show more content…

Sonnet 116 is about love and defining love. The poet praises lovers that have come together willingly and have found ways to let themselves fall into a relationship with one another. The beginning four lines reveal how the poet feels about love. He makes it clear that he believes that true love will continuously preserver, despite any obstacles. He defines love by telling you what love is not. By telling you that love is forever constant, even when circumstances and people change “love is not love which alters when it alteration finds or bends with the remover to remove”. Love isn’t something that comes and goes but yet eternal and an unchanging constant. He believes this to be so much he compares love to the north start, because it never moves in the sky and guides one home “it is the star to every wandering bark, whose worth’s unknown although his height be taken”. Finally, In the last couplet he states that from what he knows and believes love to be an irremovable nature. That nothing can change true love, real love lives forever “love is not times fool though rosy lips and cheeks within his compass come, love alters not with brief passing hours and weeks”. And says if what he believes is not true about love then no man has ever loved at all “if this be error and upon me proved I never writ, no man ever loved”. Over all this poem is all about defining what love is and is not and what it should be through what the speakers believe it should be.

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