Shakespeare’s sonnet 130, “My mistress’ eyes are nothing like the sun” and Pablo Neruda’s “My ugly love” are popularly known to describe beauty in a way hardly anyone would write: through the truth. It’s a common fact that modern lovers and poets speak or write of their beloved with what they and the audience would like to hear, with kind and breathtaking words and verses. Yet, Shakespeare and Neruda, honest men as they both were, chose to write about what love truly is, it matters most what’s on the inside rather than the outside. The theme of true beauty and love are found through Shakespeare and Neruda’s uses of imagery, structure, and tone.…
"shall I compare thee to a summer's day" the man says in Shakespeare's sonnet. these two text are similar and different the difference is setting narrator am theme is the two difference.…
Shakespeare’s sonnet, My Mistress’ Eyes, explores the common and oft-heard comparisons created concerning one’s love to the material objects of beauty, and considers the value within such correlations. As the essay explores these associations, it ultimately comes to the conclusion that such comparisons can not properly depict the love that is present towards a close other.…
Many poems can convey am attitude of the poet towards the subject of the poem. William Shakespeare’s “Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day?” shows the poets high regard of the subject’s beauty. The regard is portrayed through the alternating cacophonous and euphonious diction. The sonnet form helps express the poet’s regard toward the subject’s beauty. The literary device of metaphor aids in depicting the poet’s regard of the subject’s beauty as well.…
"Sonnet 130" compares William Shakespeare’s mistress to typical, natural beauty; each time drawing attention to his mistress’ obvious imperfections. He addresses her as if she cannot compare to the ideal appearances women are expected to look like in that of the natural world. The comparisons Shakespeare addresses highlight aspects of nature, such as snow (3)or coral (2) yet; each comparison proves to be unflatteringly about his mistress. However, in the final rhyming couplet, Shakespeare claims his love for his mistress by professing; that even though his mistresses has a great deal of flaws, he accepts them and loves her as much as any man could love a woman. In Shakespeare's, "Sonnet 130" he illustrates a true depiction of his mistress by emphasizing her flaws instead of her beauties, which provides emphasis on his sincere adoration and unconditional love for her through the line, "And yet, by heaven, I think my love as rare" (13).…
backed up by the text (i.e. quotes, paraphrasing, analysis of literary devices and story elements,…
Within Shakespeare's poem “My Mistress’ Eye Are Nothing Like The Sun”, Shakespeare essentially describes his mistress as an ugly abomination, with “wired” hair and dull lips, compared to the rest of society. Basically, Shakespeare make it seem as if the speaker's mistress has no redeeming qualities that any other women could have. The speaker compares her physical attributes to the ‘beauty’ of nature, but rather than providing imagery for the audience that allows them to picture a beautiful woman, he provides imagery comparing her most basic attributes to unwanted items.…
William Shakespeare is well known for his unique style of writing, and really changed the tone of romantic poetry with his sonnet “My mistress’ eyes are nothing like the sun”. He wanted the readers to see a different side of what beauty was he wanted them to see a more realistic view of a women. In the 1600 time frame the writers made women seems so prefect and angelic; which is not at all the way most women really look. Shakespeare seems to want the reader to look at the true mean of love not the physical aspects of beauty which will fade in time. Shakespeare’s use of sarcasm, imagery, and satire brings a twist to his theme, which points out not all women are as beautiful…
The sonnet, being one of the most traditional and recognized forms of poetry, has been used and altered in many time periods by writers to convey different messages to the audience. The strict constraints of the form have often been used to parallel the subject in the poem. Many times, the first three quatrains introduce the subject and build on one another, showing progression in the poem. The final couplet brings closure to the poem by bringing the main ideas together. On other occasions, the couplet makes a statement of irony or refutes the main idea with a counter statement. It leaves the reader with a last impression of what the author is trying to say. Shakespeare's "Sonnet 65" is one example of Shakespearian sonnet form and it works with the constraints of this structure to question how one can escape the ravages of time on love and beauty. Shakespeare shows that even the objects in nature least vulnerable to time like brass, stone, and iron are mortal and eventually are destroyed. Of course the more fragile aspects of nature will die if these things do. The final couplet gives hope and provides a solution to the dilemma of time by having the author overcome mortality with his immortal writings.…
He professes his love for her in this sonnet by making her beauty timeless, and it’s a more “traditional” love poem. Also it’s more about time and making her beauty “immortal” whereas “My Mistress’ Eyes are Nothing Like the Sun” is more about his love, and it is a very “non-traditional” poem when it comes to love poems. He doesn’t refer to his “mistress” as beautiful; in fact, he portrays her as plain, and this is unlike most love poems which often talk about how beautiful the loved people are. Shakespeare breaks this tradition, and when one first reads the poem, one may wonder, “How is this a love poem”? In the end though, Shakespeare explains that no matter what his mistress looks like, he loves her wholly and unconditionally whereas in the end of “Shall I Compare thee to a summer’s day?” he states that by creating this poem, he’s making her and her beauty last…
She is also not as beautiful as things found in nature, "My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun;” “Coral is far more red than her lips' red." Yet the narrator loves her nonetheless and in the closing couplet says that in fact she is just as extraordinary ("rare") as any woman described with such exaggerated or false comparisons…
Conclusion. Conclude your essay with a paragraph in which you summarize what you have said.…
This poem is a parody to the Petrarchan sonnets. The denotative meaning of parody is a humorous or satirical imitation of a piece of literature or writing (Dictionary.com), and that is exactly what he does here. Shakespeare’s goal was to “poke fun” at the love poems of his time. Petrarchan poems used worn out clichés such as “eyes like the sun” and “skin as white as snow”. I am guessing that Shakespeare was tired of hearing unreal comparisons of women to things in nature. As the last line of the sonnet states “As any she belied with false compare”. He wrote this sonnet to give a realistic comparison of a beautiful woman, without all of the exaggeration and allusions used in Petrarchan sonnets.…
“And yet, by heaven, I think my love as rare…”, from William Shakespeare’s Sonnet 130 (13). This is one of his most well-known sonnets and it also happens to be one of my favorite poems of all time. Shakespeare does not use words to falsify his mistress’ image; however, he uses them to tell the reality of her. This is what makes his love for her so special. She does not have to be perfect or even seem close to it for him to feel as he does about her. The use of diction, figurative language, and imagery in William Shakespeare’s Sonnet 130 reveal the narrator’s true love for his mistress despite her flaws.…
Shakespeare's poems are the monument of a remarkable genius but they are also the monuments of a remarkable age. The greatness of Shakespeare's achievement was largely made possible by the work of his immediate predecessors, Sidney and Spenser.…