Shakespeare then personifies the sky as he compares Juliet's beauty to a star that "hangs upon the cheek of night". By using personification, the audience can understand the trance that has captured Romeo. Shakespeare constantly mentions the contrast between light and dark. He also says the she is 'Like a rich Jewel in an Ethiop's ear'. This shows how Juliet stands out compared with all of the other girls including Rosaline. By using this simile, Shakespeare introduces an aspect of valuableness to love; the jewel to a poor African would be very treasurable and if he's not careful then the jewel or Juliet could be lost forever or tarnished.…
As an avid reader I enjoy different types of books. A Thousand Splendid Suns written by Khaled Hosseini is one of my favorite books because of its accurate depiction of Afghanistan after the defeat of the Soviet invasion. Unlike the Hosseini story of The Kite Runner, A Thousand Splendid Suns focuses on the difficulties that women in Afghanistan faced when the Taliban came to power. The story revolves around two women with a substantial age difference and the personal pain they suffer in their marriages to the same husband. Hosseini portrays the change in Afghanistan for women when the Taliban came to power and the strict rules they had to abide by.…
The imagery portrayed in both Shakespeare and Neruda’s sonnet share the juxtaposition between negative and positive imagery. Still, Neruda’s sonnet constantly interchanges negative and positive verses more than Shakespeare does. For instance, the first quatrain of Neruda’s sonnet perfectly portrays the mentioned juxtaposition with “My ugly, you’re a messy chestnut. My beauty, you are pretty as the wind. Ugly: your mouth is big enough for two mouths. Beauty: your kisses are as fresh as melons.” This imagery, in addition, involves two famous types of poetic devices: metaphor and simile. It’s intriguing to see that the metaphors are used to describe the ugly, while the similes are used for the beauty. These two devices add on to our understanding as readers to see that with the metaphors for the ugly is meant to make us see an over exaggerated view of the speaker’s reality in regards to his beloved and the similes for the beauty is meant for us to see what the speaker really sees because he is in love. In contrast, Shakespeare’s sonnet twice as much negative, but honest imagery within the three quatrains. The first quatrain serves as the ideal example of the concept, “My mistress’ eyes are nothing like the sun; Coral is far more red than her lips’ red; If snow be white,…
verbal news of Romeo's weddingplans, thenundercutsthe blason's hyperboles witha variationinprose: "Romeo! no, nothe. Thoughhis facebe better…
He illustrates the love as a “fixed mark” a metaphor to the North Star which can never be shaken. “Loves not Times fool, though rosy lips and cheeks” acknowledges that time has the power to change the human body but the love will not be undermined. According to Shakespeare love of the “true minds” will bear it out even at the worst times. The first three stanzas in the poem are quatrains and the last is a couplet and it may be the strongest statement that backs up his opinion about marrying for love. “If this is an error and upon me proved, I never writ, nor no man ever loved” the speaker implies that he is so sure of what he believes about the nature of true love that if he is wrong, than he never wrote and no man has ever loved. His view is idealistic and he knows he has written and that people have…
At the surface, Shakespeare uses juxtaposition to compare two contrasting images of women. He uses juxtaposition in either every couplet or individual line. Shakespeare contrasts the qualities of the ideal woman and the qualities of the woman whom he fancies. He starts the poem by saying: “My mistress’ eyes are nothing like the sun” (1). The poem kicks off by completely degrading part of the Mistress’s appearance by saying she looks nothing like what would be an idea look. Shakespeare compares how her lips are not the desired ideal shade of red, like coral (2). When fair hair is considered attractive, he ridicules her for having hair that is thick “like wires” and black (4). The poem follows up with a comparison of how her breasts are not white as snow, but rather “dun” or of a grayish color (3). At this place, he compares her to what could be the purest white, only to degrade her. A person during this time period would be found more attractive, by how paler his or her skin was. This emphasizes why he compares her breasts to the symbolic color of snow white, often considered…
“The brightness of her cheeks would shame those stars, as daylight doth a lamp; her eye in heaven would through the airy region stream so bright, that birds would sing and think it were not night” (60-64). In this scene romeo continuous to compliment her beauty. He says that her cheeks are brighter that her eyes which was, before, was related to a star. Her eye and cheek were so bright that in the night a lamp wasn’t needed and her cheeks would shine up the night for the birds to sing and forget its night.…
Shakespeare makes heavy use of clothing and the appearance of characters to augment the deception that took place throughout the play. After Macbeth becomes king, the role which he has taken is compared to clothes that simply do not fit right. "New honours come upon him, Like our strange garments, cleave not to their mould, But with the aid of use" (I, iii). Lady Macbeth's advice to Macbeth is, "Look like the innocent flower, but be the serpent under't" (I, v). In this example, Shakespeare utilizes the appearance of the characters to further illustrate…
Physically, the Wife of Bath may have grown unattractive over time but her physical appearance represents her prosperity and experience. During her youth, she most likely represented a satisfactory catch for a wife. Being a plump woman with expensive, stylish clothes indicates that she descends from a wealthy background and married into prosperity. Even without her sexually boastful tone, the Wife of Bath's scarlet stockings represent the strong sensual desire within her five marriages and other numerous relations with men. Chaucer described her with large hips and an equally large hat meaning she fulfills the role of mother yet remains elegant in style. Her boisterous manner should be a sign that most men would not find her desirable but her history of affairs says otherwise.…
"Conceal me what I am; and be my aid/ For such disguise as haply shall become/ The form of my intent. I 'll serve this duke:/ Thou shalt present me as an eunuch to him:/ It may be worth thy pains; for I can sing,/ And speak to him in many sorts of music,/ That will allow me very worth his service."�(1.2.53-60) The clothing she wears and her somewhat modified behavior allow her all the privileges of manhood. Her doublet and hose act as her passport and provide her with a livelihood, a love interest, and friendship. We are led to believe that the only way she could survive would be to take on a male persona.(Mullenix) Shakespeare 's works are not a commentary on the view of women, they are merely records of a time long past. Although Shakespeare appears to accept the role of women in his society, he is not so blind to human nature that he neglects their appearance in his works. Indeed, it is common for a woman to have a leading - or at least pivotal - role in his plays. Women were used to teach the men a lesson or to keep them on the right track. For example, the women behind the actions of Hamlet are Queen…
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.…
“Her brow was clear and ample, her blue eyes cloudless and her lips and the moulding of her face so expressive of sensibility and sweetness that none could behold her without looking on her as of a distinct species, a being heaven-sent, and bearing a celestial stamp in all her features” (p. 34). From beginning to end of this further description of Elizabeth, not once does it provide an example of her attractiveness on the inside, but a clear description of her physical appearance. Once again proving the unreasonable analysis of women as a whole. When in reality, the part of women that matters is the way they are on the inside, without the caretaker, strong yet sweet role women play in everyday lives, there would be hopeless and lost men out…
Shakespeare used a soliloquy to distance the character of Lady Macbeth from the stereotypical women by letting the audience hear her train of thoughts. ‘My dearest partner of greatness’ when Lady Macbeth first spoke of her husband she referred to him as her partner, suggesting him to be her equal; another cause adding to the breaking martial order. In the quote ‘Yet do I fear thy nature: It is too full o’th’milk of human kindness’ Lady Macbeth is violating the accepted social boundary by speaking of her husband in a derogatory manner. One defining moment of abnormal relationship is when Lady Macbeth calls upon the dark spirits to ‘unsex’ her in order to do what is need for Macbeth to be…
William Shakespeare’s ‘Macbeth’, is the story of a usurping General, Lord Macbeth, and his wife Lady Macbeth who are driven to murder their king in pursuit of the throne and power. The tragedy has multiple reoccurring themes and motifs, of which Shakespeare uses many aesthetic features to effectively develop and enhance. One such theme is Masculinity vs. Femininity which resounds throughout the entirety of the play and is a central focus point during many events. Shakespeare uses imagery, symbolism and metaphor very effectively during the course of the play to augment and pinpoint important developments and changes to the characters and their states of masculinity and femininity. At the time that Shakespeare wrote his plays the values and attitudes were vastly different to those of modern society. Women were considered the fairer sex while men were considered the dominant sex. In Macbeth, this view is approached with the idea that masculinity carried with it the ability to kill and commit sin while femininity in its ideal was softer, gentler and comprised of virtue.…
His use of imagery is clearly present as he gives generous detailing of many facial features that added to her attractiveness, such as her full figure and bold, fair face, along with her tasteful clothing in order to convey that she was wealthy enough to dress nicely or expensively. Chaucer writes, “She had a flowing mantle that concealed large hips, her heels spurred sharply under that” (482-483). Chaucer’s extensive detailing of the attractive features of the Wife of Bath give a clear image to the reader what men around her think of her appearance and hint to a possible admiration or love he holds for the…