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    Sonnet 17 Explication

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    Sonnet 17 Explication Who will believe my verse in time to come If it were filled with your most high deserts? Though yet‚ heaven knows‚ it is but as a tomb Which hides your life and shows not half your parts. If I could write the beauty of your eyes And in fresh numbers number all your graces‚ The age to come would say “This poet lies: Such heavenly touches ne’er touched earthly faces.” So should my papers yellowed with their age Be scorned like old men of less truth than tongue‚ And

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    Sonnet 69 was written by Pablo Neruda in the 20th century.  As I was reading the original sonnet‚ I was filled with inner joy and love.  The original sonnet brings profound feelings‚ flashbacks‚ and makes you and the sonnet feel as if one.  However‚ the translation of sonnet 69 does not. It is rather dull and brings no sense of joy.                 In sonnet 69‚ the type of figurative language that is being used is hyperbole; which helps create emphasis. In Stanza 2‚ the line “like the red beginning

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    Shakespeare's Sonnet 102

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    Shakespeare’s Sonnet 102 Poet and screenwriter‚ Susan Griffin‚ once said‚ “A story is told as much by silence as by speech.” This statement underlines the fact that just because words are not spoken‚ it does not mean that there is no meaning behind the silence. Someone’s lack of words can have as much‚ if not even more‚ power as another’s most persuasive speech. In Sonnet 102‚ Shakespeare explains why he believes in the power of silence regarding his feelings towards his true love. His allusion

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    Sonnet 18 Essay

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    A sonnet is a form of a poem that originated in Europe. One of the best known sonnet writers is Willliam Shakespeare because he wrote 154 of them. In sonnet 18‚ Shakespeare used numerous literary elements in order to prove his thesis. This sonnet is a comparison to nature and a woman who will never lose her beauty. In sonnet 18‚ different literary elements such as personification‚ metaphors‚ and an anaphora are used in order to prove that nature is never constant‚ but her beauty is constant and will

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    sonnets 116 130

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    What different attitudes to love can be found in sonnets 116 and 130? In sonnet 116 it defines love‚ by telling both what it is and is not. In the first quatrain Shakespeare talks about what love is not. Shakespeare says that love is “the marriage of true minds” which is a metaphor for true love‚ ideal and perfect love. Shakespeare uses the word “minds” rather than words like “hearts”‚ he does this to let us know that perfect love is a partnership of the two thinking. Shakespeare then goes on

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    Shakespeare Sonnet 20

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    Shakespeare’s ‘Sonnet 20’ This sonnet has been the subject of much debate as academics theorise for and against the possible homosexuality of Shakespeare‚ as per the sexual connotations present in the sonnet and the way Shakespeare plays with gender. However‚ the way in which one interprets poems of any kind is highly subjective. Consider‚ for instance‚ a poem on love: the poet cannot be claimed as being an expert on love and its merits‚ and oftentimes a poem is not necessarily based on a personal

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    Shakespeare Sonnet 129

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    Sonnet 129 is an interesting poem in Shakespeare’s set of sonnets‚ supposedly‚ addressed to his dark mistress. This sonnet is full figurative language and other poetic devices that let the reader know exactly how the poet feels about the emotions and dangers associated with lust. He also uses interesting punctuation choices that create the flow and tone of the poem. As the readers‚ we do not know who this poem is addressed to due to the lack of thou‚ he‚ or she in the poem. It does seem to be describing

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    Sonnet In Primary Colors

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    I really enjoyed reading each of the poems in different voices‚ personally‚ I chose voices of a famous actress and or actors causing for a good laugh as well. For Sonnet in Primary Colors‚ I use a Spanish accent‚ as Fredia was a Mexican artist‚ it is not as beautiful as she was but it was very fun. As a Spanish woman‚ I was telling the story of a beautiful young Mexican artist. The story of fatal events‚ she became a survivor‚ a mother‚ a lover and a voice. Emily Dickinson’s I’m Nobody! Who are you

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    An Overview of Sonnet 130

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    Title: An overview of “Sonnet 130” Author(s): Joanne Woolway Source: Poetry for Students. Detroit: Gale. From Literature Resource Center. Document Type: Critical essay [Joanne Woolway is a freelance writer who recently earned her Ph.D. from Oriel College‚ Oxford‚ England. In the following essay‚ Woolway analyzes how‚ in “Sonnet 130‚” Shakespeare “succeeds...in turning traditional poetic conventions around.” She also takes a close look at the ways Shakespeare’s versification—his skill patterning

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    An Analysis of "Sonnet 30" by William Shakespeare "Sonnet 30" by the great William Shakespeare is a vastly contrasting poem in the sense that it presents its rather large main problem in twelve sorrow filled lines and solves this same rather large problem with a simplistic two lines. The poem starts by painting a vivid mental picture of a forlorn person who is lounging all by themselves in a solitary and placid place while pondering deeply on all the memories of the past. The author illustrates

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