Thursday, January 23, 2020

William Shakespeares Sonnet #55 Essay -- English Literature Shakespea

William Shakespeare’s Sonnet #55 is a Shakespearian sonnet. It contains three quatrains, or four line stanzas, and ends with a couplet. The poem is written in iambic pentameter William Shakespeare’s Sonnet #55 is a Shakespearian sonnet. It contains three quatrains, or four line stanzas, and ends with a couplet. The poem is written in iambic pentameter. The speaker is the older man. This is the same speaker in many of Shakespeare’s sonnets. In this sonnet the speaker is telling the young man, beautiful, male addressee that he is not sharing his beauty with the world, but is selfishly keeping it all to himself. He’s explaining to the addressee that he needs to have children to spread his beauty and share it with the world. In the first quatrain the speaker is telling the addressee about how he will live eternally in the poem. Shakespeare writes, â€Å"Not marble nor the gilded monuments/ of princes shall outlive this powerful rhyme† (Shakespeare lines 1-2). He uses a metaphor comparing the beauty of the young man to â€Å"upswept stone besmeared with sluttish time† (Shake...

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