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Willam shakespeare - Sonnet18

William ShakespeareEnglish1 строк1 публичных разборов
Original Poetry
Translation
Willam shakespeare - Sonnet18
William Shakespeare - Sonnet 18 Simplified
 

Explanation

Sonnet 18, one of Shakespeare's most famous sonnets, opens with the speaker posing a rhetorical question: 'Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?' The speaker immediately answers by asserting that the beloved is more lovely and more temperate than a summer's day, which can be too hot or too short. The speaker goes on to describe how summer's beauty fades, but the beloved's eternal beauty will not. This is because the beloved's beauty is immortalized in the poem itself. The sonnet concludes with the idea that as long as people read the poem, the beloved's beauty will live on. This sonnet explores themes of beauty, immortality, and the power of poetry to capture and preserve the essence of the beloved.

Word Dictionary8

WordEasy MeaningTranslationPron.
theeyouyou (old-fashioned)thee
temperatemoderatenot extreme or excessivetem-per-ate
leasedurationa period of time something lastslees
complexionappearancethe natural color, texture, and appearance of the skincom-plex-ion
declinesfadesto become less in strength or qualityde-klahyns
untrimmedunadornednot decorated or enhancedun-trimmed
eternaleverlastinglasting foreveree-ter-nal
fairbeautya beautiful person or thingfehr

Poet & Context

PoetWilliam Shakespeare
EraElizabethan Era

William Shakespeare was an English playwright, poet, and actor, widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language. He wrote 154 sonnets and numerous plays, including tragedies like Hamlet and comedies like A Midsummer Night's Dream. His works have been translated into every major language and are performed more than any other playwright's.

View on Wikipedia
WhenAround 1609
WhySonnet 18 is part of Shakespeare's collection of 154 sonnets, which explore themes of love, beauty, politics, and mortality. This particular sonnet is a tribute to the beauty and eternal nature of the poet's beloved, contrasting the fleeting nature of a summer's day with the enduring qualities of the beloved.
FormSonnet

Themes & More

BeautyImmortalityNature
Metaphor: Comparing the beloved to a summer's day.Imagery: Descriptions of summer's qualities and the beloved's beauty.Personification: Giving human qualities to summer, such as 'the eye of heaven'.Alliteration: Repetition of consonant sounds, e.g., 'more lovely and more temperate'.
Willam shakespeare - Sonnet18 — William Shakespeare | ИИ-анализ стихотворения