shakespeare's sonnet-18 explanation
1. Shall I compare
................summer's day.
Thou art
...................temperate.
Rough winds
................May.
And summer's
...................date.
(V.
U-MODEL -NO- 8 / 16)
Ans. These lines have been taken from ‘Shall I compare
thee’ written by William Shakespeare.
The poet expresses his deep faith in the immortality of his friend. In a world where every object is ephemeral,
his friend will outlive them all.
The poet waxes eloquent over his friend’s beauty that
surpasses that of a summer’s day. He is categorically critical of the day which
is ever-honoured by every body for its loveliness. The poet lists a catalogue
of denunciations of the day’s glory in order to bring his friend’s beauty into
bold relief. The poet emphasizes that his friend’s loveliness is much superior
to that of a summer’s day. He is more even-tempered than the Summer Season. He
is more attractive and impressive than it. Sometimes rough winds violently
shake the tiny buds of May and the season lasts but for a short while with all
its lovely elements which are short-lived. But the beauty of the poet’s friend
is enduring and ever-lasting. It never fades away and it does withstand the
ravages of time. So comparison between the friend’s beauty and that of a
summer’s day should hardly be taken into consideration.
The poet hesitates to compare his friend to a summer’s
day. His virtues do outshine its. The qualities it is endowed with, fall far
short of his in majesticity and excellence.
No calamity can make his friend lose his everlasting youth and freshness.
2. And eyery fair from
.....................declines.
By chance
.......................untrimm'd.
(V. U-MODEL -NO- 8 / 17)
Ans. These lines have
been taken from ‘Shall I compare thee’ written by William Shakespeare. The poet here emphasizes the transitoriness
of all living objects of Nature.
Every
object of nature, however fair, is subject to decay. Nothing lasts for-ever. It
is the law of Nature. Leaves and flowers along with every fair creature are destined to die some day. Death spares none
in the world. With a changing course of Nature everything declines. Every fair
element of Nature loses its beauty in course of time. Its loveliness and charm
can claim no permanence. Time with its ravages and the power of destructibility
annihilates everything. So, the season of Summer that lasts but for a brief
spell, soon falls a victim to the mighty rage of time that preys on its
sweetness and sucks it dry. What is fair turns foul and faded being deprived of
'trimming'.
In
Course of time the charm of everything declines. No beauty can exist for ever. A sense of mortality haunts it and it
surrenders to the clutches of destruction being ultimately shorn of all honour
and variety.
3. But thy eternal
.......................fade.
Nor lose ..........................ow'st.
(V. U-MODEL -NO- 8 / 18)
Ans. These lines have been taken from ‘Shall I compare
thee’ written by William Shakespeare. The poet here boldly affirms the perpetual continuity of his friend’s
summer despite the ravages wrecked by time.
The poet is so much confident about the everlastingness of his friend’s
beauty that he boldly proclaims that his ‘eternal summer’ shall never fade. He
is sure to continue forever his immortal glory which time can never eclipse or
curb. His beauty will eternally shine beyond all earthly limitations and
restrictions. His loveliness will be reigning supreme in the kingdom of wrecks
and ravages. Like an undisputed monarch he will survive with an undying fame.
The analogy between the glorious beauty of his friend and that of a summer’s
day compels the poet to speak volumes of the former that knows no decay, no
destruction. The imperishable beauty of his friend stands matchless in
comparison to the evanescent and fleeting one of a day in summer.
The poet’s friend is the fairest of all. Nothing can steal away his summer nor defile
the sublimity that his friend is possessed of.
His beauty is to continue eternally.
4. So long as men
..........................can see.
So long
...........................to thee.
(V. U-MODEL -NO- 8 / 19)
Ans. These lines have been taken from ‘Shall I compare
thee’ written by William Shakespeare. The poet is so much eloquent in his
praise of his friend that he goes to the extent of perpetuating his friend in
the memory of man for ever.
The poet establishes his contention in a most convincing manner that
his friend is deathless. He can never perish and he strongly asserts that his
friend would survive as long as the human civilization exists. He will be made
eternal through letters of gold and his place would be made so secure that no
calamity of death could be able to topple him down. He will be the cynosure of
all eyes that will keep wondering at his immortal status that the poet’s verse
would lend him. There death would fail to claim his beauty against the
enlivening effect of his verse and in this transitory universe where the
ravages of time thwart man’s ambition and damage all beauteous aspects of
nature, his friend will be shining forever. Thus, the poet will perpetuate his
friend’s beauty through his poetic endeavour.
The poet says that his friend will never die. Nothing can perish him. He is destined to remain alive until the
human civilization and society cease to exist.
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