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Sunday, March 17, 2019

Free Essay: Analysis of Sonnet 12 :: Sonnet essays

Analysis of Sonnet 12   When I do count the clock that tells the time, And prove the brave twenty-four hours sunk in hideous night When I behold the regal past height, And sable curls oer-silverd all with white When lofty trees I see barren of leaves, Which erst from heat did canopy the herd, And summers green all girded up in sheaves Borne on the bier with white and bristly beard Then of thy yellowish pink do I question make That thou among the wastes of time mustiness go, since sweets and beauties do themselves forsake, And die as fast as they see others change by reversal And nothing gainst Times scythe can make defence save stemma to brave him when he takes thee hence.     This is an enjoyable sonnet that uses nature imagery, found extensively in Petrarca, that Shakespeare uses to get his point across. Not much explication is needed, aside the bear on images of nature, to fully understand its intent, but I would like to point come forward a pe culiar allusion. When reading line 3, the violet past prime has made me think of Venus and Adonis. In the end, Adonis melts into the earth and a violet sprouts where his body was, which Venus then places in her heart, signifying the love she has for him. recital this into the poem makes the few following lines more significant. Having Adonis portrayed as the handsome youth, Shakespeare is alluding to the death of youth (in general and to the immature man) through the sonnet. In the next line, it is not certain if sable is an adjective or a noun and if curls is a noun, referring to hair (which is plausible) or a verb modifying sable. Invoking the allusion to Adonis here, Shakespeare portends that if Adonis did give out longer, he too would have greying hair thus, Shakespeare sees behold an Adonis figure, the young man, past his youth.

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