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Title: Analysis of sonnet 130 by shakespeare
| Subject: | Shakespeare | | Date: | March 21, 2004 | | Level: | Unspecified | | Grade: | Unspecified | | Length: | 2 pages (404 words) | | Essay rating: | 4
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(total score: 11) | | Keywords: | sonnet 130, love poetry, shakespeare, morpheus, heartedly, astrophel and stella, lackluster, grandiose, dark lady, poem, petrarch, hair etc, petrarchan, stanzas, allusion, sonnets, metaphors, parody, metaphor, deliberately, |
ANALYSIS Sonnet 130 is Shakespeare's rather lackluster tribute to his Lady, commonly referred to as the dark lady because she seems to be non-white (black wires for hair, etc). The dark lady, who ultimately betrays the poet by loving other men, appears in sonnets 127 to 154. Sonnet 130 is clearly a parody of the conventional and traditional love sonnet, made popular by Petrarch and, in particular, made popular in England by Sidney's use of the Petrarchan form in his epic poem "Astrophel and Stella". If you compare any of the stanzas of that poem with Shakespeare's sonnet 130, you will see exactly what elements of the conventional love sonnet Shakespeare is light-heartedly mocking. In sonnet 130, there is no use of ... Showed first 120 words of 400 Size (words) ...
... Continuing with another 115 out of 400 Size (words) ...beautiful than the finest pearls, diamonds, rubies, and silk. In sonnet 130, the references to such objects of perfection are indeed present, but they are there to illustrate that his lover is not as beautiful -- a total rejection of Petrarch form and content. Shakespeare utilizes a new structure, through which the straightforward theme of his lover's simplicity can be developed in the three quatrains and neatly concluded in the final couplet. Thus, Shakespeare is using all the techniques available, including the sonnet structure itself, to enhance his parody of the traditional Petrarchan sonnet typified by Sidney's work. But Shakespeare ends the sonnet by proclaiming his love for his mistress despite her lack of ...Essay still continues 100 more words...
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| Author: | | Eggy | | Score: | | 1 of 1 person
(100%)
found this comment useful.
| | Date: | | 20 September 2004: 15:24:59 | | Title: | | I appreciate ur honesty | | Comment: | | hi diamondize!
Unlike the other users here u actually wrote whatever you really thought of the poem analysis u read! I respect your opinion and i'm glad u respect mine too and i'm also glad that our opposing points of view did not affect ur overall idea of this analysis! That's very fair and just of u..thank u |
| Author: | | diamondize1 | | Score: | | 1 of 2 people
(50%)
found this comment useful.
| | Date: | | 26 May 2004: 06:34:05 | | Title: | | Sonnet 130 | | Comment: | | I like this essay, but disagree with your description of this as a 'lacklustre tribute'. Personally I read this to be a response to those poets using overblown imagery to describe their love. He is forcefully putting forward his love which is grounded in reality and without fancy. I would have liked to see a little more on the language used, but this was very well written |
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