SONNET 18
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PARAPHRASE
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Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?
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Shall I
compare you to a summer's day?
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Thou art more lovely and more temperate:
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You are
more lovely and more constant:
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Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,
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Rough
winds shake the beloved buds of May
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And summer's lease hath all too short a date:
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And
summer is far too short:
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Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines,
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At
times the sun is too hot,
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And often is his gold complexion dimm'd;
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Or
often goes behind the clouds;
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And every fair from fair sometime declines,
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And
everything beautiful sometime will lose its beauty,
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By chance or nature's changing course untrimm'd;
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By
misfortune or by nature's planned out course.
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But thy eternal summer shall not fade
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But
your youth shall not fade,
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Nor lose possession of that fair thou owest;
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Nor
will you lose the beauty that you possess;
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Nor shall Death brag thou wander'st in his shade,
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Nor
will death claim you for his own,
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When in eternal lines to time thou growest:
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Because
in my eternal verse you will live forever.
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So long as men can breathe or eyes can see,
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So long
as there are people on this earth,
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So long lives this and this gives life to thee.
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So long
will this poem live on, making you immortal.
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ANALYSIS
temperate (1): i.e., evenly-tempered; not overcome by passion.
the eye of heaven (5): i.e., the sun.
every fair from fair sometime declines (7): i.e., the beauty (fair) of everything beautiful (fair) will fade
(declines).
Compare to Sonnet 116: "rosy lips and cheeks/Within his bending sickle's compass come."
nature's changing course (8): i.e., the natural
changes age brings.
that fair thou ow'st (10): i.e., that beauty
you possess.
in eternal lines...growest (12): The poet is using a
grafting metaphor in this line. Grafting is a technique used to join parts
from two plants with cords so that they grow as one. Thus the beloved becomes
immortal, grafted to time with the poet's cords (his "eternal
lines"). For commentary on whether this sonnet is really "one long
exercise in self-glorification", please see below.
Sonnet 18 is the best known and most well-loved of all 154 sonnets. It
is also one of the most straightforward in language and intent. The stability
of love and its power to immortalize the poetry and the subject of that
poetry is the theme.
The poet starts the praise of his dear friend without ostentation, but
he slowly builds the image of his friend into that of a perfect being. His
friend is first compared to summer in the octave, but, at the start of the
third quatrain (9), he is summer, and thus, he has metamorphosed into the
standard by which true beauty can and should be judged.
The poet's only answer to such profound joy and beauty is to ensure
that his friend be forever in human memory, saved from the oblivion that
accompanies death. He achieves this through his verse, believing that, as
history writes itself, his friend will become one with time. The final
couplet reaffirms the poet's hope that as long as there is breath in mankind,
his poetry too will live on, and ensure the immortality of his muse.
Interestingly, not everyone is willing to accept the role of Sonnet 18
as the ultimate English love poem. As James Boyd-White puts it:
What kind of love
does 'this' in fact give to 'thee'? We know nothing of the beloved’s form or
height or hair or eyes or bearing, nothing of her character or mind, nothing
of her at all, really. This 'love poem' is actually written not in praise of
the beloved, as it seems, but in praise of itself. Death shall not brag, says
the poet; the poet shall brag. This famous sonnet is on this view one long
exercise in self-glorification, not a love poem at all; surely not suitable
for earnest recitation at a wedding or anniversary party, or in a Valentine.
(142)
Note that James Boyd-White refers to the beloved as "her",
but it is almost universally accepted by scholars that the poet's love
interest is a young man in sonnets 1-126.
Sonnets 18-25 are often discussed as a group, as they all focus on the
poet's affection for his friend.
For more on how the sonnets are grouped, please see the general introduction to
Shakespeare's sonnets.
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