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Shakespeare says: 'My mistress's eyes are nothing like the sun'
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Shakespeare says: 'My mistress's eyes are nothing like the sun'
Shakespeare says: 'My mistress's eyes are nothing like the sun'
The rhyme scheme of Shakespeare's Sonnet 130, "My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun," is ababcdcdefefgg.
It's a sonnet.
The married guy should have nothing more to do with the mistress. Period. If he does, you should leave. Period.
nothing call it too an end!
Sonnet 130
It's a poem. It doesn't have a setting.
No she can't. A mistress is a mistress: there for pretty much sex and nothing more. Marriage however is not only an intimate relationship but a legal contract between the husband and wife. The mistress is just a random third party. It would NEVER hold up in court because the mistress is helping the man cheat.
Legally, nothing. If the man is granted the divorce and keeps the mistress, then she has won the honor of being with a man that can't be trusted.