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There are 11 syllables in the line "shall you compare thee to a summer's day."
shall i compare thee to a summers day
Shakespeare claims that the object of his sonnet in , Shall I Compare Thee to a Summers Day, will be immortal because of the written word. His beloved's summer will continue as long as there are people alive to read the sonnet.
in compering the warmness of the person to the warmness of summer day
These words are not in a play. "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?" is the first line of Shakespeare's sonnet number XVIII (18), officially dedicated to the Dark Lady.
"Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?" is a famous sonnet written by William Shakespeare, known for its vivid imagery and themes of love and beauty.
probably sonnet(poem) 18 "shall i compare thee to a summers day..?" and it was very well known :O
The program shall be followed by dinner.
Shall I Compare Thee- Beauford Dainee
the title itself has natural imagery. Anything in the poem that compares to nature, or a image having to do with nature is natural imagery
In Sonnet 18, William Shakespeare is writing about a beautiful woman and comparing her beauty to a summer day. The message is, that because he is immortalizing her beauty in verse, it will never really fade. In other words, art, such as poetry, lives on long after physical beauty is gone.
The literary terms in "Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer's Day" by William Shakespeare include sonnet (14-line poem with a specific rhyme scheme), metaphor (comparing the beauty of the person to a summer's day), and iambic pentameter (meter with five metrical feet per line).