its called pushp ki abhilasha...:)
Temptation
No, Sonnet 116 by William Shakespeare is not an elegy. It is a Shakespearean sonnet that talks about the enduring nature of true love. Elegies are poems that lament the loss of someone or something.
sonnet
It is all about temptation.
Sonnet 18 and sonnet 116
It is also called the English sonnet. The other form is the Italian sonnet, or petrarchan sonnet.
Yes, there is an apostrophe in Shakespeare's Sonnet 130. The poem addresses the speaker's mistress directly, which is an example of apostrophe—a figure of speech where the speaker talks to someone who is not present or cannot respond. This technique emphasizes the speaker's feelings and thoughts about beauty and love, contrasting them with typical poetic conventions.
Shakespeare, Sonnet CXVI (141). In this sonnet Shakespeare talks about the constancy of true love. "Love is not love Which alters when it alteration finds, Or bends with the remover to remove. O, no! it is an ever-fixed mark, That looks on tempests and is never shaken..."
Sonnet 130
The Sonnet Series - 2013 Sonnet 31 The Old Man and the Sonnet 1-8 was released on: USA: 1 May 2013
No, 'gardener' is a noun.
how a gardener help us