real love endures conflicts
The first four lines of Shakespeare's Sonnet 116 express the idea that true love is unchanging and unshakable, despite difficulties and challenges that may arise. The poet asserts that love is a beacon that guides those who are truly devoted to each other through life's trials, unwavering in its strength and constancy.
Shakespeare's sonnet 116 opens: Let me not to the marriage of true minds Admit impediments.
a couplet The last two lines for A+
It's a Sonnet.
It's a Sonnet.
Let me not to the marriage of true minds admit impediments.
Let me not to the marriage of true minds admit an impediment.
A good explanation just bore in vienna? YAWN.
Hi
In the minds of the people who draw and print the maps, and of the people who read them.
Elvis Presley Sang Suspicious Minds
"Agree to Disagree"
Lines 1 to 12 of a sonnet are virtually the whole poem, which is only 14 lines long. In this case, the last two lines can be paraphrased as "That's true, you know." so in effect the first twelve lines are the whole poem. This poem is not about love which grows. It is about love which endures. It "alters not", it is "an ever fixed mark" and is "never shaken". This unchanging love which he describes does not grow because things which grow change, and the love to which he refers, the "marriage of true minds", does not change at all and never will.