The best love Sonnet is "How Do I Love Thee" ....let me count the ways... by Emily Dickinson.
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William Wilberforce was the most significant because he tried to do better things for the slave trade but no one really listened to him. also my evidence shows proof that no one listened to him. my evidence is that when William Wilberforce presented the first bill to abolish the slave trade to the house of commons, but it was rejected. this shows that no one was actually listened to in those days.
William Blount was an American politician who is one of the signatories of US constitution. He was a Senator from Tennessee and also served as Governor of Southwest Territories. A recent research showed that around 30 slaves were kept in Blount Mansion as workers by William Blount. This shows that he believed in Slavery and practiced it as well.
It is not always an indication, but he was married and fathered three children. Some people think he was gay, as some of his poetry was written to a man; but others argue that he married Anne Hathaway which shows that he could have been bisexual or even straight. At the time, it was quite acceptable for straight men to express strong feelings of affection for each other which did not have any implication of sexual attraction. Crossing the line into expressions of sexual desire for other men was strictly and ferociously punished, as were acts of homosexuality. Gays of Shakespeare's day had to be very careful. In the long run, it doesn't matter what his orientation was; he was a superb poet and playwright.
I don't think anyone knows but, the Bayeux Tapestry shows that the arrow was in Harold's right eye.
The Bayeux Tapestry shows Halley's comet, Harold and his people seeing it with fear in their eyes. The omen may have helped William win, but I have never read that there actually was an effect on the battle, or even on the morale of Harold's army, so asserting it happened might be going a bit too far.
all i know are romeo and julett and hamlett
no, not in the sense that we know them today, his shows did contain music and songs though
Probably Shakespeare.The description of the mistress is consistent with detail elsewhere in the Sonnets and there is good evidence that the latter are essentially autobiography. For more on this concept read The Biography in Shakespeare's Sonnetsat the link below.
William Shakepeare is mentioned in this novel because he is the main character.
Just recite Shakespeare's Sonnet 18. Not only is it romantic, but it shows class.
"The eye sees all, but the mind shows us what we want to see". This famous quotation was given by: (2) Shakespeare(1) Shankaracharya (3) Sir William Hamilton (4) John Keats
In Sonnet 57, Shakespeare portrays love as a force that can lead to inner conflict and turmoil. He acknowledges the challenges and uncertainties that come with love, emphasizing the need for resilience and determination in facing them. Overall, Shakespeare's view of love in this sonnet is complex, reflecting its capacity to both inspire and cause inner struggle.
William Shakespeare was the first to use the word "puke" in writing. (in As You Like It: "the infant, mewling and puking in the nurse's arms") There is a record of the word "pukishness" from 1581 which shows that it may have been a word before Shakespeare used it.
They put up a monument in Stratford church which shows us what he looked like (he was seriously bald even early in life) and that he was a writer.
Claudio is planning to call off the wedding.
During Shakespeare time he wrote famous plays, several poems and one hundred and fifty four exceptional shorter poems known as sonnets. Sonnet 18 and Sonnet 130 is two of his famous sonnets. They both are similar in theme, revolving around love, and Shakespeare has used several techniques in order to present this theme. The two sonnets arrive at a contradictory where his early sonnet, sonnet 18, supplements the theme with natural beauty and sonnet 130 using inner beauty. The poet uses the common traditional idea of love in the early sonnet to express the depth of his love that he has for his girlfriend. Shakespeare includes lines complimenting this wife, similar to the first line where he begins using a rhetorical question , should he compare her "to a summers day?" This gives the expression to the reader that she is just as beautiful and glorious as summer but then later this expression is soon lost and failed to describe her. This is seen in the second line he states that she is "more lovely" and "more temperate" and considering she is more temperate tan summer it tells the reader that her beauty for him is consistent. This stylistic technique of comparing her to summer and then to dissent himself by saying that not even summer is as glorious as her. In sonnet 130 he uses a very unconventional way to express love. I think by using this technique it shows that Shakespeare enjoys to express his love by comparing her to summer but then that not even that is an appropriate description. The tone is different in sonnet 130 where he uses a structure where the quatrains help to expand his description of how his mistress' qualities are all ghastly. For example he speaks about her lips and that coral is more red "than her lips' red" A technique used is by emphasizing that her lips are not red repeating the adjective "red". On top of that he includes the words "far more" giving the audience the image that if her lips were red they would have to be painted implying to us that she does not posses fake beauty. The structure of the rhyme scheme finishes with a rhyming couplet that concludes beyond all her unsatisfying qualities he believes that his "love as rare". This technique stresses how her beauty is internal. In my opinion this structure shakespeare uses to present love is a very different concept to the traditional way but it was cleverly used and it shows how deep love can be found by a man and that its not all on the outer beauty.
"Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?" is a famous line from Sonnet 18 by William Shakespeare. The purpose of this line and the sonnet as a whole is to praise the beauty and eternal qualities of the beloved, suggesting that their beauty will never fade, unlike the fleeting nature of a summer's day. It is a reflection on the power of poetry to immortalize beauty and love.