The normal syntax would be to place the verb before the object: "all prefiguring you". But for the sake of the rhyme, Shakespeare has reversed the verb and object resulting in "all you prefiguring". The meaning is the same.
yes
If you mean William Shakespeare's sonnet 73, it is not surprisingly a Shakespearean sonnet.
No
skepticism
Reflective or meditative.
yes
If you mean William Shakespeare's sonnet 73, it is not surprisingly a Shakespearean sonnet.
No
skepticism
I say nay
Reflective or meditative.
This is the first line of Sonnet 18 by William Shakespeare. Shakespeare suggests that the memory of beauty will be immortalized in the sonnet. (see related question)
I think you would have to ask Shakespeare himself that question.
Sonnet (Shakesperean sonnets)
No, there is no onomatopoeia in this poem.
Some famous sonnet writers include William Shakespeare, Petrarch, John Donne, and Elizabeth Barrett Browning. Each of these poets has made significant contributions to the sonnet form through their works.
William Shakespeare's Sonnet 116 is probably the most popular of his couplets. It is about love in its most ideal form.