"Too hot the eye of heaven shines"
The eye of heaven is the sun.
"Thy eternal summer shall not fade"
Your youth shall not fade.
There are a few metaphors/personification.
A 14-line poem with certain structure is called a Sonnet. Shakespear was a master of the Sonnet.
shakespearean sonnet
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A sonnet typically has 14 lines, so if you want to get technical, it usually contains around 140-160 words. But hey, who's counting when you're crafting beautiful poetry? Just make sure you nail those rhymes and rhythms, honey.
a sixteen line poem is a sixteen line poem, not a sonnet, consisting of fourteen lines.
"My hope is banish'd into deepest hell," - line 9 contains an allusion to Shakespeare's Sonnet XXXI with the mention of hell as a place of despair or extreme adversity.
A Shakespearean sonnet consists of 3 quatrains (4-line stanzas) followed by a rhymed couplet (2-line stanza).
I'm not sure which excerpt you are referring to. Can you provide the specific text so I can identify the line containing a metaphor?
The line "My love is such that Rivers cannot quench" contains a metaphor as it compares her love for her husband to an unquenchable river, emphasizing its depth and intensity.
This line from Shakespeare's Sonnet 116 means that true love should not be hindered by any obstacles or challenges. It emphasizes the idea that genuine love is constant and unchanging, despite difficulties that may arise. It asserts the belief in the endurance and purity of true love.
Yes, there is a simile in Sonnet 29 by William Shakespeare. The line "Like to the lark at break of day arising" contains a simile comparing the speaker's mood to a lark ascending in the morning.
A sonnet is a quatorzain, or a 14-line poem.
The sonnet "The Lotus" by Toru Dutt typically follows the 14-line structure and employs iambic pentameter. It also contains a volta, or a shift in tone or argument, usually found in the latter part of the sonnet. Moreover, the sonnet uses elaborate imagery and symbolism often associated with the Victorian-era sonnet tradition.
Shakespeare's "Sonnet 71: No longer mourn for me when I am dead" contains the line, "Give warning to the world that I am fled, From this vile world with vilest worms to dwell."
it's a miltonic sonnet. Milton puts volta in middle of eighth line.
A sonnet.'
Sonnet