in compering the warmness of the person to the warmness of summer day
The dominant metaphor in Shakespeare's sonnet 18 (Shall I compare thee to a Summer's day ......) is youth described as a day in summer. Though properly speaking, since the comparison is made explicit, and since the parallels are developed and become the structure of the poem - this isn't really a metaphor. It is something between a simile and a conceit.
the title itself has natural imagery. Anything in the poem that compares to nature, or a image having to do with nature is natural imagery
the sun
It is a sonnet.
No, it is a sonnet, a poem of love.
shall i compare thee to a summers day
probably sonnet(poem) 18 "shall i compare thee to a summers day..?" and it was very well known :O
The dominant metaphor in Shakespeare's sonnet 18 (Shall I compare thee to a Summer's day ......) is youth described as a day in summer. Though properly speaking, since the comparison is made explicit, and since the parallels are developed and become the structure of the poem - this isn't really a metaphor. It is something between a simile and a conceit.
The literary terms in "Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer's Day" by William Shakespeare include sonnet (14-line poem with a specific rhyme scheme), metaphor (comparing the beauty of the person to a summer's day), and iambic pentameter (meter with five metrical feet per line).
the title itself has natural imagery. Anything in the poem that compares to nature, or a image having to do with nature is natural imagery
the sun
It is a sonnet.
No, it is a sonnet, a poem of love.
Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer's Day? by William Shakespeare And it would appear to be about a man, not a woman.
Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer's Day? or maybe The Road Not Taken "If" by Rudyard Kipling
"Iambs" are a type of metrical foot in poetry consisting of a short syllable followed by a long syllable. In the line "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day," each pair of syllables creates an iambic pattern, as in "Shall I", "compare thee", and "summer's day."
The extended metaphor in the poem "Your Father as a Guitar" by Martin Espada compares the speaker's father to a guitar, highlighting the father's resilience, strength, and ability to endure hardship just as a guitar withstands the test of time and produces beautiful music despite being played roughly.