In Shakespeare's Sonnet 116, the star represents something that is constant and unwavering, while the bark (or ship) symbolizes a journey with challenges and uncertainties. The comparison suggests that love, like a star, should be steadfast and guide us through the difficulties of life's journey.
It is the star to every wandering bark.
In this line from Sonnet 116 by William Shakespeare, "it is the star to every wand'ring bark," the bark represents a ship. The speaker is comparing love to a guiding star that directs and guides every wandering ship (or person) back to its desired destination.
A bark is a kind of ship. A ship "wandering" about in the ocean could use stars like the north star to figure out which way they were going so as to steer a correct course. Hence "the star to every wandering bark" is something which gives you direction.
This is a phrase taken from Shakespeare's Sonnet 116. The term "bark" refers to a sea-vessel, a ship. The star to which this phrase refers is the "North Star", the star by which sailors would orient themselves in lieu of a compass. Therefore, the phrase is speaking of something that is true, constant, and ever-dependable in the midst of struggle or confusion in life. In Shakespeare's Sonnet 116, this constant he is referring to is Love.
Shakespeare says that love: is the star to every wandering bark, In Shakespeare's time, many ships used to navigate by plotting a course according to the Pole Star (which is always due North, when viewed from north of the Equator). Shakespeare says that love is as reliable as the Pole Star, you can steer your life by it.
"Bright star, would I were steadfast as thou art" by Keats is a sonnet.
autumn is compared to a gleaner "like a gleaner....' in the middle stanza and compared to spring in the third stanza
Shakespeare Sonnet 116Let me not to the marriage of true mindsAdmit impediments. Love is not loveWhich alters when it alteration finds,Or bends with the remover to remove:O no! it is an ever-fixed markThat looks on tempests and is never shaken;It is the star to every wandering bark,Whose worth's unknown, although his height be taken.Love's not Time's fool, though rosy lips and cheeksWithin his bending sickle's compass come:Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks,But bears it out even to the edge of doom.If this be error and upon me proved,I never writ, nor no man ever loved.
Astrophel and Stella is a sonnet sequence by Sir Philip Sidney. The sequence was first published in 1591, but there is evidence the sonnets were in private circulation during the 1580's. Many critics consider Astrophel and Stella the first sonnet sequence in English, and consider the book to have been stronly instrumental in furthering the sonnet craze of approximately 1580 - 1600. The sequence is a series of love sonnets between Astrophel (from Greek 'Star Lover') to Stella (Latin for 'Star').
In Sonnet 116, there are allusions to the North Star, an unwavering guide, to describe the constancy and reliability of true love. The poem also alludes to the idea of marriage as a "marriage of true minds," which emphasizes the emotional and intellectual connection between two people.
Relationship... with what? "Relationship" usually relates two variables, not just one. The star's temperature depends, to a great degree, on its mass - more massive stars tend to be hotter. However, for a single star, the temperature also changes over the lifetime of a star. Especially, when the star runs out of hydrogen fuel, it contracts and gets hotter.
The brightness of a Cepheid star is determined by its period-luminosity relationship, which is a relationship between the star's variability period and its intrinsic luminosity. By measuring the period of a Cepheid star, astronomers can use the period-luminosity relationship to calculate its luminosity, and from there determine its apparent brightness as observed from Earth.