Friday, November 29, 2019
Sonnet 29 Essays - Sonnet 1, Sonnet 29, Sonnet 20,
  Sonnet 29    Despite popular belief, William Shakespeare was considered a great poet before a  great playwright. He accomplished writing at least 154 sonnets and other poems  of love. In this paper, I will analyze one of his greatest sonnets. One of the  most famous of his sonnets is number XXIX. This sonnet is one long sentence, but  it still follows the usual Shakespearean pattern of three quatrains (four line  sections) and a couplet. It also follows the traditional rhyme scheme for    Shakespearian sonnets: ababcdcdefefgg. The first quatrain tells how the narrator  is feeling. From reading these four lines, you sense his loneliness and sense of  abandonment by fate, G-d, love, and other men. I believe the key line in this  quatrain is line 3 (When, in disgrace with fortune and men's eyes,). Here I feel    Shakespeare is saying that this person who is very depressed, is crying out for  help to others, but he is such an outcast that not even "deaf heaven,"  meaning God and the angels of heaven or listening to his cries. The second  quatrain starts off with a line that shows the narrator wishes to be more  optimistic. He realizes that in order to achieve his goals, he must believe in  himself first and stop being so depressed. The second half of the quatrain shows  he is envious of other men's possessions and riches when he says, "Desiring  this man's art and that man's scope, With what I most enjoy contented least."    Moving into the third quatrain, you see that the speaker begins to reflect on  himself and starts to compare himself with his friends. You know this when    "Haply I think on thee, and then my state," is said. Just as you start to  think the speaker is going back into a state of self-pity, you realize the  speaker's inspired sprits are rising like "the lark at break of day".    Sonnet XXIX ends with a couplet that has an uplifting message. One the speaker  remembers the love of his friend and what great things he has, it makes him  happy with his life. So happy he wouldn't even consider swapping his place  with a king.    
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