English, asked by amarnathanuappu, 9 months ago

compare sonnet 29 and sonnet 30​

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Answered by namrata6969
11

Answer:

The sonnet contains fourteen lines and is written in iambic pentameter. It also follows the rhyme scheme for Shakespearean sonnets: a-b-a-b, c-d-c-d, e-f-e-f, g-g. Sonnet XXIX portrays two different sections, speaker's sorrowful state of mind in the first octave and then it appears to be an ecstatic image in the last.

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Answered by tyler121001
21

Answer:

Shakespeare's sonnets are believed to have been written in the order in which they are now numbered, and this is often evident in the continuation of theme across two or three sonnets, obviously reflecting the poet's present preoccupation. Both Sonnet 29 and Sonnet 30 are ultimately an address to the speaker's "dear friend" (30) and "sweet love" (29), thoughts of whom can immediately lift the poet from his misery. In both poems, too, the speaker seems to be identifying a desire for friends—in Sonnet 29, he yearns to be a man "with friends possessed," and in Sonnet 30, he mourns for "precious friends" who are now dead. In both cases, the poet's eventual resolution is that it doesn't actually matter so much that he does not have these longed-for friends, when he remembers that he has his beloved, who seemingly is enough on his own to satisfy the speaker emotionally.

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