How does Shakespeare compare the beauty of his friend to that of a summer's day in Sonnet 18?
Answers
Answered by
6
hii mate
here is ur answer
His beloved is compared to summer in the first 8 lines as “more lovely and more temperate” than a summer's day, but at the start of the 9th line, his beloved becomes summer as the poet states, “but thy eternal summer shall not fade.” With the 9th line of a sonnet often being the volta or the “turn” of the poem, this ...
hope it helps
Answered by
0
Answer:
His beloved is compared to summer in the first 8 lines as “more lovely and more temperate” than a summer's day, but at the start of the 9th line, his beloved becomes summer as the poet states, “but thy eternal summer shall not fade.” With the 9th line of a sonnet often being the volta or the “turn” of the poem, this ...
hope this will help you
Similar questions