English, asked by sisandachantel826, 17 days ago

in sonnet 130 who is the speaker ridiculing?

Answers

Answered by Madiha2963
1

Answer:

Shakespeare's Sonnet mocks the Elizabethan conventions of poetry that extolled ideal love as well as satirizing the Petrarchan sonnets that compared the object of love to Nature in hyperbolic terms.

Answered by sadiaanam
0

Answer:

Sonnet 130, also known as "My Lady's Eyes Are Nothing Like the Sun," is a poem by William Shakespeare in which the narrator seems to ridicule the conventional love sonnet and exaggerated comparisons to describe a lover's beauty and physics.

Explanation:

  • In this sonnet, the speaker describes his beloved in a more realistic and honest way, rather than using the exaggerated comparisons found in traditional love sonnets.
  • He remarks that his mistress's eyes are not like the sun, her lips are not as red as coral, and her hair is not of gold thread. It can be argued that the speaker is not mocking his mistress, but the conventions of love poetry that place unrealistic expectations on women's physical appearance.
  • By truthfully describing his beloved, the speaker realizes that true love must be based on more than just physical beauty.
  • The speaker of sonnet 130 seems to mock the traditional love sonnet and unrealistic comparisons used to describe a lover's physical beauty, rather than mocking a specific person.


View more Poems of William Shakespeare :

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