English, asked by sonathomas2000, 1 year ago

So till the judgment that yourself arise you will live in this and dwell in lovers eyes. What is the meaning

Answers

Answered by Prathamattri2062
0
These are the last two lines of the Shakespearian sonnet known as couplet. In the thirteenth line, poet says in continuation to the twelfth line that when the last day of judgement will come, the soul of his dead friend will see that because of the poem dedicated to him, he will live in the eyes of his praisers.

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Answered by Harsh23411o
0
Even if you didn't know that line 13 = the final lap in a sonnet, the "so" would indicate that we're approaching the final thought.
The speaker sums things up in a simple declaration: until he's resurrected at the final judgment, the beloved will live in this sonnet and in the loving eyes of all who read it.
So what's with these other "lovers"? Is the speaker just okay with the idea of his beautiful man having many other admirers? Well, yes. This speaker is so enraptured that he expects everyone else to share it—even those who've never met this guy in the flesh but only meet him through the lines of Sonnet 55.
"Dwell" echoes the "room" of line 10 and that pun on stanzas.
Hey, did someone switch the rhyme scheme on us? Nope, Shakespearean sonnets rhyme ABAB CDCD EFEF GG, which means that the final two lines rhyme with each other as a couplet, giving everything a nice wrapped-up-with-a-bow feel. To sink your teeth deeper into the sonnet form (and what could be more succulent?), get an eyeful of "Form and Meter" below.
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