What is the critical appreciation of sonnet 60?
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Explanation:
Sonnet 60' by William Shakespeare discusses the power of time to take life from even the most beautiful and the power of writing to fight back. The speaker spends the majority of the poem using personification to describe time as a force that gives and then takes away.
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The critical appreciation of sonnet 60 is provided below:
- William Shakespeare wrote Sonnet 60, a poetry composition. This sonnet is made up of fourteen lines and three quatrains. The basic aim of the sonnet is to demonstrate the power of time. It teaches that time gives life but also has the power to take it away, and that the cycle continues.
- The poet depicts the flying and always changing time utilizing symbols of nature and a variety of literary devices like metaphor, simile, and personification. He believes that while time gets a person to a pinnacle where he is admired for overcoming life's challenges, it also diminishes all the beauty of youth and hard work in the afterlife. It makes one eagerly anticipate the end.
- In the final quatrain, the poet demonstrates that as time passes, everything will be destroyed, and nothing will be able to withstand the force of time. However, he offers a ray of hope that his words portrayed in his poems for loved ones would live on in the hearts of people for decades.
- Hence, the central message of sonnet 60 is described.
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