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Thursday, February 28, 2019

Shakespeare’s Sonnet 102

Shakespeares Sonnet 102 Poet and screenwriter, Susan Griffin, at one time said, A story is told as oft by lock as by speech. This statement underlines the fact that just because spoken language are non spoken, it does not mean that there is no meaning behind the lull. someones lack of words can have as much, if not even much, power as anothers most convincing speech. In Sonnet 102, Shakespeare explains why he believes in the power of silence regarding his feelings towards his true discern.His allusion to the nightingale correlates perfectly with the paradox of his increa carol admire for a woman in conveying the sonnets overall discipline that silence is always preferable to just meaningless words. In the sonnet, Shakespeare uses the allusion of the nightingale to describe his bonk of a young woman. He states, Our revere was smart/ when I was wont to greet it/ as Philomel in summers froth doth sing (lines 5-7), comparing the speakers love as his relationship with the woman progresses to that of nightingales song.In classical times, the nightingale was widely referred to as Philomel. In Roman and Greek mythology, Philomela was a woman glowering into a nightingale by the Gods to save her from the hands of rapist. Because of the violence associated with the myth, the nightingales song is often interpreted as a lament, that it is also construed to symbolize beauty and even, such as in the courting of this poem, love. In a factual sense, a nightingale is a smaller bird that frequently sings at night as well as in the day, standing out as one of the only birds that sing after the sun descends.By comparing his love to Philomel after she stops her tobacco pipe in growth of riper days (8), he makes his theme of silence clear. even up the most vocal of birds such as the nightingale knows when to stop interpret its beautiful song, showing the opening how much he truly loves it by offering a moment of peace and quiet. This resembles the feelings of the narrator because even though he loves her with all his heart, he does not pauperization to bore her by saying it too often or by making it surface as if his love is not as special as it use to be.In addition, Shakespeare also introduces the poem with the paradox My love is strengthened, though more jerry-built in seeming (1) that connects his allusion to true love. This paradox starts the poem off by explaining how his love for a woman has actually gotten stronger over time although he may not verbalize it as much as he used to. He attempts to explain that even though he follows it more to himself now, his love for his woman has only increased as time passed. His love resembles the nightingales singing in that it is always going to be there even if it is not heard because he does not want to ruin the beauty of it by saying it too much.The initial divulge of first love has surpassed the narrator now, leaving him with a genuine love that does not need a constant reminding with words in inn to convey the passion in his heart. Although observing a nightingale singing is rare, its music can always be heard. This parallels the speakers love in that his woman does not need to constantly be told how much he loves her, but rather she should know it by his eyes and his actions. His silence emphasizes the idea that words are not always necessary to carry ones feelings, and even in some cases it is better to keep quiet.Shakespeares allusion to the nightingale and paradox of his growing love work together to convey the universal idea that sometimes a lack of words can have a greater depiction of a mortals inner feelings than the best articulated vocalizations possible. If a man truly loves a woman, she should be able to comprehend the intensity of that love not by the things he says, but by the way he acts and how he looks at her. Perhaps all the noise and speaking in the world then is actually peoples lack of true love for one another, a love that can onl y be found in knowing and understanding the Lord Jesus Christ.

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