Theme Analysis of Shakespeare
This sonnet is narrated by a man whose emotions are completely at the mercy of another. Its theme involves the vulnerability of the narrator's disposition and the power of love. Just when he reaches the lowest point of his depression, the addressee of the poem enters his mind and cures him of his misery. Shakespeare cleverly uses a recurring theme of heaven to help portray the broader theme of the poem. In describing his helplessness, he writes, "I trouble deaf heaven with my bootless cries. . ." Here, "bootless" is used to represent the futility of his "cries," or prayers to heaven. The diction, however, is extremely important in this context. The word "bootless" is also worthy of notice because it represents the hindrance of motion, since it literally means without boots, and without boots, it may become difficult to walk. This is contrasted later with an image in which the narrator likens his soul's uplifting to "the lark at break of day arising." Though the lark sings from "sullen earth," its song goes straight to heaven. The reader may interpret the word "sullen" as "a gloomy ill humor," "producing a dull, mournful tone," or "moody silence," as seen from the NED. The latter two definitions are more applicable to our discuss
Romeo replies to Juliet, "It was the lark, the herald of the morn. " In other words, the thought of this person makes him so happy that he would not change his fortune with any other man not even the richest of kings. This, to me, gives the impression that the addressee has been somehow temporarily removed from his life. He writes: "Yet in these thoughts myself almost despising, Haply I think on thee and then my state. This beautiful language, especially pleasing to the ear because of the iambic pentameter, summarizes the theme in the last couplet, as is customary in Shakespeare's sonnets. He is in such a dejected and "outcast state," that he desires ". For he never mentions the origin of his melancholy depicted in the first two quatrains, and the reader is left to conjecture what I have hereby mentioned. " Thus, the diction allows the theme to be revealed through a turning point, or change in texture. " Whereas before, in his dejected state, his prayers were futile and motionless, now his prayers are mobile, and, therefore answerable. I also believe, however, that it is no mistake that "haply" is a close neighbor of "happily.
Common topics in this essay:
Romeo Juliet,
,
Shakespeare's Indeed,
love rememb'red,
sweet love rememb'red,
thy sweet love,
sweet love,
narrator person,
thy sweet,
mournful tone,
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