Shakespeare and Philips en
Sonnet 130, or My Mistress' Eyes Are Nothing Like the Sun, seems to have a lot to do with friendship. Shakespeare could not have said such things like "Coral is far more red than her lips' red." There must have been a very deep and understanding relationship between these two people. If Shakespeare and this woman were just lovers, Shakespeare probably would not have written such an honest poem.This woman he refers to might very well have been a friend of his mothers or an older lady. "My mistress, when she walks, treads on the ground" (Damrosch et al. 1177). This could mean that she is very old and does not have the ability to walk properly. This also could lead to the conclusion that since this woman is old, she cannot put on any make-up or fix her hair anymore. This would explain lines four to eight. "If hairs be wires, black wires grow on her head. I have seen roses damasked, red and white, but no such roses I see in her cheeks. And in some perfumes is there more delight than in the breath that from my mistress reeks"( Damrosch et al. 1177). This woman may be losing her hair. That would account for the 'black wires'. The elderly do not usually have any colour in their face. This could be why Shakespeare said h
Friendship in Emblem tells the tale of how Philips forgot her isolation through an affair with another woman. Philips, on the other hand, wrote of a secret affair between her and another woman. She and Lucasia must have been lovers since Philips refers to their parts fitting together so well and the compass, to which Donne used as eroticism. Philips suggests to the readers that they are merely good friends. Sonnet 130 could be taken as a love poem, but not by all people. They can trust each other on many levels and share many things with each other. This could suggest that their love fits or erotic parts fit. Shakespeare feels that their friendship is so deep and intense that he can tell the sadistic truth about this elderly woman. "And as each part so well is knit, that their embraces ever fit: so friends are such by destiny and no third can the place supply"( Damrosch et al. However, he gives readers a hint when he writes "I love to hear her speak, yet well I know that music hath a far more pleasing sound"(Damrosch et al. "And in their posture is expressed friendship's exalted interest: each follows where the other leans, and what each does, the other means. "But as there is degree of bliss, so there's no friendship meant by this, but such as will transmit to fame Lucasia's and Orinda's name" ( Damrosch et al. Shakespeare wrote of the honest truth and did not deny anything he wrote.
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