Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Sonnet 116
- Structure
- The sonnet has 14
lines, divided into
three stanzas of four
lines each and a final
couplet.
- The rhyme scheme is: a-b-a-b,
c-d-c-d, e-f-e-f, g-g
- This sonnet follows the normal
structure of a sonnet which is to
change the mood at the end of
the sonnet using a rhyming
couplet.
- Attitudes, themes, ideas
- love is a mysterious force
"Whose worth's unknown",
implying love is priceless
- Love is constant- metaphor "star"
- love, like the stars in the night sky, can be
observed across the globe throughout time.
Love is not restricted by time or place, but
exists above all considerations.
- The traditional idea of love and time being
enemies is explored briefly in Sonnet 116.
Shakespeare is clear about the positive virtues
of love: even when the "rosy lips and cheeks of
youth" fall victim to Time's "sickle"
- Language
- uses repeated pairs of
words: "love is not love",
"alters when it alteration
finds" and "remover to
remove"
- These repeated words
suggest that they are a
loving couple
- metaphors based on natural
elements, suggesting that love is
natural and an essential part of life.
- "is the star to every wand'ring bark"
it's a fixed point of light in the sky - a
"star" - guiding a boat ("wand'ring
bark") lost at sea.
- There are some opposites and negatives
used to stress the qualities of love by
saying what it is not: true love can
observe storms ("tempests") and not be
affected; "Love's not Time's fool".
- The opening lines of the poem follow the
christian marriage vows ("the marriage of
true minds")
- They also stress the idea that
love should be without
"impediments". Meaning true love
should be without fault.
- "bears it out even to the edge of doom" This
suggests that love will always win over "doom"
(something bad)
- comparison
- To his coy mistress
- Sonnet 43