Thursday, April 23, 2020
Sonnet 23 Essays - Sonnet 23, Sonnet, Sonnet 1, Sonnet 65
  Sonnet 23    This sonnet demonstrates Shakespeare's great ability of playing with words.    According to him a person is tongue-tied when he has either too much or too  little to say. He illustrates his idea by giving an example of an unperfect  actor who forgets his lines on stage and more curiously, some fierce thing whose  heart is weakened by the weight of his own strength. This use of paradox adds  intensity to the sonnet and lays the foundation for the following quatrain. The  first quatrain is like the silence before a storm; the way it is presented  suggests that there is more to come. The actor and the beast are summoned to  serve only as analogues to Shakespeare's double-edged analytical presentation in  quatrain 2 of love's agonized lack of words: So I, for fear of trust, forget to  say The perfect ceremony of love's rite, And in mine own love's strength seem to  decay, O'ercharged with burden of mine own love's might. The persona here  compares him to the characters beckoned in Q1. In a passage such as this, the  distance between the composing author and the fictive speaker almost vanishes,  as it is very easy to imagine that Shakespeare, a master of expression, would  tell himself that a perfect ceremony of love could be invented. Another aspect  worthy of note is the way the phrase mine own love's has been used repeatedly;  in line 7 the persona speaks of the decay of his love and in the very next line  he speaks of its strength. This double stranglehold is an extremely interesting  case, and is beautifully expressed here. The first and second quatrains can be  coupled together as they basically portray the same idea. The sonnet therefore  can be divided into two parts instead of four. An octet followed by a sestet.    While the octet speaks of the persona's tongue-tiedness, the sestet is a plea to  his beloved to understand the depth of his love. 'O, let my books be then the  eloquence / And dumb presagers of my speaking breast...' the persona here wishes  that his writing be the silent and truthful foreteller of all the love in his  heart. Q3, in hinting at the beloved's preference for a rival poet, tongue that  more hath more expressed, ascribes the tongue-tiedness of the speaker to his new  perception of the debased judgment exercised by the beloved. At first, for fear  of trust (line 5) might seem to mean, "fearing my own powers," but  when the unnamed rival enters the scene (line 12), we see the tongue-tiedness  rather as a fear of trusting the potentially faithless beloved. Furthermore, the  verbal parallelism of the octet is replaced by an irregular line-motion as the  persona's agitation achieves full force. The sestet ends with the frustrating  speechlessness of the lover finding a way of talking, by deviating into the  third person in the final line: To hear with eyes belongs to loves fine wit. It  is a proverb coined by the persona and it somewhat negates his inadequacy. It  has a sense of pride and provides a perfect end to the poem.    
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