Reading review
expediency
This is one of the most famous of all the sonnets, justifiably so. But
it would be a mistake to take it entirely in isolation, for it links in
with so many of the other sonnets through the themes of the descriptive
power of verse; the ability of the poet to depict the fair youth
adequately, or not; and the immortality conveyed through being hymned in
these 'eternal lines'. It is noticeable that here the poet is full of
confidence that his verse will live as long as there are people drawing
breath upon the earth, whereas later he apologises for his poor wit and
his humble lines which are inadequate to encompass all the youth's
excellence. Now, perhaps in the early days of his love, there is no such
self-doubt and the eternal summer of the youth is preserved forever in
the poet's lines. The poem also works at a rather curious level of
achieving its objective through dispraise. The summer's day is found to
be lacking in so many respects (too short, too hot, too rough, sometimes
too dingy), but curiously enough one is left with the abiding impression
that 'the lovely boy' is in fact like a summer's day at its best, fair,
warm, sunny, temperate, one of the darling buds of May, and that all his
beauty has been wonderfully highlighted by the comparison。
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