Sonnet 18 is arguably the most famous
of the sonnets, its opening line competitive with "Romeo, Romeo, wherefore
art thou Romeo?" in the long list of Shakespeare's quotable quotations.
The gender of the addressee is not explicit, but this is the first sonnet after
the so-called "procreation sonnets" (sonnets 1-17), i.e., it
apparently marks the place where the poet has abandoned his earlier push to
persuade the fair lord to have a child. The first two quatrains focus on the
fair lord's beauty: the poet attempts to compare it to a summer's day, but
shows that there can be no such comparison, since the fair lord's timeless
beauty far surpasses that of the fleeting, inconstant season.
Here the theme of the ravages of time again predominates;
we see it especially in line 7, where the poet speaks of the inevitable
mortality of beauty: "And every fair from fair sometime declines."
But the fair lord's is of another sort, for it "shall not fade" - the
poet is eternalizing the fair lord's beauty in his verse, in these
"eternal lines." Note the financial imagery ("summer's
lease") and the use of anaphora (the repetition of opening words) in lines
6-7, 10-11, and 13-14. Also note that May (line 3) was an early summer month in
Shakespeare's time, because England did not adopt the Gregorian calendar until
1752.
The poet describes summer as a season of extremes and
disappointments. He begins in lines 3-4, where "rough winds" are an
unwelcome extreme and the shortness of summer is its disappointment. He
continues in lines 5-6, where he lingers on the imperfections of the summer
sun. Here again we find an extreme and a disappointment: the sun is sometimes
far too hot, while at other times its "gold complexion" is dimmed by
passing clouds. These imperfections contrast sharply with the poet's
description of the fair lord, who is "more temperate" (not extreme)
and whose "eternal summer shall not fade" (i.e., will not become a
disappointment) thanks to what the poet proposes in line 12.
In line 12 we find the poet's solution - how he intends to
eternalize the fair lord's beauty despite his refusal to have a child. The poet
plans to capture the fair lord's beauty in his verse ("eternal
lines"), which he believes will withstand the ravages of time. Thereby the
fair lord's "eternal summer shall not fade," and the poet will have
gotten his wish. Here we see the poet's use of "summer" as a metaphor
for youth, or perhaps beauty, or perhaps the beauty of youth.
But has the poet really abandoned the idea of encouraging
the fair lord to have a child? Some scholars suggest that the "eternal
lines" in line 12 have a double meaning: the fair lord's beauty can live
on not only in the written lines of the poet's verse but also in the family
lines of the fair lord's progeny. Such an interpretation would echo the
sentiment of the preceding sonnet's closing couplet: "But were some child
of yours alive that time / You should live twice; in it and in my rhyme."
The use of "growest" also implies an increasing or changing: we can
envision the fair lord's family lines growing over time, yet this image is not
as readily applicable to the lines of the poet's verse - unless it refers only
to his intention to continue writing about the fair lord's beauty, his verse
thereby "growing." On the other hand, line 14 seems to counter this
interpretation, the singular "this" (as opposed to "these")
having as its most likely antecedent the poet's verse, and nothing more.
No comments:
Post a Comment