Sonnet 134: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Content deleted Content added
Olaf Davis (talk | contribs) added {{sonnets}} template and removed redundant {{shakespearesonnets}} |
This is more specific |
||
Line 15: | Line 15: | ||
He pays the whole, and yet I am not free.}} |
He pays the whole, and yet I am not free.}} |
||
In '''[[Shakespeare|Shakespeare's]] 134th [[sonnet]]''', the speaker confronts [[Shakespeare's sonnets#The Dark Lady|the mistress]] after learning that she has seduced [[Shakespeare's sonnets#Fair Youth|the |
In '''[[Shakespeare|Shakespeare's]] 134th [[sonnet]]''', the speaker confronts [[Shakespeare's sonnets#The Dark Lady|the mistress]] after learning that she has seduced [[Shakespeare's sonnets#Fair Youth|the Fair Youth]]. |
||
==Synopsis== |
==Synopsis== |
Revision as of 22:28, 3 September 2008
In Shakespeare's 134th sonnet, the speaker confronts the mistress after learning that she has seduced the Fair Youth.
Synopsis
In the first quatrain, the speaker confesses that both he and the friend are at the mistress's mercy; in the second one, he surmises that the attachment will hold, due to the friend's naivete and the mistress's greed.
The remainder of the poem construes the mistress as an unethical moneylender: metaphorically, she lent her beauty to the speaker and then collected the friend as interest.