Like many of Shakespeare's sonnets, this poem is an expression of love. In order to express your love, you have to talk about it, define it, examine it. In telling his mistress that he loves her,
In Sonnet 130, the theme "Women and Femininity" is connected to the idea of appearances. This poem is all about female beauty and our expectations and stereotypes about the way women ought to look. You know how in magazines women pretty much tend to look the same? They all fit into a very narrow definition of what is beautiful. Essentially, the speaker in this poem is pointing out that love poetry does the same thing. It makes women into goddesses, not real human beings. He insists that his idea of beautiful femininity doesn't depend on fitting an abstract, unrealistic fantasy.
"Appearances" is a major theme in Sonnet 130, since our speaker spends a lot of the poem talking about what's wrong with his mistress's looks. He does a pretty complete dissection of her face, her body, and her smell. He doesn't say anything at all about her personality, but instead sticks to his laundry list of problems with her appearance. This gives Shakespeare a chance to poke fun at our obsession with looks and to show how ridiculous it is to ask any person to live up to some ideal of perfect beauty.
theme of poem
a sonnet
[object Object]
The theme of the poem 'To a Skylark' is nature and the strong feelings it evokes in the writer. The poem was penned by Percy Bysshe Shelley.
The theme of a elegy is remembrance of the dead.
In a sonnet, the couplet is located at the end of the poem. It consists of two rhyming lines that often summarize the main theme or offer a surprising twist on the preceding lines of the sonnet.
Appearance versus reality
Both Sonnet 130 by William Shakespeare and the poem "When Great Dogs Fight" by Ray A. Young Bear explore the theme of the contrast between appearance and reality. In Sonnet 130, Shakespeare discusses the speaker's realistic view of his lover's imperfections, while in "When Great Dogs Fight," the poet uses the metaphor of the dogs fighting to symbolize the clash of power and aggression in society. Both works demonstrate a deeper understanding beyond surface appearances.
The theme is that winners don't always look like they are winners.
Shakespeare's sonnet 130 is a Shakespearean sonnet in terms of rhyme scheme. Its meter is iambic pentameter, and its tone is satirical.
"Death be not Proud" is a sonnet by John Donne, following the structure of a Petrarchan sonnet with an octave and a sestet. It is a metaphysical poem that explores the theme of death and challenges the idea of death being something to fear.
it is a shakesperian sonnet ie. it has a specific rhyme scheme and a rhyming couplet at the end which stands out bringing a slight change in the poem's theme, tone or even setting
The voice of the poem refers to his mistress' hair as "wires, black wires."
Shakespearean sonnet #130: My mistress's eyes are nothing like the sun
Every sonnet has a different theme.
His mistress in this poem is his beloved. That is not a particularly obsolete meaning.
There is always assonance is rhyming, so yes... in the rhyming words and maybe some outside of that... white, why, wires is one example that I saw, for instance. It might contribute to the verbal enjoyment of the poem. Here is the text of Sonnet 130: http://www.Shakespeare-online.com/sonnets/130.html