![]() ![]() No this poem is no necessarily keep living so long as human keep breathing, the speaker is wrong because nobody can destroy this poem but if the human race becomes extinct tomorrow, it will keep living with other animals all over the world. Thee is the person for who the poem was written by Shakespeare.Ģ Does this poem necessarily keep living so long as humans keep breathing? Is the speaker right? The poet makes us understand in a better way, love, and how love is essential to live. ![]() The personification, provides the reader a clearer image of the characters of the poem, and about their feelings towards each other. What’s up with all of the personification? He compares his love to the summer, but, the difference is that when it finishes, summer passes on to autumn but love, never passes, it is eternal. In “When in eternal lines” the word “Eternal” talks about the future. Why? Why not just surprise us with the turn and the couplet? Lines 8 and 12 seem to do a bit of foreshadowing. ![]() In both ways, this is a correct thinking, because, the poem would be useless without anyone reading it, but, if the the poem wasn’t there either, the teachings won’t help anyone. ![]() The poem’s utility without human life, and the human life existing without the poem. Here, he makes a comparison between the utility of the poem. “Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?” It means “Shall I compare YOU…”ĭoes this poem necessarily keep living so long as humans keep breathing? Is the speaker right? When Shakespeare writes ‘Thee”, he is talking about someone in special. ![]()
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