Art vs. Time
Shakespeare, like many sonneteers,
portrays time as an enemy of love. Time destroys love because time causes
beauty to fade, people to age, and life to end. One common convention of
sonnets in general is to flatter either a beloved or a patron by promising
immortality through verse. As long as readers read the poem, the object of the
poem’s love will remain alive. In Shakespeare’s Sonnet 15, the speaker talks of
being “in war with time” (13): time causes the young man’s beauty to fade, but
the speaker’s verse shall entomb the young man and keep him beautiful. The
speaker begins by pleading with time in another sonnet, yet he ends by taunting
time, confidently asserting that his verse will counteract time’s ravages. From
our contemporary vantage point, the speaker was correct, and art has beaten
time: the young man remains young since we continue to read of his youth in
Shakespeare’s sonnets.
Through art, nature and beauty
overcome time. Several sonnets use the seasons to symbolize the passage of time
and to show that everything in nature—from plants to people—is mortal. But
nature creates beauty, which poets capture and render immortal in their verse.
Sonnet 106 portrays the speaker reading poems from the past and recognizing his
beloved’s beauty portrayed therein. The speaker then suggests that these
earlier poets were prophesizing the future beauty of the young man by
describing the beauty of their contemporaries. In other words, past poets
described the beautiful people of their day and, like Shakespeare’s speaker,
perhaps urged these beautiful people to procreate and so on, through the poetic
ages, until the birth of the young man portrayed in Shakespeare’s sonnets. In
this way—that is, as beautiful people of one generation produce more beautiful
people in the subsequent generation and as all this beauty is written about by
poets—nature, art, and beauty triumph over time.
Stopping the March Toward Death
Growing older and dying are
inescapable aspects of the human condition, but Shakespeare’s sonnets give
suggestions for halting the progress toward death. Shakespeare’s speaker spends
a lot of time trying to convince the young man to cheat death by having
children. In Sonnets 1–17, the speaker argues that the young man is too
beautiful to die without leaving behind his replica, and the idea that the
young man has a duty to procreate becomes the dominant motif of the first
several sonnets. In Sonnet 3, the speaker continues his urgent prodding and
concludes, “Die single and thine image dies with thee” (14). The speaker’s
words aren’t just the flirtatious ramblings of a smitten man: Elizabethan
England was rife with disease, and early death was common. Producing children
guaranteed the continuation of the species. Therefore, falling in love has a social
benefit, a benefit indirectly stressed by Shakespeare’s sonnets. We might die,
but our children—and the human race—shall live on.
The Significance of Sight
Shakespeare used images of eyes
throughout the sonnets to emphasize other themes and motifs, including children
as an antidote to death, art’s struggle to overcome time, and the painfulness
of love. For instance, in several poems, the speaker urges the young man to
admire himself in the mirror. Noticing and admiring his own beauty, the speaker
argues, will encourage the young man to father a child. Other sonnets link
writing and painting with sight: in Sonnet 24, the speaker’s eye becomes a pen
or paintbrush that captures the young man’s beauty and imprints it on the blank
page of the speaker’s heart. But our loving eyes can also distort our sight,
causing us to misperceive reality. In the sonnets addressed to the dark lady,
the speaker criticizes his eyes for causing him to fall in love with a
beautiful but duplicitous woman. Ultimately, Shakespeare uses eyes to act as a
warning: while our eyes allow us to perceive beauty, they sometimes get so
captivated by beauty that they cause us to misjudge character and other
attributes not visible to the naked eye.
Readers’ eyes are as significant in
the sonnets as the speaker’s eyes. Shakespeare encourages his readers to see by
providing vivid visual descriptions. One sonnet compares the young man’s beauty
to the glory of the rising sun, while another uses the image of clouds
obscuring the sun as a metaphor for the young man’s faithlessness and still
another contrasts the beauty of a rose with one rotten spot to warn the young
man to cease his sinning ways. Other poems describe bare trees to symbolize
aging. The sonnets devoted to the dark lady emphasize her coloring, noting in
particular her black eyes and hair, and Sonnet 130 describes her by noting all
the colors she does not possess. Stressing the visual helps Shakespeare to
heighten our experience of the poems by giving us the precise tools with which
to imagine the metaphors, similes, and descriptions contained therein.
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