The Sonnets and Other Poems

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The Sonnets and Other Poems Page 31

by William Shakespeare


  2 unprovident careless

  3 Grant admit, accept

  6 stick’st hesitate

  7 roof i.e. body that houses the young man’s soul/family, the house to which he belongs

  9 thought intention

  mind opinion (of you)

  10 be fairer lodged have better lodgings

  11 presence appearance, manner

  kind benevolent/natural/possessed of family affection

  13 another self i.e. a child

  14 still always

  thine or thee your descendants or yourself

  1 wane decline, become older and weaker (with suggestion of “become detumescent after sex”)

  2 one of thine a child of yours (or just possibly “your wife” who has become pregnant)

  from … departest (which child is formed) out of that which you leave behind, i.e. youth/ semen

  3 fresh blood lifeblood/semen

  youngly in your youth

  4 from youth convertest i.e. are old

  convertest turn away/change

  5 Herein i.e. in having children

  increase prosperity, advancement/reproduction/children

  7 minded so of your intention (not to have children)

  8 threescore year sixty years

  make … away bring the world to an end

  9 for store to have children/to preserve

  10 featureless lacking attractive features

  rude rough, crude

  11 Look whom whomever

  12 in bounty generously

  13 seal stamp of authority

  14 print impress or stamp with a seal

  copy pattern from which copies (i.e. descendants) are made/abundance/lease (of life; legal term “copyhold”)

  1 count i.e. count the hours the clock strikes

  tells counts out/reveals

  2 brave splendid

  3 prime its peak (originally, “the first hour of the day”)

  4 sable black

  5 barren bare (with connotations of infertility)

  6 erst formerly

  canopy protect, give shade to

  7 girded up tied up firmly

  8 bier barrow for carrying harvested crops/stand for a coffin

  white … beard i.e. the bristly bundles of pale harvested crops (personified as the corpse of a bearded old man)

  9 question make wonder, speculate

  10 wastes deserted or uncharted lands/vast expanses/ruins (with connotations of “wasted moments”)

  11 sweets and beauties sweet and beautiful things

  forsake abandon

  13 Time’s scythe the figure of Time was traditionally depicted carrying a scythe with which to cut down the living (continues the harvesting metaphor)

  14 breed children

  brave defy

  1 you although “thou” was usually a more intimate form of address, it was also more self-consciously poetic, so the decisive shift to “you” (and the use of love) signals a more personal, less conventional approach

  2 here i.e. in this world

  3 Against in anticipation of/to defend yourself against

  4 semblance appearance, likeness

  some other i.e. a child

  5 in lease by leasehold, temporarily

  6 determination end (legal term relating to the cessation of tenancy)

  were would be

  your … bear would look like you/would carry your body (to the grave)

  8 issue child(ren)

  9 house i.e. body/family

  10 husbandry careful household management (plays on the sense of “being a husband”)

  13 unthrifts wasteful people

  1 my judgement pluck draw my knowledge

  2 have understand

  4 dearths famines

  seasons’ quality what the weather governing the seasons will be like

  5 fortune … tell predict every minute of the future

  8 oft predict frequent predictions

  10 art knowledge

  11 As i.e. as the knowledge that

  12 store having children

  convert change/turn

  13 prognosticate foretell

  14 Thy … date your death will bring the final end of truth and beauty

  date limit of a fixed period of time

  1 consider consider that

  2 Holds in perfection remains perfect

  3 stage i.e. the world

  4 Whereon … comment which the stars comment on and secretly influence

  influence the supposed flowing from the stars of ethereal fluid that affected human destiny

  5 as like

  6 Cheerèd and checked encouraged and restrained

  7 Vaunt boast, exult

  at height decease start to decay when they are at their height

  8 wear … memory wear out their splendid appearance and vigor until it is quite forgotten

  9 conceit notion

  this inconstant stay our uncertain stay in the world

  11 wasteful ruinous

  time … decay i.e. either time and decay compete over who shall ruin the youth, or together they discuss the way they will do so

  12 sullied gloomy/tarnished

  13 all in war in all-out war

  14 engraft you new i.e. restore you—“grafting” is the horticultural practice of inserting a shoot from one tree into another; puns on “engrave,” suggesting the reanimation of the young man through the writing of poetry about him

  1 But wherefore but why (the argument continues from Sonnet 15)

  2 bloody bloodthirsty

  3 fortify strengthen against attack

  5 on … hours at the peak of your life

  6 maiden virgin

  gardens a common metaphor for the female body or womb

  unset unplanted or unseeded (with semen)

  8 liker more like (you)

  counterfeit portrait

  9 lines of life family lineage/physical features (of children); also suggests the lines of a poem

  that life repair renew that life

  Time’s pencil the paintbrush with which Time has “painted” the young man’s appearance

  pupil inexperienced, amateur

  11 fair beauty

  12 live yourself a living reality

  13 give away yourself i.e. to marry and create children

  keeps yourself still preserves you forever

  14 drawn … skill i.e. in the children you create; the young man’s pen is his penis

  2 deserts merits, worth

  4 parts qualities/physical features

  6 in … number enumerate in new verses

  8 touches qualities/brushstrokes

  10 less … tongue more talk than truthfulness

  11 true genuine/rightful/regular

  rights may pun on “rites,” suggesting worshipful ceremonies

  poet’s rage frenzied poetic inspiration

  12 stretchèd strained, irregular

  antique old; may pun on “antic,” i.e. “grotesque, mad”

  2 temperate even-tempered, moderate

  4 lease temporary period of occupancy

  date duration

  5 eye of heaven i.e. the sun

  7 fair … declines beautiful thing loses its beauty at some point

  8 untrimmed stripped of ornament and beauty

  10 possession includes the legal sense of “exclusive control over property” (in contrast to lease)

  fair thou ow’st beauty you own

  12 lines i.e. of poetry (also suggestive of family lineage)

  to … grow’st you become an integral part of time

  14 this i.e. this sonnet

  2 brood children (who all return to the earth in death)

  3 keen sharp/eager

  4 phoenix mythical Arabian bird that lived for five hundred years, was consumed by fire, and then reborn from its own ashes; only one existed at a time

  5 fleet’st fly past

  7 sweets delights, pleasures

&nbs
p; 9 carve i.e. carve wrinkles

  10 antique ancient (puns on “antic,” i.e. “grotesque, distorting”)

  11 untainted unmarked/uninjured

  12 pattern ideal model, exemplar

  14 My love the man I love (with secondary sense of “my love for him”)

  1 with … painted created by Nature herself/not painted with cosmetics

  2 master-mistress sovereign mistress/man with female qualities or beauty—a person who fulfills the traditional role of a lover’s mistress to whom sonnets were addressed, yet is a man and perhaps a social superior

  of my passion the object of my passionate love/the master who directs my passions

  3 acquainted plays on the sense of “equipped with a vagina” (a “quaint”)

  4 false fickle, unfaithful

  5 rolling straying

  6 Gilding adding shine to, coating with a superficial layer of gold

  7 A … controlling one with the form of a man, but whose facial beauty has the power to enthrall both men and women

  hue form/facial appearance/complexion

  9 for as, to be

  10 wrought made, fashioned

  fell a-doting became infatuated (with you)

  11 me … defeated deprived me of you

  12 one thing i.e. a penis

  to … nothing irrelevant to my purposes (apparently a denial of homosexual interest, but since nothing can also mean “vagina,” there may be a suggestion of “[a penis that] for my purposes is the equivalent of a vagina”)

  13 pricked thee out selected you (by marking your name on a list)/gave you a prick (penis)

  pleasure sexual enjoyment

  14 Mine … treasure let me have your love and women have sex with you

  use sexual employment (quibbles on the sense of “profit, financial interest”)

  treasure may have connotations of “semen”

  1 Muse i.e. poet (inspired by a Muse)

  2 Stirred moved, inspired

  painted artificial, made up with cosmetics

  3 heaven … use invokes heaven itself as a poetic comparison for his beloved

  4 every … rehearse describes every beautiful thing there is alongside the beauty of his mistress

  5 Making … compare linking her in proud comparisons

  7 rare splendid, exceptionally beautiful

  8 rondure sphere (the world)

  hems encloses

  11 any mother’s child i.e. any human being (a deliberately homely expression to contrast with the extravagant language attributed to other poets; perhaps, though, there is also the suggestion that to a mother, her child is always the fairest of all)

  12 gold candles i.e. stars

  13 hearsay rumor, secondhand information

  14 purpose intend

  1 glass mirror

  2 one date the same age

  3 furrows i.e. wrinkles

  4 look I I expect

  expiate end

  6 raiment clothing

  7 in … me refers to the popular poetic concept of lovers exchanging hearts

  9 be … wary take good care of yourself

  11 chary carefully

  13 Presume … heart do not expect to receive your heart back

  1 unperfect not word-perfect

  2 with … part forgets his lines out of stage fright

  3 replete filled

  5 for … trust from lack of confidence/for fear of not being trusted

  6 perfect … rite correct words that make up the rituals of love (rite puns on “right,” i.e. what is owed to a lover)

  8 O’ercharged overloaded

  might strength

  9 books i.e. writings (the sonnets)

  10 presagers indicators/announcers (to create an oxymoron with dumb)

  breast heart

  11 Who i.e. my books

  12 that tongue i.e. the tongue of some other person

  14 fine wit sharp intelligence and understanding

  1 stelled portrayed, delineated

  2 table flat board on which a picture is painted

  3 frame picture frame, but plays on the sense of “body”

  4 perspective type of painting in which the image appeared distorted (or different) until it was viewed from a particular angle

  5 through i.e. in the work of/by looking into the eyes of

  7 shop can mean “workshop”

  still forever

  8 That … eyes i.e. the young man stares into the poet’s eyes (windows), where his own are reflected

  13 this cunning want lack this skill

  14 know understand, see into

  2 of from

  3 triumph exultation

  4 Unlooked for unexpectedly/overlooked, disregarded

  joy … most take pleasure in what I consider most worthy of honor

  5 leaves petals

  6 marigold the bright orange-yellow flower was noted for opening its petals in response to the sun

  7 in … burièd i.e. without the sun, their splendor is lost (shut up within petals)

  8 glory magnificence/brightness

  9 painful suffering pain

  famousèd made famous

  might the Quarto text has “worth” here, but the failure to rhyme with quite has caused most editors to emend to might (or “fight”); some retain “worth” and emend quite to “forth”

  10 foiled defeated

  11 razèd erased

  14 remove move away (i.e. be unfaithful)

  1 vassalage total service and allegiance (feudal term)

  2 knit bound

  3 ambassage formal message

  4 witness bear witness to

  wit intelligence/ingenuity

  6 wanting lacking

  7 some … it some clever poetic device that you think up will embellish my plain expression of duty/some favorable opinion of yours will cause you to lodge my vulnerable duty in your soul

  9 moving life and fortunes

  10 fair aspect favorable influence (astrological term)

  14 prove me put me to the test

  2 dear precious

  travel plays on the sense of “travail” (hard work)

  5 far i.e. far away from you

  6 Intend proceed on/devote themselves toward

  10 shadow image/ghost

  11 Which i.e. which shadow

  ghastly frightening/ghostly

  14 For on account of

  1 How … then the argument continues from Sonnet 27

  plight state, condition

  3 oppression the oppressive toil mentioned in Sonnet 27

  6 shake hands make a pact

  7 the … complain night by causing me to complain

  10 dost him grace i.e. by shining in the sun’s place

  11 swart-complexioned black-faced

  12 twire twinkle/peep out

  gild’st the even make the evening glitter

  1 in disgrace out of favor

  2 beweep weep about

  3 bootless useless

  6 Featured … possessed having the looks of one man and the friends of another

  7 art skill/learning

  scope freedom

  8 With … least least satisfied with what I have most of

  10 Haply perhaps/ by good fortune (puns on “happily”)

  state i.e. state of mind

  12 sullen dark/melancholy

  14 change exchange

  1 sessions … summon the metaphor is of a law court, to which thoughts are summoned as witnesses

  3 sigh sigh at

  4 new wail lament anew

  dear valuable (as in line 13)

  5 flow i.e. weep

  6 dateless endless

  7 cancelled rendered invalid (another legal term)

  8 th’expense the loss

  9 grievances foregone past sorrows

  10 heavily sorrowfully

  tell o’er add up/relate

  11 account financial account/narrative (the financial metaphor is maintained with pay and dear)<
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  fore-bemoanèd moan griefs lamented in the past

  1 Thy … dead i.e. the qualities and affections of dead friends live on in the young man (but there is also the suggestion that the poet has been deserted by his friends or lovers in favor of the young man)

  bosom heart

  endearèd with loved by/made more valuable by

  2 lacking not having, missing

  3 parts attributes

  5 obsequious funereal, mourning

  6 dear tender, heartfelt

  religious reverent/conscientious

  7 interest financial interest (owed to the dead)

  8 removed moved elsewhere

  there i.e. in the young man’s bosom

  10 trophies spoils, memorials, relics

  11 all … give gave all their shares in me to you

  12 That due of that which was owed to

  13 I loved which I loved

  14 And … me and you, who are all of them, have all of me

  1 my well-contented day the day of my death, which I welcome/the day when I shall pay all my debts (to nature)

  2 churl base villain/miser

  3 fortune chance/good fortune

  4 rude unpolished

  5 bett’ring … time superior work subsequently being produced

  7 Reserve preserve, keep

  rhyme poetic qualities

  8 height i.e. height of achievement

  happier more fortunate, talented

  9 vouchsafe deign to bestow upon me

  10 Muse inspiration/skill

  11 dearer birth i.e. better literary creation

  12 march … equipage a military metaphor, literally “march among ranks of better equipped soldiers”—i.e. be in the company of more sophisticated poets

  4 alchemy the power to turn base metals into gold

  5 Anon soon

  basest lowliest/darkest

  6 rack mass of clouds driven by the wind (puns on “wrack,” i.e. wreck)

  7 visage face

  10 all-triumphant glorious

  11 out, alack alas

  12 region cloud cloud of the upper air

  13 no whit in no way, not at all

  14 Suns … world earthly kings (but also puns on “sons of the world,” i.e. ordinary mortals)

  stain become stained, lose brightness/become dishonored

  1 thou i.e. the sun; continuing the theme of Sonnet 33, the young man’s deception is addressed through weather imagery

  4 brav’ry splendor

  rotten smoke unhealthy vapors (clouds were believed to carry disease)

  7 salve soothing ointment

  8 disgrace affront/ disfigurement (i.e. scar)

  9 physic medicine

  12 cross affliction

  14 ransom pay, atone for

  3 stain darken (also implying moral corruption)

  4 canker cankerworm, a parasitic grub that destroys plants

 

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