Sonnet 18
Sonnet 18
Sonnet 18
one of the greatest love poems of all time. Like other sonnets, it is written in iambic pentameter
form, consisting of three quatrains and a rhyming couplet. It deals with the theme of beauty and
the way it is affected by time.
The sonnet begins with conveying the beauty of Shakespeare’s love. It is notable that their
physical features are not actually described – we are told nothing specific of how they look –
instead Shakespeare compares his love to a summer’s day and concludes that their beauty is
greater than that of summer and the sun. The poem opens with the famous complementary
question:
Shakespeare makes specific criticisms of the summer: its beauty is spoiled by strong winds and
it disappoints us by being too short:
In the second quatrain, Shakespeare continues his criticisms of the summer. At this point,
however, he focuses on the imperfection of the sun and explains that it is temporary and, like
other aspects of the summer, tends towards unpleasant extremes:
In the second quatrain Shakespeare poses his problem fairly explicitly: every beauty will fade
either by chance or through the natural course of time:
The final couplet reaffirms the poet's hope that as long as there is breath in mankind, his poetry
too will live on, and ensure the immortality of his muse.
In conclusion, Shakespeare’s Sonnet 18 successfully conveys the themes of beauty and the
effect of time on it through a variety of poetic techniques and effective use of the iambic
pentameter structure. This sonnet, however, very possibly should not be regarded as a love
poem due to the fact that Shakespeare has clearly aimed to draw a lot of attention to himself as
the poet and that his description of his beloved’s beauty did not include much detail.