Summary The poet begins a new sequence of sonnets, written in his absence from the youth during the summer and autumn months, although the first image in Sonnet 97 is of winter. The previous positions of the young man and the poet are now reversed, and it is the poet […]
Read more Summary and Analysis Sonnet 97Summary and Analysis Sonnet 96
Summary Still using the paternal tone, the poet observes that the young man’s vices are a subject of public gossip. The contrast between the youth’s beauty and his vicious way of life makes the vices seem less immoral than otherwise: “Thou mak’st faults graces that to thee resort.” The youth’s […]
Read more Summary and Analysis Sonnet 96Summary and Analysis Sonnet 95
Summary Employing a paternal attitude, the poet continues his lecture on how deceiving appearances can be. In the first quatrain, he constructs a simile in which the young man is like a “fragrant rose” in which vice, likened to a destructive worm, grows unchecked. The poet doesn’t condemn the young […]
Read more Summary and Analysis Sonnet 95Summary and Analysis Sonnet 94
Summary On the surface at least, Sonnet 94 continues the theme from the previous sonnet, which contrasts virtue with appearance. Although the sonnet offers a warm testimonial to a cool and impassive youth, there is no specific mention of the poet or the young man in the entire poem. The […]
Read more Summary and Analysis Sonnet 94Summary and Analysis Sonnet 93
Summary In contrast to the concluding couplet in the previous sonnet, in which the poet questions the young man’s moral character, now the poet surmises that the youth may be inconstant without knowing it. In this startling reversal, the poet acknowledges the essentially good nature of the youth, who is […]
Read more Summary and Analysis Sonnet 93Summary and Analysis Sonnet 92
Summary Resignedly, the poet is prepared to accept whatever fate brings. Because his life depends on the youth’s love, his life will not survive the loss of that love and support: “And life no longer than thy love will stay, / For it depends upon that love of thine.” Because […]
Read more Summary and Analysis Sonnet 92Summary and Analysis Sonnet 91
Summary The poet examines his love for the young man in a more relaxed, less urgent vein. He first catalogues different activities that people like to immerse themselves in, then he admits that he values the youth’s precarious love more than any other sport or possession he already listed in […]
Read more Summary and Analysis Sonnet 91Summary and Analysis Sonnet 90
Summary Already distressed by “the spite of fortune,” the poet urges the youth not to postpone his desertion of him if that is what he intends; do it at once, the poet begs: “Then hate me when thou wilt; if ever, now.” His appeal for a swift and decisive action […]
Read more Summary and Analysis Sonnet 90Summary and Analysis Sonnet 89
Summary Continuing where the previous sonnet left off, this sonnet reveals an undertone of apprehension in the poet’s references to the young man. Whatever the slanderous accusation the youth will make against him, the poet promises to prove the youth justified. Loving the young man and knowing that the young […]
Read more Summary and Analysis Sonnet 89Summary and Analysis Sonnet 88
Summary The poet speaks of his relationship with the young man as though it has been repaired after the rival poet’s departure, but his is a vision of how things might be rather than how they are. He proposes to prove that the youth is virtuous — although the youth […]
Read more Summary and Analysis Sonnet 88