Sonnet 17
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Sonnet 17
by William Shakespeare Who will believe my verse in time to come, |
[edit] Synopsis
Shakespeare's Sonnet XVII, the last of his procreation sonnets, questions his own descriptions of the young man, believing that others in future ages will believe them to be exaggerations if he does not make a copy of himself (a child). Shakespeare insists that his comparisons, even though they are quite strong, are not exaggerations. Shakespeare even goes as far as to say that Heaven is a "tomb" in comparison to that which the young man deserves. Shakespeare argues that the descriptions in fact are not strong enough, and they do not do justice to the young man's beauty. ("If I could write the beauty of your eyes,/"). The sonnet ends with a typical notion that should the young man have a child, he shall live both in the child and in the poet's rhyme.
As in Sonnet 130, Shakespeare shows himself again to be quite conscious and hesitant in terms of flamboyant, flowery proclamations of beauty.
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