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Shakespearean quotations on aging and analysis of the elderly in Shakespeare.
- Much Ago About Nothing
will die, if he love her not, and she will die, ere : she...
- As You Like It 2.7.143-70
Shakespeare did not have to go far for the introductory...
- Shakespeare's Education
The famous quotation from Nicholas Rowe's notoriously...
- King Lear 2.2.99
King Lear Fast Facts King Lear was performed during the...
- Shakespeare's Ancestry
Richard Shakespeare worked on several different sections of...
- Sonnet 73
Notes that time of year (1): i.e., being late autumn or...
- Shakespeare's Birth
Shakespeare's Birth. The baptismal register of the Holy...
- Shakespeare's Siblings
Shakespeare's Siblings William Shakespeare was indeed lucky...
- Much Ago About Nothing
I have lived long enough. My way of life is to fall into the sere, the yellow leaf, and that which should accompany old age, as honor, love, obedience, troops of friends I must not look to have. William Shakespeare. Time, Fall, Yellow. William Shakespeare “Macbeth”, W. W. Norton & Company. A good old man, sir. He will be talking.
13 Μαρ 2024 · Literary Works Similar to “Sonnet 18” by William Shakespeare. Other Shakespearean Sonnets: **Sonnet 116: ** Celebrates true love as an enduring, unchanging force. Sonnet 73: Explores the idea of love persisting even in the face of aging and decay. Sonnet 130: Subverts traditional beauty tropes, praising a beloved’s realistic qualities
Sonnet 73 by William Shakespeare presents a speaker who is talking about old age and love. The main idea of the sonnet is the arrival of death and the increasing intensity of love accompanying it. Meanings of Lines 1-4
The poem uses natural metaphors of decline and decay to grapple with the onset of old age, and ultimately suggests that the inevitability of death makes love all the stronger during the lovers’ lifetimes.
12 Νοε 2023 · 'Sonnet 73' is one of four William Shakespeare wrote on the subject of time, the aging process and mortality. It's a thoughtful, reflective sonnet, the voice of a person getting older, aimed at a partner whose love the speaker obviously needs.
Read Shakespeare’s Sonnet 63, ‘Against my love shall be as I am now,’ with a summary and complete analysis of the poem.