Sonnet 138, by William Shakespeare

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William Shakespeare, born in 1564 and died in 1616, wrote one hundred and fifty four sonnets in his lifetime. It is said that Shakespeare’s sonnets from 127 to 152 discuss the Dark Lady. Shakespeare appeared to have mixed feelings toward this Dark Lady who was not a portrayal of his actual wife. (Absolute Shakespeare, 2005) This paper will discuss Shakespeare’s Sonnet 138, “When my love swears that she is made of truth”. This Petrarchan sonnet has the rhyme scheme of ABAB, CDCD in the octave and EFEF, GG in the sestet. The fourteen lined sonnet made its first appearance in William Jaggard’s book titled “The Passionate Pilgrim”. This paper will argue against Edward A. Snow’s article on “Love of Comfort and Despair: A Reading of Shakespeare’s Sonnet 138”. Snow believes Sonnet 138 transforms “cynicism and despair” into an “affirmative and idealistic” vision of romance (Snow, 462). However, this paper argues against Snow’s opinion of Sonnet 138 with a different judgement on the Shakespearean sonnet. The argument is that the sonnet expresses the refusal to acknowledge the truth and it portrays the idea of a flawed relationship, as opposed to the picture-perfect love. The first two lines of the sonnet read “When my love swears that she is made of truth/I do believe her, though I know she lies” (Shakespeare, 1-2). In my opinion these two lines tell of the author’s knowledge of his mistress’s unfaithfulness. The author is aware of her deceitful ways; however he claims to ‘believe her’ and does not let her know that he is aware of her untruths. The language that Shakespeare uses expresses a content attitude with the situation of the relationship, that he has no desire to argue or tell his mistress of his knowledge. In contrast, Snow write... ... middle of paper ... ...the idea of a flawed relationship in Sonnet 138; this portrayal of love is different to what we are used to seeing in other poems and plays. Perhaps Snow failed to see that this different representation of love isn’t unpleasant or distressing, as long as the lovers are at ease with one another. Works Cited "Absolute Shakespeare." Absolute Shakespeare. N.p., 2005. Web. 20 Nov. 2013. . De Grazia, Margreta. “Interpreting Shakespeare’s Sonnets”. PLMA. 100.5 (1985). 810-812. JSTOR.Web. Mabillard, Amanda. "Shakespeare Online." Shakespeare Online. N.p., 2000. Web. 20 Nov. 2013. . McIntosh, Hugh. “The Social Masochism of Shakespeare's Sonnets”. JHUP. 50.1 (2010).109-125. JSTOR.Web. Snow, Edward A. “Love of Comfort and Despair: A Reading of Shakespeare’s Sonnets. ELH. 47.3 (2007).462-483 JSTOR.Web.

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