Monday, December 2, 2019
Shakespeare`s Poems Essays - Sonnet 1, Lord Byron,
  Shakespeare`s Poems    Time has seen an infinite amount of beauty in its long existence. Nature has  produced so many wonderful scenes and objects that we cannot collect it all even  in one life. We ourselves are keepers of such beauty and intrigue that poets and  other writers have captured our essence in prose. Whether it's beauty that is  skin deep or the beauty of a face that makes you look twice, what attracts us is  not always what attracts your neighbor. Shakespeare's, "My Mistress' Eyes    Are Nothing Like the Sun," and Lord Byron's, "She Walks in Beauty," are  the epitome of what men and women long for. Although different in their  interpretations of beauty, they hold true to the meaning of beauty, and the  meaning of love. In Shakespeare's "My Mistress' Eyes are Nothing like the    Sun," beauty is definitely only skin deep. Shakespeare's description of his  love is an abomination to the quintessential woman every man lusts for. He  describes her as having, "black wires grow on her head" (Mistress line 4),  instead of the beautiful, long black hair that most men would die for.    Shakespeare also states, "I love to hear her speak, yet well I know That music  hath far a more pleasing sound" (Mistress line 9-10). The subject in this  sonnet is well beyond grotesque, and her voice is to be thought as a plague on  the ears. However, what she has to say to him and the way she say's, "I Love    You" is like music in Shakespeare's ears and his heart. No matter how  unattractive she is to him or to anyone else, only he knows her true beauty, and  that lies deep inside her. Beauty is not just a word, nor is it just an  appearance to Shakespeare in this sonnet. Beauty is something that has already  been achieved by someone who is looking desperately to find it - that someone  being the woman. She seems like someone who Shakespeare is quite close to and  not just some tramp he pulled off the street. To be able to write about someone  in this way, one would have to know the inner thoughts and feelings of that  someone. Shakespeare, although in an odd fashion, poured her emotions, as well  as his own, into this paradoxical description of what love should be. To    Shakespeare, what you see is not always what you want, but what you know could  be all you ever hoped for. One of the most beautiful love poems ever written,    "She Walks in Beauty," is a drawn out description of beauty and the love of  such beauty. Lord Byron describes this angelic creature as innocent, decisive,  and perfect in every way, shape and form. He does not say, however, that he  loves her. If there is any hint of love at all, it is for her outside appearance  to the world. This could have been a gentle stranger he saw sitting in a tavern,  or just someone he had made up. At any rate, Lord Byron's depiction of this  mysterious woman is one of great admiration and lust. The reader does not learn  any more of her, nothing about her personality or her wit. Byron tends to skip  these rather skeptical details perhaps because she was a horrible person. She  may have been stuck up and snobby, and may have let no man near her that  didn't have enough money to support her. Then again, she may have been the  local prostitute whose morals were as low as her profession. However one would  look at her, however one would want to describe her, she was "so soft, so  calm, yet eloquent" (Beauty line 14) and ",,,all that's best of dark and  bright" (Beauty line 3). Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, to coin the  well over-used phrase. William Shakespeare and Lord Byron, two of the most  renowned poets of all time, both held beauty at high standards. Although  different, both authors expressed a great love for what one can see and for what  one can know. For Byron, it seemed that what you see is what you get. That  beauty is a woman who can turn the head of every man as she walks down a street,  or a woman who can make time stand still when she enters a room. Byron's  fantasy was every man's fantasy, and his words drew a picture of radiance and  perfection. For Shakespeare, on the other hand, what you see isn't what you  get, but what you know is    
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