Shakespeare Sonnet 130 Tone

Words: 500
Pages: 2

Women all across the world are compared to something whether it’s good or bad. It has gotten to the point where women have become acclimated to the comparisons. In sonnet 130, the speaker compares his mistress’ physical appearance to all sorts of things to show how women are always falsely compared. Shakespeare uses a truthful tone and comparative word choice to portray the idea that women are always being compared to all sorts of things like their hair, their breast, their looks, and even the way they dress, but love conquers all imperfections.
William Shakespeare uses comparative word choice to describe how his mistress’ physical appearance looks to helps the reader understand the comparisons women have to go through each and every day. The speaker says, “ And in some perfumes is there more delight, than in the breath that from my mistress reeks” (lines 7-8). The speaker is
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The speaker says,” My mistress’ eyes are nothing like the sun” (1). The sun is a very bright star, so therefore he is saying her eyes doesn’t have a glow to them. The speaker states, “ I have seen roses damasked, red and white, but no such roses see I in her cheeks” (5-6). Roses are usually bright red and white; he is saying her cheeks are colorless unlike roses. The way the tone is being used in the sonnet to compare the mistress gives the readers an idea of all the comparisons women go through in life. The meaning Shakespeare tried to portray in Sonnet 130 was women are always falsely compared and love conquers all imperfections. The speaker says, “ And yet by heaven I think my love as rare, as any she belied with false compare” (13-14). These lines stood out the most because he is saying his love for her conquers all of her imperfections. The speaker revealed the meaning that women are always roguishly compared in the final line of the sonnet when he said “any she belied” (12). The