Saturday, August 3, 2019
The Tension between Beauty and Virtue in Shakespeares Sonnet 95 Essay
The Tension between Beauty and Virtue in Shakespeare's  Sonnet 95     Ã     Ã  Ã    "Sonnet 95" of Shakespeare's "blond young man" sonnets depicts a tension-filled  variation on the classic blazon. The poet seems torn between the "shame" (1)  that taints his subject and the "sweets" (4) of the subject 's beauty. The  initial imagery of a "canker" (2) within a "rose" (2) serves to set up the  sexual overtones that dominate the poem, as well as to create the sense of  strain between disapproval and attraction that heightens throughout each  quatrain. Shakespeare develops this imagery to ensnare the subject in an  increasingly agitated opposition between his physical beauty and his behavioral  repulsiveness. Though the poet claims that he "cannot dispraise but in a kind of  praise" (7), the closing couplet goes counter this, bringing the sense of  antagonism between the poet 's admiration and his disapproval full circle. The  couplet serves as a warning that the physical beauty and virility that have  dominated the young man 's life will end, destroying the "   mansion" (9) where he  hid his moral failing through the quatrains.     Ã       The opening quatrain of Sonnet 95 serves to expose the  contrast between the young man 's physical and moral states. This quatrain,  despite permitting the young man 's "beauty" (3) to dominate the sense of his  "sins" (4), also begins to assert the idea that he will suffer for his vice. The  opening image of "How sweet and lovely" (1) dominates the completion of the  thought "dost thou make the shame" (1) through both rhythm and diction. While  Shakespeare sets the opening in perfect iambic rhythm, the insertion of a  pyrrhic foot to begin the statement of the young man 's "shame" (1) weakens the  idea, allo...              ...s to force the idea  that there is a danger in the previously stated opposition. However, the phallic  imagery of the "large privilege" (11) of which the young man should be aware  helps to complete the poem 's consideration of physical beauty in place of  virtue by drawing the poem back to the sexual overtones set up in the beginning.  The warning that "the hardest knife ill-used doth lose his edge" (12) forces the  idea that age leads to physical impotence, thereby leaving physical beauty the  transient domain of the young, and virtue the permanent domain of all.     Ã       Work Cited     The Norton Anthology of English Literature. Eds. M. H.  Abrams and Stephen Greenblatt. 7th ed. 2 vols. New York: Norton, 2000.  1:1041-42.     Works Consulted     "canker, n." Oxford English Dictionary. Ed. J. A. Simpson  and E. S. C. Weiner. 2nd ed. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989.                      The Tension between Beauty and Virtue in Shakespeare's Sonnet 95 Essay  The Tension between Beauty and Virtue in Shakespeare's  Sonnet 95     Ã     Ã  Ã    "Sonnet 95" of Shakespeare's "blond young man" sonnets depicts a tension-filled  variation on the classic blazon. The poet seems torn between the "shame" (1)  that taints his subject and the "sweets" (4) of the subject 's beauty. The  initial imagery of a "canker" (2) within a "rose" (2) serves to set up the  sexual overtones that dominate the poem, as well as to create the sense of  strain between disapproval and attraction that heightens throughout each  quatrain. Shakespeare develops this imagery to ensnare the subject in an  increasingly agitated opposition between his physical beauty and his behavioral  repulsiveness. Though the poet claims that he "cannot dispraise but in a kind of  praise" (7), the closing couplet goes counter this, bringing the sense of  antagonism between the poet 's admiration and his disapproval full circle. The  couplet serves as a warning that the physical beauty and virility that have  dominated the young man 's life will end, destroying the "   mansion" (9) where he  hid his moral failing through the quatrains.     Ã       The opening quatrain of Sonnet 95 serves to expose the  contrast between the young man 's physical and moral states. This quatrain,  despite permitting the young man 's "beauty" (3) to dominate the sense of his  "sins" (4), also begins to assert the idea that he will suffer for his vice. The  opening image of "How sweet and lovely" (1) dominates the completion of the  thought "dost thou make the shame" (1) through both rhythm and diction. While  Shakespeare sets the opening in perfect iambic rhythm, the insertion of a  pyrrhic foot to begin the statement of the young man 's "shame" (1) weakens the  idea, allo...              ...s to force the idea  that there is a danger in the previously stated opposition. However, the phallic  imagery of the "large privilege" (11) of which the young man should be aware  helps to complete the poem 's consideration of physical beauty in place of  virtue by drawing the poem back to the sexual overtones set up in the beginning.  The warning that "the hardest knife ill-used doth lose his edge" (12) forces the  idea that age leads to physical impotence, thereby leaving physical beauty the  transient domain of the young, and virtue the permanent domain of all.     Ã       Work Cited     The Norton Anthology of English Literature. Eds. M. H.  Abrams and Stephen Greenblatt. 7th ed. 2 vols. New York: Norton, 2000.  1:1041-42.     Works Consulted     "canker, n." Oxford English Dictionary. Ed. J. A. Simpson  and E. S. C. Weiner. 2nd ed. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989.                        
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.