Friday, November 6, 2015

Explain and extract the use of imagery in the sonnet 130.

Sonnet 130 by Shakespeare is a parody of traditional love poetry.  The speaker is making fun of love poems that use hyperbole or excessive exaggeration by comparing the objects of their desires to natural wonders like the sun and moon and roses.  The poem uses imagery to express what his lover is not.  He does not mean this as a negative comment about his lover. The poem suggests that no one compares to natural wonders.  That's the point: it's silly to compare a woman to all of the wonders that he mentions in the poem, like so many poets do.


Nature, as well as his lover, are revealed in the poem by the use of imagery.  Some of the images follow:


  • her eyes are nothing like the sun

  • coral is far more red than her lips' red

  • snow is white/breasts are dun

  • hairs=wires/black wires grow out of her head

  • roses mingling red and white/no roses in her cheeks

  • delightful perfumes/her breath reeks

  • her speaking/music more pleasing

  • goddess walking/she treads on the ground

 The speaker uses imagery to bring love poetry back to reality, so to speak.  A lover doesn't have to be like the sun and coral and snow and roses, etc., to be loved. 


By showing what his lover is not with imagery, but also stating that he loves her as any poet has ever loved, the speaker brings realism to love poetry.

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