

The seasons attract Shakespeare’s attention in some of the sonnets. Shakespeare Uses Seasons to Represent Emotions in Sonnets The cloud comes back in sonnet 33, one of the passionate sonnets in the cycle. In sonnet 28, for example, the poet tries to flatter the day by saying that it is bright by his friend’s presence even when there are clouds in the sky. Nature sometimes becomes a medium of the poet’s hyperbolic praise of his friend. Rough winds do shake the darling birds of mayĪnd summer’s lease hath all too short a date. Shakespeare’s Comparison between Summer’s Day And His Friend’s BeautyĪnother reference to nature comes in sonnet 18, where the poet compares his friend’s beauty with summer’s day and finds the former lovelier and more temperate: Which erst from heat did canopy the head,Īnd summer’s green all girded up in sheaves. In sonnet 12, for example, he talks about the passage of time and the decline of all things:Īnd sable curls all silver’d over with white The natural world is, in this way, closely integrated into the texture of the poet’s thought. Shakespeare sees the mutability of human existence reflected in the transience of these flowers. The rose, the violet, and lily are constantly referred to for their immaculate beauty and short-lividness. The Beauty of Flowers in Shakespeare’s SonnetsĪnother aspect of nature that attracts Shakespeare is the evanescence of the beauty of flowers.


However, nobody bothers about the sun when it is setting like-wise the poet’s friend will be ignored or forgotten after his death unless he has a son to perpetuate his name. His argument runs thus people gaze at the sun and worship its glory when it rises in the morning they still worship its splendor when it is noontime, and it has reached the highest point in the sky. For example, in sonnet 7, he uses the example of the morning glory in order to persuade his friend to get married. Shakespeare skillfully relates the description of nature to his theme. Gilding pale streams with heavenly alchemy. Kissing with golden face the meadows green, “Full many a glorious morning have I seenįlatter the mountain-tops with sovereign eye, “Like to the lark at break of day arisingįrom sullen earth, sings hymns at heaven’s gate. Lifts up his burning head, each under eye” “Lo, in the orient when the gracious light In various sonnets, Shakespeare refers to the morning beauty of nature and the rosy life of colors spread on the earth and the clouds. Nature’s loveliness and plenitude attracted Shakespeare more than her violent or tempestuous aspects. One of many exciting elements in Shakespeare’s sonnet is nature-imagery. Shakespeare’s Nature-Imagery in Sonnets Inspires Love And Beauty Shakespeare also emphasized the inevitability of death in his sonnets through nature-imagery. Nature plays a vital role in the sonnets by supplying the back-drop or the psycho-drama of the feelings. The sonnets are Shakespeare’s attains at depicting the psychological propensities of human beings, caught in the web of romance, friendship, jealousy, and other motives. King Lear or As You Like It or A Midsummer Night’s Dream– everywhere, the world of nature features prominently. In his Comedies and Tragedies, Shakespeare showed his deep interest in the workings of the natural world. In most sonnets, nature provides the background, either by supplying the images or showing the objective co-relative for them. The fair youth sonnets represent through their order the life cycle of man. Shakespeare’s sonnets revolved around the themes of love and friendship.
