#Sonnet 130 meaning full#
It shows the speaker's full intent of insiting that love does not need these conceits in order to be real, and women do not need to look like flowers or the sun in order to be beautiful.
This couplet makes no comparisons between the poets lover and other beauties. He continues with "As any she belied with false compare" meaning that any love in which false comparisons appeal to describes the loved one's beauty. The first part of the couplet defines the speaker's love as rare and valuable. The speaker's true love is defined in the couplet. This description of his love explains why the pros weigh out the cons with the speaker truly loving his mistress. The complex definition of the speaker's love leads to think that the mistress is unlovable. Sonnet 130 explains about how the speaker's mistress can have many negative qualities but at the same time have outstanding qualities which leads to the speaker truly loving his mistress. Negative comparisons, positively complicated comparisons and the speaker's definition of his love all play a part of the pros and cons in this poem. Throughout the poem the speaker compares his lover to a number of other beauties and never in the lovers favor. William Shakespeare's sonnet, 130, is a fourteen line poem in which Shakespeare compares nature to his mistress.