"Beauty is not in his face, beauty is the light in your heart." - Kahlil Gibran. I would like to compare Sonnet 130 of William Shakespeare with Harlem Dancer of Claude Mackay. Poetry and sonnets are written in English, there are 14 lines and knots, and ABABCDCDEFEFGG prosodic scheme, which shows the beauty of women. Sonnet is a fixed pattern of poetry expressing perfect thoughts and ideas. Sonnet comes from the Italian word "sonetto".
Many men who contrast Shakespeare's "Four sons 18" and "Four sons 130" find different things to attract them to a woman. In "Four Sons 18" and "Four Sons 130", William Shakespeare describes two conflicting women he likes in two different ways. Poetry is very similar, but the poem is very different. Shakespeare began with a passionate tone, and he expressed his love as "summer." Summer days are not perfect, he said she was more beautiful. He expressed summer as "hot" or "rough wind". Then when he says that his love will never disappear, he will adopt a more anxious tone, "But your eternal summer will not disappear." "In the Sonnet 130" Shakespeare took a totally different approach when explaining his lover. Shakespeare said that his eyes' eye is "nothing like the sun" and said her lips were "not as red as coral", so it began with a critical tone.
Many people mentioned Shakespeare's Sonnet 18 "Should I compare you to summer?" As UK's last love poetry (Shakespeare). This sonnet is a typical form comparing summer and one's own beauty. But Shakespeare's unique Sonnet 130 is more important and insightful. Sonnet 130 "My lover 's eyes are completely different from the sun." Ignore the typical position of the "cross" in the sonnet. And I talk about love that can be said to be more realistic and I will laugh about the ordinary love of the 17th century. Poetry
Shakespeare's Sonnet 130 is a typical sonnet imitation in the Shakespeare era. It can be interpreted as a romantic ridicule of a traditional sonnet, but it actually reveals how superficial a sonnet is superficial. Shakespeare opposes himself with a metaphor to make a more realistic explanation about the love that he feels. By using seemingly insulting comparisons, the authors demonstrate Sonnet's ideal standard reality and demonstrate that they consider mediocrity to be negative. This contrast shows how love is expressed and experienced in a non-traditional way, but still has the same strength. This sonnet is juxtaposed with the sacred symbol and human character, departing from satirical standard content, and making a bold symbolic remark about love that is not type.