The Sonnets and Other Poems

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The Sonnets and Other Poems Page 34

by William Shakespeare


  3 altered new newly altered, different

  8 wrinkles grimaces

  13 Eve’s apple the apple that Eve picked in the Garden of Eden, beautiful in appearance, but doomed to bring evil to humankind when eaten (biblical)

  14 answer … show does not correspond to your appearance

  2 the … show the action (sex) that, based on their (attractive) appearances, they seem most likely to do

  3 moving provoking sexual desire in

  4 cold lacking passion, chaste

  6 husband … expense preserve their natural endowments from being wasted (expense suggests the emission of semen)

  7 lords … faces the rightful owners of their beauty

  8 stewards domestic managers, administrators

  10 to itself alone

  11 base degrading (perhaps also suggesting “in the lower regions”)

  infection suggestive of venereal disease, as well as moral corruption

  12 basest most common

  outbraves surpasses, outdoes in appearance

  13 things may play on the sense of “genitals”

  deeds actions/sexual exploits

  14 Lilies … weeds this line also appears in Edward III (1596), thought by many scholars to contain some material by Shakespeare

  2 canker cankerworm, a parasitic grub that destroys plants

  3 spot stain

  name reputation

  4 sweets sweet things (perhaps suggestive of furled petals)

  6 sport pleasures/ sexual activity

  9 mansion i.e. the young man’s body

  13 large privilege extensive freedom

  14 knife phallic connotations

  ill-used misused sexually

  edge effectiveness/sexual appetite

  1 wantonness wildness/willfulness/lechery

  2 gentle suitable to a gentleman

  3 of … less by high and low classes alike

  4 Thou … resort you turn the faults that attend you into virtues

  6 basest cheapest, humblest

  7 errors sins/inaccuracies

  8 truths virtues/valid things

  translated transformed

  10 like … translate he could change his appearance to that of a lamb

  11 gazers admirers

  away i.e. astray

  12 strength … state power that your qualities and birth give you

  13 But … report repeats the closing couplet of Sonnet 36

  5 time removed period of separation

  6 teeming fertile

  big pregnant

  increase offspring

  7 Bearing carrying/giving birth to

  wanton … prime offspring of lustful spring (an image suggestive of ripened fruit dropping from trees and crops being harvested)

  8 their lords’ i.e. spring’s

  9 issue offspring

  10 But … fruit i.e. not much hope at all

  unfathered fatherless

  11 wait attend

  2 proud-pied splendidly multicolored

  trim adornment, finery

  4 That so that

  heavy Saturn the planet and god were associated with melancholy (“heaviness”)

  5 nor … nor neither … nor

  lays songs

  6 different flowers flowers differing

  7 summer’s i.e. cheerful, bright

  8 proud showy

  lap i.e. the earth

  11 but only, merely

  figures sketches

  12 after in imitation of

  pattern model, exemplar

  14 As as if

  shadow image

  1 forward early/presumptuous

  chide rebuke, upbraid

  2 thy … smells i.e. your sweet perfume

  3 purple pride the purple color you are so proud of/purple splendor

  4 for complexion as (artificial) coloring

  5 grossly obviously/crudely

  6 condemnèd … hand blamed for stealing the whiteness of your hand

  7 buds of marjoram these are tightly curled and sweet-smelling

  8 on … stand grew on thorny stems, but the phrase can also mean “in a state of high anxiety” (the roses are fearful because they have committed theft)

  9 white i.e. fearful

  11 annexed thy breath added the crime of stealing your breath for his perfume

  12 for in punishment for

  pride … growth the glory of its prime

  13 canker cankerworm, a parasitic grub that destroys plants

  eat ate

  15 But … thee that had not stolen its scent or color from you

  1 Muse inspiring goddess of poetry, or creative inspiration generally

  3 fury creative energy, poetic frenzy

  4 Dark’ning … light hiding your real power to give prominence to unworthy subjects

  5 straight straightaway

  6 gentle numbers noble verses

  idly worthlessly/foolishly

  7 lays songs

  8 argument subject matter

  9 resty sluggish, lazy

  10 graven engraved

  11 satire to satirist toward (i.e. ridicule, vilify)

  12 spoils destruction, plundering

  14 So thus

  prevent’st forestall, confound

  scythe … knife a tautology— a scythe is a crooked (curved) knife

  1 Muse the address to the Muse continues from Sonnet 100

  what … amends how can you make amends

  2 truth … dyed truth imbued with beauty

  3 depends are subordinate, dependent for their existence

  4 dignified you acquire dignity

  5 haply perhaps

  6 colour cosmetics, rouge (plays on the sense of “excuse”)

  his colour fixed its complexion ingrained

  7 pencil paintbrush

  to lay apply in layers (as paint on canvas)

  8 intermixed adulterated, added to and debased

  10 lies in thee is in your power

  13 office duty

  14 long hence far into the future

  shows appears

  1 seeming appearance

  3 merchandised treated as a saleable commodity

  rich esteeming high value

  4 publish announce publicly

  6 wont accustomed

  lays songs (poems)

  7 Philomel the nightingale (in classical mythology, Philomel was raped and had her tongue cut out by her brother-in-law; she was later turned into a nightingale by the gods)

  summer’s front the beginning of summer

  8 pipe music

  in … days i.e. as summer moves toward autumn

  11 wild belonging to wild birds/unrestrained

  burdens weighs down/fills with song (a “burden” can mean “a chorus”)

  12 sweets sweet things, pleasures

  14 dull bore, blunt your appetite

  1 poverty poor poetic efforts

  2 pride splendid abilities/pride in the beautiful youth

  3 argument all bare unadorned subject matter (i.e. the young man)

  6 glass mirror

  7 overgoes outdoes, surpasses

  invention creative skill

  8 Dulling making tedious/rendering blunt

  9 mend improve

  10 mar spoil

  11 pass end

  12 graces beauties/attributes

  2 eye I eyed an aural pun

  4 pride splendor

  8 which … green you who are still young and fresh

  9 dial hand the hand of a clock (as in Shakespeare’s poem “To the Queen”)

  10 Steal creep away/rob

  figure (clock’s) numeral/appearance/face

  pace movement/ footstep

  11 hue complexion

  still doth stand remains motionless/remains yet

  12 Hath motion does move, change

  13 age unbred unborn future age

  14 Ere before

  1 idolatry excessive devotion/worship of many gods<
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  2 show appear/display

  3 Since since in fact, in my defense (or possibly “simply because”)

  4 To … one addressed to and about only one person

  still always

  5 Kind loving/generous

  9 Fair beautiful/just

  true genuine/faithful

  argument theme

  10 varying to expressed in various

  11 invention spent creativity exhausted

  12 Three … one the religious theme continues with the suggestion of the Christian Trinity (God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Ghost)

  14 kept seat resided/were enthroned

  1 chronicle historical record

  wasted past, consumed (with suggestion of “squandered”)

  2 wights people (deliberately archaic word)

  4 lovely handsome/amorous

  5 blazon description (literally, of a coat of arms)

  8 Even just, exactly

  master are owner of

  11 for because

  divining predicting (rather than definitively knowing)

  14 wonder admire

  3 the … control regulate the duration of my love/restrict my right to possession of love (the person or the emotion)

  4 as … doom subject to a fixed term

  5 The … endured probably a reference to the death (eclipse) of Queen Elizabeth I in 1603; as the Virgin Queen, she was associated with the moon, symbol of chastity

  endured undergone

  6 augurs prophets

  presage prediction

  7 Incertainties … assured uncertainties are brought securely to an end (crown suggests the coronation of the childless Elizabeth’s successor, James I, putting to an end the uncertainties about England’s future)

  8 olives … age the olive tree (symbol of peace) will last forever (King James regarded himself as an international peacemaker)

  9 balmy soothing (again suggestive of coronation, at which the monarch was anointed with “balm,” i.e. holy oil)

  10 subscribes surrenders

  12 insults triumphs, exults

  13 monument tomb or other memorial structure

  14 crests heraldic devices on coats of arms

  spent gone, wasted away

  1 character write

  2 figured represented

  3 register record

  8 hallowed treated as holy (with suggestion of “halloo,” i.e. call out)

  9 case clothing/condition

  10 Weighs not does not care about

  11 gives … place yields to the inevitable lines of old age

  12 antiquity age

  aye ever

  page boy attendant (plays on the sense of “page of poetry”)

  13 conceit notion, conception/poetic device, metaphor

  there i.e. in the sweet boy/in the poetry

  14 show it make it seem

  1 false of heart disloyal, unfaithful

  2 my … qualify to moderate my passion

  5 ranged wandered, strayed

  7 Just … exchanged punctual and not changed by time

  8 water … stain tears to wash away my fault

  10 frailties moral weaknesses

  blood temperament/sexual desire

  11 preposterously unnaturally (literally, “inversely, back to front”)

  stained polluted, morally tarnished

  12 for nothing as something of no value/for no reason

  1 gone may play on the sense of “had sex”

  2 motley fool (after the multicolored costume of a jester, so perhaps alluding to Shakespeare’s acting career)

  3 Gored wounded/cut into triangles (resembling the diamond patches of a fool’s motley)

  4 Made … new offended old friends or lovers by finding new ones/repeated former sins because of new passions/committed plenty of sins with the new objects of my affections

  6 Askance and strangely with a side glance and in an unfriendly way

  all above i.e. heaven

  7 blenches swervings

  8 worse essays trying out worse loves

  9 what … end i.e. eternal love

  10 appetite implies sexual desire

  grind whet, sharpen (as a phallic knife; “to grind” could mean “to have sex”)

  11 proof experiments, experiences (i.e. lovers)

  try test the worth of/subject to strain, afflict

  12 confined restricted

  13 next … best you, who are to me the next best thing to heaven

  14 most most loving i.e. supremely loving, but perhaps subverted by a slight suggestion of the young man’s own tendency to love many people

  1 with Fortune chide rebuke or complain at Fortune

  2 of responsible for

  4 public means a means of making a living that involves catering to the public (probably a reference to Shakespeare’s theatrical career)

  public manners breeds generates (or is generated by) the sort of (low) behavior associated with public life

  5 brand criminals (including strolling players, if they were arrested as vagabonds) were branded on the face or hand with a hot iron

  6 almost applies to subdued (“my nature is almost subdued”)

  subdued To conquered by

  8 renewed restored

  10 eisel vinegar (i.e. bitterness)

  11 No bitterness i.e. there is no bitterness

  12 correct correction correct again what has already been corrected

  1 th’impression the mark left by the brand of Sonnet 111 (line 5)

  2 vulgar base/public

  4 So so long as

  o’er-green gloss over/grass over

  allow praise

  7 None … wrong no one other than you has the power to alter my fixed sensibilities either for better or for worse, and I do not have such a power over anyone at all

  9 so profound abysm such a deep abyss

  10 adder’s sense i.e. deaf ears; proverbially, adders blocked their ears in order to avoid succumbing to the music of the snake charmer

  12 how … dispense note how I disregard others’ neglect of me

  13 are … bred exist so powerfully in my thoughts

  2 that … about eyesight, which shows me where to go

  3 part divide/abandon

  4 Seems seeing appears to see

  effectually is out in effect is blind

  5 heart i.e. inner consciousness

  6 latch catch hold of, apprehend

  7 his quick objects the living (or “fleeting”) things he sees

  8 Nor nor does

  9 rud’st or gentlest most uncouth or most well-bred

  10 favour appearance/face

  12 shapes transforms, remodels

  13 Incapable of unable to receive, contain

  14 true faithful

  untrue deceptive, unreliable

  1 Or … whether Is it the case that … or that

  crowned with you made into a king by your love

  4 alchemy pseudoscience that sought to turn base metal into gold

  5 indigest shapeless, crude

  6 cherubins angels

  7 Creating every bad making every bad thing into

  8 beams eye-beams, rays of light thought to be emitted by the eye and to enable vision

  10 most kingly like a king (subject to deceptive flattery)

  11 what … ’greeing what agrees with (the mind’s) taste

  14 doth first begin i.e. drinks first from the poisoned cup itself

  4 full intense

  5 reckoning time calculating time

  whose starts a long relative clause which continues to the end of line 8, but is not followed by a main clause (which may be purposeful or may be the result of “divert” being a misprint for “diverts,” which would then be the main verb belonging to reckoning time

  millioned accidents innumerable chance events

  6 ’twixt vows between (lovers’) vows and their fulfillment

  7 Tan i.e. render unattractive, fair skin be
ing considered a mark of beauty

  8 alt’ring changeable

  10 Might … say was it not natural for me then to say

  12 Crowning seeing as best, privileging

  13 Love … babe Cupid, the god of love, was traditionally depicted as a child

  then … so so I should not have spoken as I did

  14 give … grow attribute maturity to love that was still in its infancy

  2 Admit acknowledge, concede

  impediments echoes the words of the marriage service in the Book of Common Prayer, where the couple and the congregation are asked to declare if they know of any impediment to the marriage

  4 bends … remove is inclined to cease if abandoned by the object of love (or perhaps “is inclined to be unfaithful in response to infidelity from the object of love”)

  5 ever-fixèd mark lighthouse, beacon, or landmark

  7 star the North (or Pole) Star, used in navigation

  bark small ship

  8 worth’s unknown value cannot be fully known or measured

  height be taken height above the horizon can be scientifically measured

  9 Time’s fool the plaything of Time, or subject of its mockery

  10 bending curved

  compass scope/arc

  12 doom doomsday, the end of the world

  13 upon me proved I am proved to have committed it (legal language)

  1 Accuse initiates legal imagery that continues through the sonnet

  scanted stinted, neglected

  3 call visit/invoke/appeal (to)

  4 bonds physical ties/legal documents

  5 frequent familiar, in company/often

  unknown minds strangers

  6 given … right given away your richly bought right to my time

  9 Book record

  10 on just proof on top of what can be fairly proved

  accumulate pile up (charges)

  11 level aim/line of fire/sights

  12 wakened hate the hate that my behavior has roused in you

  13 appeal legal appeal for a second hearing

  14 virtue moral integrity/power

  1 Like as just as

  2 eager compounds pungent concoctions

  our palate urge stimulate our appetite

  3 maladies unseen i.e. potential illnesses

  4 sicken make ourselves ill

  shun prevent

  purge use laxatives or emetics

  5 Even so in just such a manner

  6 frame my feeding adapt my diet (sexual connotations)

  7 welfare good health

  meetness appropriateness

  8 ere … needing before there was any real need

  9 policy … assured my stratagem of anticipating and preventing diseases generated actual ill health

  11 to medicine into a condition requiring medicine

  12 rank of full of/bloated with/diseased by

  1 siren a mythical creature, part woman, part bird, whose enchanting singing lured sailors to their deaths (presumably suggests a person with whom the poet has been unfaithful)

 

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