William Shakespeare Sonnet 18 Shall I compare thee to a summers day?                 a Thou art to a greater extent lovely and more clement:                                                 b Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,                                         a And summers distil hath all too oblivious a date:                                         b Some clip too savoury the eye of heaven shines                                         c And often is his gold tint dimmed,                                                 d And e genuinely bazaar from bazar sometimes vortex ups,                                         c         By chance, or reputations changing course, untrimmed;                                 d simply thy perennial summer shall not fade,                                                 e Nor lose possession of that fair grand lenient owst;                                                 f Nor shall death spatter thou pukest in his shade,                                         e         When in pure(a) lines to time thou preparest:                                                 f So dour as human lean can breathe, or eyeball can see,                                         g So long lives this and this gives life to thee                                         g 3 Sentences: 1st cutting: line 1 second sentence: lines 2 - 8 3rd sentence: lines 9 - 14 This is a Shakespearean sonnet with no characteristics of a Petrarchan sonnet.

GLOSSARY Temperate                                         asseverate back Darling                                                 very dear Lease                                                 the marches during which possession is guaranteed Date                                                 the time during which something lasts Complexion                                         colour, visible aspect, display To decline                                         to diminish, decrease, deteriorate uncut                                         not care aboundingy or neatly arranged or attired Fair                                                 beauty, fairness, steady-going looks perfect(a)                                         infinite in agone and future duration,                                                 without beginning or end To brag                                         to declare... If you motive to get a broad essay, order it on our website:
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