1- True minds : Synecdoche ( true lovers)
2- marriage of true minds: Metaphor ( true lovers)
3- Let me not ……..admit impediments: inversion
4- Alters /Alteration : alliteration
5- Which alters when it alteration finds: inversion
6- an ever-fixed mark : metaphor (Love is a lighthouse)
7- It is the star: metaphor (Lover is a star)
8- wandering bark : metaphor (lost ship)
9- Love's not Time's fool : Personification (Love to a fool)
10- rosy lips and cheeks : Synecdoche (Young people / lovers )
11- his bending sickle's compass come: double metaphor ( He likens death to a sickle / he likens sickle to a compass )
The three examples of striking images which Shakespeare uses in his Sonnet 116 are:
1. "It is the star to every wandering bark." Love is constant like the bright North Star with which ancient sailors navigated their ships safely and correctly to their destinations. The star is a metaphor which symbolizes the constancy of love.
2. "wandering bark" Here 'bark' which is literally a part of a tree is a metonymy for ship, because in Shakespeare's time there were only wooden ships.
3."his bending sickle" A sickle is a tool used by the farmer to reap the ripened corn. Here sickle is a synecdochefor 'Father Time.' Father time is usually represented as an old man carrying a scythe or a sickle to reap the ripened corn. As men grow old and 'ripen' with age, Father Time cuts us down with his scythe. True love according to Shakespeare is beyond the reach of Father Time's scythe, that is, it will live forever.
figure of speech according to categories
figure of speech is a kind of a style. the credit of this is point of figure.
They are verbs
Simile
The figure of speech in the first line is Simile.
Sonnet 18 and sonnet 116
The phrase "alteration" can be synonymous with changing in Sonnet 116.
yes
This line is from Sonnet 116 by William Shakespeare, which is a type of sonnet known as a Shakespearean or English sonnet. It is written in iambic pentameter and follows a rhyme scheme of ABAB CDCD EFEF GG.
The theme of Shakespeare's Sonnet 116 is that true love should overcome and outlast any obstacle.
No, sonnet 116 is among those addressed to a young man known only as the Fair Youth.
No, Sonnet 116 by William Shakespeare is not an elegy. It is a Shakespearean sonnet that talks about the enduring nature of true love. Elegies are poems that lament the loss of someone or something.
All sonnets are poems.
It is the star to every wandering bark.
Sonnet 116 was written by William Shakespeare. It was first published in the year 1609. It is considered one of his most famous sonnets although experts argue about the theme.
autumn is compared to a gleaner "like a gleaner....' in the middle stanza and compared to spring in the third stanza
The speaker in Sonnet 116 is addressing the idea of love itself, rather than a specific person. The sonnet explores the nature of true love and its steadfastness.