None of Shakespeare's sonnets have names, only numbers like Sonnet XVIII. The named poems like Venus and Adonis, The rape of Lucrece, and the phoenix and the turtle, are not sonnets
William Shakespeare's sonnets were published first in 1609 under the title "Shake-speare's sonnets". There are 154 sonnets and they are all numbered: Sonnet I, Sonnet II, and so on. Sometimes they are known by their first lines. Shakespeare did not give them names.
Some of the sonnets Shakespeare wrote include "Sonnet 18" ("Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?"), "Sonnet 29" ("When, in disgrace with fortune and men's eyes"), and "Sonnet 116" ("Let me not to the marriage of true minds").
Sonnet XC. Sonnet XVIII. Sonnet XXXV. Sonnet CL. The Sonnets do not have names, only numbers. If you want the content of the various sonnets you will have to read them. The attached link is one place you can do this (also any copy of the Complete Works of Shakespeare)
Some of the names of Shakespeare's sonnets are The Fair Young Man, The Rival Poet, and The Dark Lady. All of these sonnets are also numbered off so, though they are all about the same thing, they are numbered in roman numerals.
shakespeare wrote alot of sonnets about love
William Shakespeare is widely regarded as having written the greatest number of sonnets in the English language. He wrote a collection of 154 sonnets that are considered some of the finest in English literature.
Shakespeare is generally credited with 38 plays, 3 long poems, 154 sonnets, and one or two other random pieces of verse. But these totals can be different in the opinions of different scholars, who argue about some of the more dubious attributions. According to some people who think he was Christopher Marlowe or the Earl of Oxford, he wrote more after the time of his death.
It's impossible to know how old Shakespeare was when he wrote any of the sonnets. All we know is that they were written before they were published in 1609 when he was 45. Two of them, numbers 138 and 144 were published in 1599, ten years earlier. This will give some idea of the period of time Shakespeare wrote them.
Shakespeare wrote the following books for publication: Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece. He did publish his sonnets in 1609 but he did not write them to be published as a book. They were just a collection of poems which he had written, some of which had been published before. Although Shakespeare is famous for his sonnets, he is more famous for his plays. However, he had no intention of publishing them and did not intend that anyone (except the actors in his company) should read the scripts. They are meant to be watched, not read, and so it's difficult to call them "books he wrote".
There are over 150 sonnets. Some are about love. Some are about loss. Some are dedicated to the Dark Lady. Others are about the joy of everyday occurrence's.
some of them were called sonnets
Some famous sonnets not by Shakespeare include "How Do I Love Thee?" by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, "Death, be not proud" by John Donne, "On His Blindness" by John Milton, and "Bright star, would I were stedfast as thou art" by John Keats.
His two long poems, Venus & Adonis and Lucrece, were dedicated by him to Henry Wriothesley, third Earl of Southampton. The hero of Venus & Adonis (who differs in some significant respects from the Adonis of Shakespeare's source material) appears to be a projection of the Earl, as he was at the time of composition. However, it is clear that Shakespeare wrote these poems for publication and public consumption, notwithstanding the dedication, and rightly so since Venus and Adonis in particular sold like hotcakes.Evidence suggests that the young lord was also the original audience for those manuscript poems which were subsequently edited and printed under the title Shakespeare's Sonnets. For a summary of this evidence read The Biography in Shakespeare's Sonnets, at the link below. Shakespeare apparently did not write the sonnets for the purpose of publication as witness Francis Meres' reference in 1597 to Shakespeare's "sugared sonnets among his private friends". The sonnets were not published until over a decade later.
William Shakespeare wrote the sonnet sequence known as Shakespeare's sonnets. The idea that someone else wrote these poems or coauthored these works is wild speculation and has no historical evidence to support it. The poems were probably written by Shakespeare in the late 1590s in a period when London theaters were closed to prevent the spread of plague and Shakespeare could devote himself to poetry instead of drama. Some critics have speculated that sonnets 153-154 were written by an editor to finish off the sonnets but again there is no historical evidence to suggest this.