Time, Natural Beauty, and Reproduction: Shakespeare's Sonnets 5-10

Published: May 20, 2022, 4:36 a.m.

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I\'m going through the Sonnets methodically, and sharing my thoughts with you as I go. I absolutely love Shakespeare\'s plays, and this is the first time I\'m really studying the sonnets as a whole. The first thing right out of the gate that is surprising is how pro life Shakespeare\'s narrator is. The persona of the poems, the voice speaking, considers not having children a crime. 

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Is this a kind of existential wisdom, or is it also possibly intense flirting? 

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He is saying to THIS man in particular if you do not have kids it will be a crime. 

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Or, you can see it both ways: that he is using the idea as a rule in general as a chance to flirt with this object of his adoration. 

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We talk about Shakespeare as being a part of a cultural Renaissance, so maybe it shouldn\'t be surprising that birth and reproduction is such a primary part of his material. Still, it was a bit of a surprise to me how adamant he is about the reader reproducing. 

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Themes: Time and Nature as Creator and Destroyer

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             Reproduction as Divine Duty and Protection Against Death

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             Inevitability of Cycles of Decay and Regeneration

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             Refusal to Reproduce as Shameful and Murderous

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