Shakespeare And Moss Poetry Analysis

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When looking at Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day by Both Shakespeare and Moss you find that both poems are about the same exact things the immortalization of a person by writing a poem about their likeness. Moss’s poem is said to be somewhat of a translation of Shakespeare’s in a more modern language. However, when looking at the two poems you can see although the subject matter a is the same there is some major differences. While reading Moss’s poem it reads more dry and dull almost like reading from a dictionary whereas Shakespeare’s when read almost feels as though it was meant for the reader to picture it in their mind like a movie. In this paper I will compare and contrast both of the poems while breaking down the stylistic choices made by each poet and how they affect the …show more content…

In the Elizabethan Era it was not uncommon for a poet to write in this manner in order to make the reader picture the poem, story, or play in their heads. Some of the words used in his poems were invented by Shakespeare himself “inventing over 1,700 of our common words by changing nouns into verbs, changing verbs into adjectives, connecting words never before used together, adding prefixes and suffixes, and devising words wholly original” (Mabillard). In the poem Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day Shakespeare made use of figurative language in order to describe the person that he was writing about by comparing “her” to many aspects of the of a summer day. An example of figurative language is when Shakespeare says “thou art more lovely and more temperate” which could mean that the person is more beautiful and more mild than a summer’s day. While temperate Is not a word used in common language to describe a person Shakespeare uses figurative language to heighten his comparison of the summer day and the poem’s

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