Sonnet · Fair Youth Sonnets

Sonnet 21

So is it not with me as with that Muse,

Stirr’d by a painted beauty to his verse,

Who heaven itself for ornament doth use

And every fair with his fair doth rehearse,

Making a couplement of proud compare.

With sun and moon, with earth and sea’s rich gems,

With April’s first-born flowers, and all things rare,

That heaven’s air in this huge rondure hems.

O! let me, true in love, but truly write,

And then believe me, my love is as fair

As any mother’s child, though not so bright

As those gold candles fix’d in heaven’s air:

Let them say more that like of hearsay well;

I will not praise that purpose not to sell.

What it's about

A rejection of ornate, hyperbolic love poetry in favour of honest praise. The speaker distinguishes himself from poets who flatter through impossible comparisons, insisting his own love is real and doesn't need cosmic exaggeration to be genuine.

In plain English

I'm not like those poets who get inspired by some painted-up beauty and then go overboard—comparing their lover to the sun, moon, earth, sea, spring flowers, everything under heaven. They just pile on extravagant comparisons to sound impressive.

What I want is to love truly and write truly. My love is beautiful—genuinely, normally beautiful—even if she's not literally as bright as stars. I won't pretend she is.

Let the poets who care about hearsay and exaggeration do their thing. I'm not interested in laying it on thick just to sell a story.

Lines that stick

  • O! let me, true in love, but truly write
  • I will not praise that purpose not to sell
  • Making a couplement of proud compare

Themes

  • love
  • truth
  • poetry
  • beauty
  • flattery
In the app

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