Sonnet · Fair Youth Sonnets

Sonnet 63

Against my love shall be as I am now,

With Time’s injurious hand crush’d and o’erworn;

When hours have drain’d his blood and fill’d his brow

With lines and wrinkles; when his youthful morn

Hath travell’d on to age’s steepy night;

And all those beauties whereof now he’s king

Are vanishing, or vanished out of sight,

Stealing away the treasure of his spring;

For such a time do I now fortify

Against confounding age’s cruel knife,

That he shall never cut from memory

My sweet love’s beauty, though my lover’s life:

His beauty shall in these black lines be seen,

And they shall live, and he in them still green.

What it's about

The speaker confronts the beloved's inevitable aging and death, then offers sonnets as a weapon against forgetting. It's both a love poem and a desperate bargain: the beautiful young man will decay, but these verses will freeze him in time—not to prevent age, but to ensure his beauty outlives his body.

In plain English

I picture my beloved as he will be in old age: worn down by time, his face lined and bloodless, his youth long gone. All the beauty he possesses now will fade and vanish, taking with it the promise of his prime.

So I'm writing these sonnets now as a shield against that loss. When time's blade cuts away his living beauty and even his life itself, these words will keep his face alive in memory.

His beauty will survive here, preserved in these dark lines of ink. He'll stay eternally young within them, even as his body ages and dies.

Lines that stick

  • With Time's injurious hand crush'd and o'erworn
  • His beauty shall in these black lines be seen, / And they shall live, and he in them still green

Themes

  • time
  • beauty
  • mortality
  • preservation
  • aging
In the app

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