Sonnet 19 | Sonnet 19: Creative Immortality

In the following essay, Chris Semansky examines how Shakespeare’s Sonnet 19 suggests that art transcends time.

The idea that human beings can immortalize themselves in their art is popular among artists and writers and serves as an alternative to notions of immortality rooted in an afterlife or in one’s progeny. In antiquity, Horace and Ovid held this belief, just as today many poets do. Shakespeare also subscribed to this idea of creative immortality, and made it the topic of many of his poems. In Sonnet 19, one of a number of sonnets which praise the beauty of the Earl of Southhampton, the speaker desires that the young man he writes about never age. The speaker explicitly addresses Time, asking...

[The entire page is 1297 words long]

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