Can I compare you to summer?
William Shakespeare
William Shakespeare
Can I compare you to summer?
Can I compare you to summer?
You are cuter and gentler.
But you are cuter and gentler than summer.
The wind shook the lovely buds of May.
The strong wind in May withered the buds.
The lease in summer is too short.
How short summer is.
Sometimes the eye of heaven shines too hot.
Don't fall in love with that beautiful day.
His golden complexion often darkens.
In a blink of an eye, it will be foggy.
Every market sometimes declines.
Don't sigh.
Accidental or natural processes of change are not pruned.
Anxious to break the impermanent fate
But your eternal summer will not fade
Only your eternal summer is new every day.
And you won't lose the beauty you know
Your beauty is intact.
Death will not boast that you want to rest in his shade.
Death has no chance to imprison you.
When you grow up in eternal lines of poetry
You will live forever in my eternal poem.
As long as human beings can breathe, their eyes can still see.
As long as there are people in the world reciting my poems.
This is eternal, which gives you life.
This poem will be immortal and keep your beauty forever.
Extended data:
I can compare you to. Summer is Shakespeare's sonnet. Written between 1590 and 1598, the narrator compares his lover with summer and thinks that lover is better. He also pointed out through this poem that his lover will live forever.
The original poetry collection is divided into two parts. The first part is the126th poem dedicated to a young aristocrat. The poet's poems enthusiastically praised the beauty of this friend and their friendship. The second song is 127, which is dedicated to a "dark lady" and describes love.