Tag: Summer

Sonnet 18 William Shakespeare poem AZpoetry.com

Sonnet 18 by William Shakespeare

“Sonnet 18” by William Shakespeare

Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?
Thou art more lovely and more temperate:
Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,
And summer’s lease hath all too short a date:
Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines,
And often is his gold complexion dimm’d;
And every fair from fair sometime declines,
By chance, or nature’s changing course, untrimm’d;
But thy eternal summer shall not fade
Nor lose possession of that fair thou ow’st;
Nor shall Death brag thou wander’st in his shade,
When in eternal lines to time thou grow’st;
So long as men can breathe or eyes can see,
So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.

About the poem “Sonnet 18” by William Shakespeare

“Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?”

Few poems in the English language are as instantly recognizable as William Shakespeare’s Sonnet 18. Opening with the iconic line, “Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?”, this timeless love poem is part of Shakespeare’s 154-sonnet sequence, most of which are believed to have been written in the 1590s.

Summary of Sonnet 18

In this 14-line sonnet, Shakespeare praises the beloved’s beauty, comparing it favorably to a summer’s day. While summer may be lovely, it is fleeting—subject to rough winds, scorching heat, and an eventual decline into autumn. The speaker argues that the beloved’s beauty is more constant, more temperate, and immune to the decay that time brings to all things.

The poem concludes with the bold claim that the beloved will achieve immortality through the enduring power of verse:

“So long as men can breathe or eyes can see,
So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.”

Analysis of Sonnet 18

A Celebration of Eternal Beauty Through Poetry

Shakespeare’s use of the sonnet form—a tightly structured 14-line poem with a rhyme scheme of ABAB CDCD EFEF GG—emphasizes both technical mastery and emotional intimacy. At its core, Sonnet 18 is a love poem, but it is also a declaration of art’s ability to preserve memory and beauty forever.

Where nature is cyclical and bound by time, poetry resists decay. The speaker elevates the beloved’s loveliness to something divine, untouchable, and timeless—not by denying mortality, but by using language to triumph over it.

Love Beyond the Season

Unlike the sometimes superficial comparisons in other love poetry of the time, Shakespeare subverts expectations. Rather than praising the beloved as “just like” a summer’s day, the speaker moves beyond that metaphor, arguing that the beloved surpasses summer. Summer fades—but the beloved’s “eternal summer shall not fade.” This conceptual shift turns what begins as a romantic gesture into a deeper reflection on permanence, art, and devotion.

Universal Emotion, Lasting Impact

Sonnet 18 remains one of Shakespeare’s most celebrated works because it speaks to something universal: the human desire to preserve what we love, to fight back against the tide of time, and to express deep emotion with precision and beauty. Its influence can be felt across centuries of poetry, including right here in Arizona’s contemporary love poems.

Explore More Love Poetry on AZPoetry.com

Shakespeare’s Sonnet 18 reminds us of the emotional power that love poems can carry—then and now. At AZPoetry.com, you’ll find a growing collection of love poems written by poets from across Arizona. Whether you’re looking for romance, heartbreak, longing, or joy, we invite you to discover how local voices are keeping the tradition of love poetry alive in the desert.

👉 Click here to explore Arizona Love Poetry ›

Letter to Summer by Valence poetry | Azpoetry.com

“Letter To Summer” by Valence

I send letters and Bottles across bodies
of water or folded up and flown over the
Peaks addressed to the summer summer is
a star-eyed space cadet called me
Stardust in the making I wrote back
don’t forget your belly laugh is my
childhood toy chest you taught me how to
speak up gutsy back when I was gunshy31
and a winter as beautiful as Robert
Frost epat since then some car accidents
thick black stitches and outpatient
surgery I now realize we are Playing for
Keeps and I am Sleepless but I still
want hot coffee and good times for
dreamers the heart is fragile shelter
but I want it fresh final steady before
we said I miss you wish you smiled more
you sturdy banister heart monitor
sidekick they won’t play you my glues
forever I won’t always be there to rim
shot your punchline I know because the
stars are in season and they only smell
sweeter the older we get don’t they
there was a time when I wi outed
stargazed with so many questions all
piano glissando and shimmering Christmas
light spinning under willow trees
chasing the fireflies even now with my
ghosts the nightmares of sweet nothing I
once met a woman with her mother’s last
heartbeat tattooed on her wrist and I
realized love could be life’s tender
mercy and keep us strong keep us head
above water keep us heart pumping that
raw ink calligraphy and painting our
dreams on the Twilight streets of
anywhere life sometimes strikes me as
rusher let the way you die younger bear
witness to death with the grace of a
passer by and Perfect Stranger summer
skull curse frights me every sunset
summer don’t remember me Shipwrecked
Only Sunrise Breakfast light is the
pendant that hangs from your necklace
your beauty begets a crowd like an ink
be Stadium still letting off heat and I
know I’ve been the Distortion making
something heavy out of your sweetest
Melody for some time now but no regrets
we are not just our smoke flying Skyward
like a soul from the exit wound born up
by seraphs we are not just our heavy
hearts and solemn goodbyes we are heart
Menders open eyes bright as the moon let
your gaze hold me like high tide sing me
the Blues

Video transcription of “Letter To Summer” by Valence and Ghost Poetry Show.

About the poet Valence

Valence is a slam poet and artist in the Phoenix area of Arizona. Learn more about his work HERE.