1. Love in Sonnet 18 (Shakespeare) and Sonnet 43 (Browning)
With Browning and Shakespeare's distinctive styles of representing love, another contrast can be observed between religion and nature. Browning compares love to weighty, and divine concepts like ""Being and ideal Grace"", ""Right"" and ""Praise"". ... He immediately compares his loved by a rhetorical question – "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?... Through the contrasting paces of the two sonnets, different stages in relationships can be inferred. ... Moreover, by comparing her lover to "God," Browning illustrates her dedicatio...
- Word Count: 1172
- Approx Pages: 5
- Grade Level: Undergraduate