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OMMENTARY
SONNET 102 CII
CII 1. My love is strengthened, though more weak in seeming; 2. I love not less, though less the show appear; 3. That love is merchandized, whose rich esteeming, 4. The owner's tongue doth publish every where. 5. Our love was new, and then but in the spring, 6. When I was wont to greet it with my lays; 7. As Philomel in summer's front doth sing, 8. And stops his pipe in growth of riper days: 9. Not that the summer is less pleasant now 10. Than when her mournful hymns did hush the night, 11. But that wild music burthens every bough, 12. And sweets grown common lose their dear delight. 13. Therefore like her, I sometime hold my tongue: 14. Because I would not dull you with my song. |
The poet continues to excuse his recent silence by saying that it is a sign of his increased love. Even the nightingale's song would become tedious if it were spread throughout the entire summer, when every other common bird was singing. It is noticeable in this sonnet that the imagery almost takes command, and what in the beginning started as praise of the youth becomes a separate delight in the manifestations of early summer, as the days ripen, and birds sing from every tree. Finally the poet puts an end to it all, and insists that silence is best, since the beauty of their love does not need a prattling tongue to enliven it with song. | |
The sonnet is part of the group of four which run from 100 to 103, and is a variation on the theme of silence which they seek to explain and excuse. |
THE 1609 QUARTO VERSION
The owners tongue doth publiſh euery where. Our loue was new,and then but in the ſpring, When I was wont to greet it with my laies, As Philomell in ſummers front doth ſinge, And ſtops his pipe in growth of riper daies: Not that the ſummer is leſſe pleaſant now Than when her mournefull himnes did huſh the night, But that wild muſick burthens euery bow, And ſweets growne common looſe their deare delight, Therefore like her, I ſome-time hold my tongue: Becauſe I would not dull you with my ſonge. |
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1. My love is strengthened, though more weak in seeming;
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1. My love = my affection for you. However, it could mean 'you, the beloved, you, whom I love', and could include a suggestion of deterioration in the appearance of the youth. The words seeming, and show are echoes of the concluding line of the previous sonnet. They usally carry overtones of hypocrisy and false covering for something which is not all well within. Here however the opposite is the case, or so the poet declares, in that his love shows itself as weak, and seems to be less than before, but in reality it has become stronger. Whether one believes this declaration or not is perhaps not relevant. Within the conventions of sonneteering the lover's words are gospel and the beloved is faultless. But the mere fact that the protestations occur as justifications for a period of silence, and that they are set in a group of sonnets which follow on from some in which abandonment, (87-9), hatred (90), deception (94-6) and separation (97-8) are the themes, leads one to suspect that the protestations themselves are mere show, a failing or tired love which is covered over with elegant and skillful wordplay. | |
2. I love not less, though
less the show appear; |
2. See the note above. The poet claims that the ostentatious show of his love, which in former times was evidenced by frequent sonnets (and other declarations?), he now considers to be superfluous, and he does not wish to cheapen his love by making it too public and shallow. | |
3. That love is merchandized, whose rich esteeming,
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3.
That love = any love (which is advertised,
publicised, put up for sale by the owner); is merchandized = is made into a commodity, is reduced to the level of an object of trade (or prostitution). whose rich esteeming = the precious worth of which. 3-4: 'Any love, when its preciousness is broadcast to the world as if it were a piece of merchandise, has its value reduced to that of a mere commodity on the market place'. |
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4. The owner's tongue doth publish every where. |
4. publish = make public, broadcast, make known to the world. There is a strong suggestion in these two lines (3-4) of pimping and prostitution. Compare for example the prostitution scene in Pericles, where Marina's qualities are trumpeted to the world: BAWD Boult, take you the marks of her,
the colour of her MARINA The gods defend me! |
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5. Our love was new, and then but in the spring,
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5. Springtime and love were proverbial companions. Cf. the song in As You Like It: It was a
lover and his lass, It is not implied that the poet first became acquainted with the youth in the springtime. |
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6. When I was wont to greet it with my lays;
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6. I
was wont = I was in the habit
of, I was accustomed to. Yet nor the lays of birds 98.5 Sing to the ear that doth thy lays esteem 100.7 |
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7. As Philomel in summer's front doth sing,
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7. Philomel - the classical name for the nightingale, which apparently sings in early summer. Shakespeare uses it here, as also in MND.II.2.13-14, Philomel with melody, Sing in our sweet lullaby, without any obvious reference to the rather brutal story from the classics, given in Ovid's Metamorphoses VI.424-674. Philomela was turned into a nightingale after taking revenge on her brother in law, Tereus, for being raped by him. Procne, her sister, became a swallow, and Tereus a hoopoe. summer's
front
= the beginning of the summer, early summer. one that converses more with the buttock of the night than with the forehead of the morning: COR.II.1. The nightingale sings
most in early summer, when
seeking a mate. |
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8. And stops his pipe in growth of riper days:
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8. stops his pipe = ceases to sing. The pipe was the traditional shepherd's instrument, so any music of the countryside could be referred to in such terms, since the natural music of the fields was regarded as the source of all melodies. We tend to underestimate how close the Elizabethan age was to all the sounds of nature. Even in London, which was then a large city, fields and gardens were always close by. Roads were not tarmacked and concrete was almost unknown. (OED.3.a. gives the earliest use of the word concrete in this sense as 1834, although concrete of some sort was in fact used by the Romans). One would not have to leave the city to hear a nightingale sing. For us such sounds are obscured, masked and obliterated by city living. See for example Bottom's speech in Midsummer Nights Dream: BOT. I will walk up and down here, and
I will sing, that
they shall hear I am not afraid. Bottom automatically finds his security in the rural memory of birds and bird song. his - editors
often emend this to her, in conformity with lines
10 & 13. Arguments
in favour of retaining his are given by GBE p.211,
and JK p.306.
(among others). |
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9. Not that the summer is
less pleasant now |
9. Not that = it is not because etc. I.e. I have not ceased writing sonnets to you because the summer of our love is less pleasurable than the springtime was, when the nightingale etc.. | |
10. Than when her mournful hymns did hush the night, |
10.
her - through the influence of the
legend the singing nightingale was thought of as female. It may not
have
been known at the time that it was the male which was the chief
songster.
mournful hymns - sad tunes, (because of Philomela's tragic story). Bird song at night however would be considered mournful, in harmony with the darkness of night. hush the night - the night appeared to become hushed as if listening to the song of the nightingale. This is a frequent experience, even today, of those who actually do listen to a nightingale singing. |
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11. But that wild music burthens every bough,
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11. But
that = but because. Come unto
these yellow sands, There may also be a reference to the rival poets, who 'burthen every bough' with their commonplace praises of the youth. |
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12. And sweets grown common
lose their dear delight. |
12.
sweets grown common = sweet things
that have become common place, vulgar, widespread. dear delight = precious and valuable ability to give pleasure. The thought is almost proverbial, although recorded proverbs do not match these words. The rarity of a thing often makes it precious |
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13. Therefore like her, I
sometime hold my tongue: |
13.
like her = like the nightingale;
sometime = at times, for some periods of time. hold my tongue = refrain from writing verse in praise of you, or praising you in speech. |
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14. Because I would not dull you with my song.
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14.
I would not = I prefer not to, I
choose not to; dull you = bore you, make you endure the tedium of my song. Also, make you lose your shine by using repetitious praise. The poet wishes to avoid the fault of over-praising the youth, which would have the effect of making all praise vulgar, dull, and as common as birdsong. |
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London Bridge as it was in Shakespeare's day, circa 1600. | Views of London as it was in 1616. | Views of Cheapside London, from a print of 1639. | The Carrier's Cosmography. A guide to all the Carriers in London. As given by John Taylor in 1637. | Oxquarry Books Ltd | |
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