Sonnet 66

GPTKB entity

Statements (54)
Predicate Object
gptkbp:instance_of gptkb:poetry
gptkbp:analysis Critically acclaimed
gptkbp:contains_song Iambic pentameter
ABABCDCDEFEFGG
Couplet at the end
Quatrains used
Volta present
gptkbp:critical_reception Considered a masterpiece
Widely studied
Included in anthologies
Analyzed in literary criticism
gptkbp:cultural_impact Referenced in literature
Quoted in speeches
Studied in academia
Performed in theater
Adapted in music
gptkbp:form gptkb:sonnet
gptkbp:historical_context Written during the English Renaissance
Part of the sonnet tradition
Reflects Elizabethan values
Responds to societal issues of the time
gptkbp:historical_interpretation Various interpretations exist
Commonly viewed as a critique of society
Examines the passage of time
Explores the nature of love and loss
Seen as a reflection on personal despair
https://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#label Sonnet 66
gptkbp:influence Romantic poetry
gptkbp:inspiration Inspired adaptations
Influenced poets
Influenced songwriters
Inspired visual art
gptkbp:language English
gptkbp:line And weep afresh love's long-since-canceled woe.
Tired with all these, for restful death I cry.
gptkbp:literary_devices gptkb:Metaphor
gptkb:personification
Imagery
gptkbp:literary_movement Renaissance literature
Elizabethan literature
Early Modern English literature
gptkbp:notable_themes gptkb:Beauty
gptkb:Love
gptkb:Time
Mortality
gptkbp:number_of_lines gptkb:14
gptkbp:part_of gptkb:Shakespeare's_Sonnets
gptkbp:published_in 1609
gptkbp:sound Cynical
gptkbp:subject_matter Societal corruption
gptkbp:theme Disillusionment
gptkbp:written_by gptkb:William_Shakespeare
gptkbp:bfsParent gptkb:William_Shakespeare
gptkbp:bfsLayer 4