Sonnet 66

GPTKB entity

Statements (54)
Predicate Object
gptkbp:instance_of gptkb:poet
gptkbp:bfsLayer 2
gptkbp:bfsParent gptkb:Educational_Institution
gptkbp:analysis Critically acclaimed
gptkbp:art_movement Renaissance literature
Elizabethan literature
Early Modern English literature
gptkbp:contains_track 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:poet
gptkbp:historical_context Various interpretations exist
Written during the English Renaissance
Commonly viewed as a critique of society
Examines the passage of time
Explores the nature of love and loss
Part of the sonnet tradition
Reflects Elizabethan values
Responds to societal issues of the time
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:literary_devices gptkb:Metaphor
gptkb:Person
Imagery
gptkbp:part_of gptkb:Shakespeare's_Sonnets
gptkbp:product_line gptkb:14
And weep afresh love's long-since-canceled woe.
Tired with all these, for restful death I cry.
gptkbp:published_by 1609
gptkbp:sound Cynical
gptkbp:subject Societal corruption
gptkbp:theme Disillusionment
gptkbp:themes gptkb:Beauty
gptkb:Love
gptkb:Time
Mortality
gptkbp:written_by gptkb:Educational_Institution