[stellar-one/poems/includes/header.htm]
  [stellar-one/poems/includes/left.htm]

 

 

Sonnet 18
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 owest;
Nor shall Death brag thou wander'st in his shade,
When in eternal lines to time thou growest:
So long as men can breathe or eyes can see,
So long lives this and this gives life to thee

 

 
        
 

 
  Hit Counter
 visits since
09/02/2002
updated 06/27/2009
 
 

 

 
 

Annonymous

Poetry books, by author:

Mathew Arnold

William Blake

Ann Bradstreet

Elizabeth Barrett Browning

Robert Browning

George Gordon Byron, Lord Byron

Lewis Carroll

Samuel Taylor Coleridge

Emily Dickinson

John Donne

T. S. Eliot

Ralph Waldo Emerson

Robert Frost

Thomas Gray

Thomas Hardy

George Herbert

Robert Herrick

Oliver Wendell Holmes

Gerard Manley Hopkins

Ben Jonson

John Keats

Rudyard Kipling

Katherine Mansfield

Christopher Marlowe

Andrew Marvell

Wilfred Owen

Edgar Allen Poe

Ezra Pound

Li Po

Sappho

William Shakespeare

Percy Bysshe Shelley

John Suckling

William Wordsworth

Thomas Wyatt

 
 

 

[stellar-one/poems/includes/footer.htm]