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SONNETCAST – William Shakespeare's Sonnets Recited, Revealed, Relived - Sonnet 28: How Can I Then Return in Happy Plight
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Sonnet 28: How Can I Then Return in Happy Plight

03/26/23 • 17 min

SONNETCAST – William Shakespeare's Sonnets Recited, Revealed, Relived

Sonnet 28 continues on from Sonnet 27 and develops the thought further, elaborating on the ways day and night appear to conspire to make William Shakespeare's struggling life a misery as he travels, away from his young lover. While it thus does not tell us anything that is in that sense new, it produces a layered internal dialogue that gives us a great sense of the poet's state of mind and disposition of heart.

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Sonnet 28 continues on from Sonnet 27 and develops the thought further, elaborating on the ways day and night appear to conspire to make William Shakespeare's struggling life a misery as he travels, away from his young lover. While it thus does not tell us anything that is in that sense new, it produces a layered internal dialogue that gives us a great sense of the poet's state of mind and disposition of heart.

Previous Episode

undefined - Sonnet 27: Weary With Toil, I Haste Me to My Bed

Sonnet 27: Weary With Toil, I Haste Me to My Bed

Sonnet 27 is the first of several sonnets in which Shakespeare laments the fact that he is away from his young lover, thus answering the question posed indirectly by Sonnet 26 as to who is on the move. And while this sonnet can stand on its own, with a fully formed and perfectly concluded argument, it does come as a pair with Sonnet 28, which follows on directly from it and which, by contrast, relies on this sonnet to be properly introduced. The two should therefore be looked at together, and we will do so when we get to Sonnet 28.

Next Episode

undefined - Sonnet 29: When in Disgrace With Fortune and Men's Eyes

Sonnet 29: When in Disgrace With Fortune and Men's Eyes

One of the most celebrated poems in the canon, Sonnet 29 casts William Shakespeare in a state of deep and lonely unhappiness, from which the memory of his young lover is able to lift him in spectacular fashion. By continuing the theme of weariness and dejection established by the previous two sonnets, it confirms our notion of Shakespeare being on the road, away from the young man, but rather than focusing on a longing desire to be with him, it rejoices in the love experienced before.

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