Sonnet 40: Take All My Love, My Dear, Take Them All
INTRODUCTION:
This sonnet talks about the speaker's love for the youth and his resentment on the youth's power over him. Sonnet 40 is also one of the sonnets in the Fair Youth sequence by Shakespeare and published in 1609.
SONNET 40: SUMMARY
However is the poet in love with the young man, he also has some wrath over his treacherous behaviour simultaneously. But this wrath is dissembled against his love on the youth in abundance.
His beloved youth has looted his own love. Yet the speaker's wrath is not exposed much and he encourages the youth to take away his every belongings including his love.
Before his love for the youth, everything is worthless. He seems passive even after he is exhausted of everything. All are because of his limitless love for the young man which hides from his eyes all wrong doings that the young man does.
His beloved youth has looted his own love. Yet the speaker's wrath is not exposed much and he encourages the youth to take away his every belongings including his love.
Before his love for the youth, everything is worthless. He seems passive even after he is exhausted of everything. All are because of his limitless love for the young man which hides from his eyes all wrong doings that the young man does.