Connor Warner
Dr. Obermeier
English 200
1 March 2000
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[comment1]
A New Twist on the Court Room Drama:
An Examination of Physicality and Emotional Attachment in Shakespeare's
"Sonnet 46" [comment2]
In "Sonnet 46"
of his works about the blond young man, William Shakespeare presents a
unique view on the classic debate about physical lust versus emotional
love. The poet struggles to decide if his feelings are based upon superficial
desire and infatuation, represented by the "eye" (1), or true love independent
of the physical world, symbolized by the "heart" (1). With a deft movement
from violent imagery in the first two lines to the civilized language
of law, Shakespeare dismisses the commonly accepted view of a battle between
the eye and the heart. [comment3]
The diction of warfare denotes two very separate alien sides clashing
in destructive confrontation. Shakespeare advances quickly away from such
wording, setting his debate in the civilized context of a courtroom. While
the parties engaged in a lawsuit are competing, they are not seeking the
destruction of their opposition. A common bond exists between the two
sides of a legal case, the bond of society. They are parts of the same
whole, or they would not be bound by the laws of that whole. The same
holds for the eye and the heart, as well as their metaphysical counterparts,
lust and spiritual bonding. The eye and the heart are but organs that
make up the body. Physical desire and emotional attraction are just aspects
of the overlying concept of love. [comment4]
This is Shakespeare's final point: both physicality and emotional attachment
combine to form the powerful force humans know as love.
The opening quatrain of "Sonnet 46" sets
up the conflict of infatuation versus true love, acknowledging the classic
view of a battle between opposing forces, but swiftly moving beyond such
a black and white portrayal of the issue. The first line of the poem seems
to say that Shakespeare, like many others, sees infatuation and spiritual
attraction as hostile, warring parties. He even chooses to modify "war"
(1) with the word "mortal" (1), signifying a conflict to the death with
no possibility for reconciliation or pacification. But in the next line
he contradicts himself. Though the poet continues to utilize martial imagery
such as "conquest" (2), his choice of verbs subtly changes the meaning.
[comment5]
"[D]ivide" (2) suggests that both parties in the conflict will receive
some portion of the prize, an unlikely occurrence if the eye and heart
are truly in "mortal war" (1). Shakespeare underscores this change in
direction by substituting a trochee for the standard iamb as the initial
foot of the line. Already, the poet is shifting focus away from the idea
of warfare and onto the image of a courtroom.
The second quatrain completes that movement
and establishes equality between the two sides. Words of violence are
conspicuously absent from this point on in the poem, replaced by legal
vocabulary, such as "plead" (5), "deny" (7), and "lies" (8). [comment6]
No longer bitter enemies, the eye and the heart become the plaintiff and
the "defendant" (7) in a civil dispute over the possession of Shakespeare's
love. The diction in this section of the poem also serves to contradict
the traditional negative connotations of infatuation. Physical attraction
is often portrayed as [comment7]
course or unclean, but Shakespeare disagrees. He describes eyes, the tangible
representation of lust, as "crystal" (6), an adjective that implies colorless
beauty and perfect purity. [comment8]
Crystals are used in folklore to divine the future, to perceive the truth,
and, by using this word to modify eyes, Shakespeare implies that physical
attraction stands on equal footing with true love. The meter echoes this
equality. Lines 5-6, and 7-8, which present the arguments of the heart
and eye respectively, are identical sets of rhymed, un-variated iambic
pentameter, separated only by an initial trochee in line 7 which underscores
the clear distinction between the heart's contention and that of the eye.
The third quatrain builds suspense, as
the poet's internal trial nears conclusion. Having established equality
between lust and true love, Shakespeare moves on to introduce the fulcrum
that adjudicates the balance between the two--the mind. Continuing with
his legal imagery, the poet builds a "quest of thoughts" (10) to try the
case and "determine [. . .]" (11) the "verdict" (11). He throws in a curious
twist, informing his readers that the members of the jury are all "tenants
to the heart" (10). In doing so, Shakespeare once again calls to mind
the classic view of the heart's pure love versus the tainted infatuation
of the eye. Despite the apparent bias of the mind toward the heart, the
poet does not now share that bias. He once again describes the eyes with
diction of purity and cleanliness, naming them "clear" (12). The conflict
between eye and heart is manifesting itself in the conflicting message
of the third quatrain. Leading his readers into the terminal couplet,
the author builds tension by utilizing alternating spondaic and pyrrhic
feet in line 12. [comment9]
This produces an effect of slowness followed by celerity, almost like
a human consumed by indecision, reaching a solution and then falling back
into doubt.
Such a build-up leads readers to expect
a dramatic conclusion, a declaration of victory in favor of either true
love or infatuation; but Shakespeare provides only a simple, anti-climactic
division between the two. [comment10]
The couplet seems to blend in with the rest of the poem, having almost
no metrical variation and a recycled rhyme scheme. Usually the final couplet
of a Shakespearean sonnet presents an ironic turning point, and therefore
often begins with an initial trochee in line 13 to sign-post that reversal.
This couplet is different. Because Shakespeare is proving that physicality
and emotional attachment are simply parts of the same whole, he strives
not for reversal in the couplet, but for harmony. Therefore, he begins
line 13 with an iambic foot, "As thus" (13), allowing the third quatrain
to flow directly into couplet. The poet also repeats the rhyme of "part"
(13) and "heart" (14) from lines 12 and 10 of the third quatrain, tying
the couplet even closer to the body of the poem. Shakespeare presents
a common sense solution to the problem, declaring the entire conflict
to be almost irrelevant. Lust is based on external aesthetic appeal, so
the poet bestows the "outward part" (13) of the poem's young object upon
the eye. True love draws its strength from an internal bonding of spirits,
and therefore Shakespeare deeds the "inward love" (14) to the heart. And
these two halves together form love.
Work Cited
Shakespeare, William. "Sonnet 46." The Norton Anthology of English
Literature. Eds. M. H. Abrams and Stephen Greenblatt. 7th ed. 2 vols.
New York: Norton, 2000. 1: 1033.
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