Shall I compare Thee to the summer Day
...ect of wind and sunlight, but his love's beauty will not fade when the season starts to change or when the sunlight dims. Unlike summer, her beauty will never depreciate. Shakespeare nicely compares his love's perfection to summer's flaws; through his everlasting sonnet, it will memorialize her beauty, as long as the sonnet exists, her beauty flourishes. The poet started the poem with a question that proposes a comparison between his love and summer. Though, he immediately separates his love perfection and the imperfect summer by saying "Thou art more lovely and more temperate". Generally we consider summer as a season outgoing, and a lovely season. Perhaps to many of us, summer is the most pleasurable season of all. Thus, in favoring his love he conveys that she is way more exceed the beauty of summer. He is already making his point about which one he thinks is the more beautiful and moderate. She is more beautiful than anything he has ever seen or can compare to. As he continues on, he then lists the reasons why he adores her. And also describes the less enjoyable things about summer. The wind is one of the factors in sullying the beauty of summer, "Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May". As the s...