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OverviewWhen I finished the second volume of Shakespeare's Sonnets: Line by Line Explanation (Sonnets 41-80), I thought I had reached the heart of the poet's struggle. I had watched him confess his wandering, beg for forgiveness, and return to the young man with renewed devotion. I had followed him through the rival-poet sequence, where he admitted his own inadequacy and yet claimed that his plain truth outlasted any ""gross painting."" I had seen him defy Time and vow constancy. It felt like a natural pause. But readers kept asking: What about the Dark Lady? What about the sonnets where he calls Love a blind fool? What about ""My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun""? They were right. The most famous sonnets of all - the ones that turn love poetry upside down - were still waiting. So was the bitter end of the triangle between the poet, the young man, and the dark-eyed woman who enslaved them both. This third and final volume covers Sonnets 81 through 154, completing the full arc of Shakespeare's sonnet sequence. The poet's relationship with the young man grows more distant, even as the shadow of the Dark Lady looms larger. In Sonnets 127-152, we enter a new world entirely: the poet writes to a woman with black eyes and raven hair - unfaithful, cruel, and yet irresistible. He knows she lies. He knows she is ""as black as hell."" But he cannot stop loving her. These sonnets are raw, honest, and sometimes shocking. They are not about ideal beauty or eternal constancy. They are about desire that outruns reason, about self-deception, about the strange power of unworthiness to provoke love. The poet accuses his own eyes of being deceived, his heart of being a fool, and his body of betraying his better self. He admits that he has sworn false oaths about her fairness and broken far more promises than she has. The volume ends with two mythological sonnets - 153 and 154 - that tell of Cupid's torch, a cold fountain turned to a hot bath, and the discovery that water cannot cool love. It is a fitting conclusion: love is unquenchable, incurable, and endlessly fascinating. A Note on This Volume Each sonnet in this volume is explained independently, so this book can be read on its own. However, for the complete emotional journey - from the first plea to ""increase"" to the final admission that water cannot cool love - the full three-volume set is recommended. I have also continued the personal commentary - my own reflections on each sonnet. Some of these sonnets are uncomfortable to read because they lay bare the poet's weakness and self-hatred. But that is also why they matter. They show that love is not always noble or pure. Sometimes it is a fever. Sometimes it is a lie we tell ourselves. And sometimes it is the only truth we have. I am grateful to the readers who urged me to complete this journey. Without your encouragement, I might have stopped at Sonnet 80. Now, with this volume, the full arc of Shakespeare's sonnets is complete - from the first plea to ""increase"" to the final admission that water cannot cool love. May you find as much insight and wonder in these pages as I did. Mayuri Singh Full Product DetailsAuthor: Mayuri SinghPublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 3.50cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.655kg ISBN: 9798199258142Pages: 548 Publication Date: 30 May 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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