Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Aesthetics in Sonnet 31

Understanding the art of a poem is not an easy task to accomplish, for people often refer to things as either “ugly” or “beautiful” without attempting to determine the meaning behind the object or work of art.  We indicate that something is beautiful because it holds value to us and embodies a definite purpose.  For example, lyrics are striking or significant because they remind us of an individual or moment in our lives.  This principle has been come to know as aesthetics, the branch of philosophy dealing with such notions as the beautiful, the ugly, the sublime, the comic, etc. Because artistic value is compassionately personal, it must be felt as ones own. Sonnet 31 by Sir Philip Sydney portrays beauty through its powerful poetic conceit and its ability to reflect on love.

            In Sonnet 31, Sir Philip Sidney is infatuated with Stella, the star he seems to be seeking, but yet she is far out of reach. He is hurt incontrovertibly because she rejects him.  He asks the moon rhetorical questions and confides in him about his love life with Stella. He then goes on to propose that all women must be the same and their existence on Earth or in the heavens is irrelevant.  He resembles the idea that once a man is mistreated by a woman they love, they lose hope for all the others that might potentially be different.  To go as far as question whether even in the heavenly realm faithful love is regarded as foolishness proves how ungrateful he believes Stella is by contemptuously rejecting him.

            While he speaks to the moon he remarks that both of them have now become fellow sufferers of love. It is fascinating that Sidney makes the moon into a proper noun by capitalizing it, almost giving it human qualities in doing so.  This apostrophic take on the poem shows how love can have irrational effects on people, but still holds exquisiteness behind it. The moon is beautiful because it helps morose romantics think, meditate, and dream while also creating a passionate atmosphere. Astrophel’s eyes meet with the moons at night in hope of receiving some sympathy from someone who sees all that goes on in the world and looks down at all the lovers.

Sydney’s influential vanity concerning love and his personal experience with it is the prime example of beautiful poetry. Love is a powerful emotion that conquers everyone in the world at one point in his or her life. Rejection is not pleasant, but when the person you love does not reciprocate your love, you have to have the pride to accept this fact. By confessing to the moon his dilemma, the speaker hoped to obtain compassion of some sort. As noted in Sonnet 31, love is a natural and extraordinary passion; humans are wired to fall in and out of love.  




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