William Shakespeare, Sonnet cxii
Notes
line 4: Allow -- approve. [ Back to text ]
line 8: This passage is obscure, and there is probably some slight misprint. Steevens says, with his usual amenity, "The meaning of this purblind and obscure stuff seems to be -- 'You are the only person who has the power to change my stubborn resolution, either to what is right, or to what is wrong.'" We have little doubt that something like this is the meaning; but why has not this great conjectural critic, instead of calling out "purblind and obscure stuff", tried his hand at some slight emendation? He is venturous enough when the text is clear. We might read thus:
That myor we might read, as Malone has proposed, "steel'd sense so changes right or wrong;
line 14: This line presents in the old copy one of the many examples of how little the context was heeded. We there find --
That all the world besides me thinks y' are deadMalone changes this to --
That all the world besides methinks they are dead.We adopt Mr Dyce's first reading. [ Back to text ]
Most notes to Shakespeare's sonnets are from Charles Knight's edition, but those in square brackets are mine.