Sonnet 19


Sonnet 19 is one of 154 sonnets published by the English playwright and poet William Shakespeare in 1609. It is considered by some to be the final sonnet of the initial procreation sequence. The sonnet addresses time directly, as it allows time its great power to destroy all things in nature, but the poem forbids time to erode the young man's fair appearance. The poem casts time in the role of a poet holding an “antique pen”. The theme is redemption, through poetry, of time's inevitable decay. Though there is compunction in the implication that the young man himself will not survive time's effects, because redemption brought by the granting of everlasting youth is not actual, but rather ideal or poetic.

Structure

Sonnet 19 is a typical English or Shakespearean sonnet. The English sonnet consists of three quatrains followed by a couplet. It follows the form's typical rhyme scheme: ABAB CDCD EFEF GG. Like all but one of Shakespeare's sonnets, Sonnet 19 is written in a type of metre called iambic pentameter based on five pairs of metrically weak/strong syllabic positions. The eighth line exemplifies a regular iambic pentameter:

× / × / × / × / × /
But I forbid thee one most heinous crime:

Both the first and third lines exhibit reversals which thrust extra emphasis on an action verb, a practice Marina Tarlinskaja calls rhythmical italics
:

× / × / / × × /× /
Devouring Time, blunt thou the lion's paws,
/ × × / × × / / × /
Pluck the keen teeth from the fierce tiger's jaws,

Synopsis and analysis

Sonnet 19 addresses time directly as "Devouring Time", a translation of the often-used phrase from Ovid, "tempus edax". G. Wilson Knight notes and analyzes the way in which devouring time is developed by trope in the first 19 sonnets. Jonathan Hart notes the reliance of Shakespeare's treatment on tropes from not only Ovid but also Edmund Spenser.
The sonnet consists of a series of imperatives, where time is allowed its great power to destroy all things in nature: As it will "blunt... the lion's paws;" cause mother earth to "devour" her children ; and the tiger's "keen teeth", its 'eager', its 'sharp', and its 'fierce' teeth from the jaw of a tiger. The quarto's "yawes" was amended to "jaws" by Edward Capell and Edmond Malone; this change is now almost universally accepted.
Time will even "burn the long-liv'd phoenix, in her blood." The phoenix is a long-lived bird that is cyclically regenerated or reborn. Associated with the sun, a phoenix obtains new life by arising from the ashes of its predecessor. George Steevens glosses "in her blood" as "burned alive" by analogy with Coriolanus ; Nicolaus Delius has the phrase "while still standing."
As time speeds by, it will bring the seasons, which are not only cycles of nature but ups and downs of human moods. Time may "do what ere thou wilt." The epithet "swift-footed time" was commonplace, as was "the wide world".
Finally the poet forbids time a most grievous sin : It must "carve not with thy hours my love's fair brow". In associating crime and wrinkles Shakespeare has drawn on Ovid again, "de rugis crimina multa cadunt", rendered by Christopher Marlowe as "wrinckles in beauty is a grieuous fault". The hours must not etch into the beloved's brow any wrinkle. Nor must time's "antique pen," both its 'ancient' and its 'antic' or crazy pen, "draw... lines there".
Time must allow the youth to remain "untainted" in its "course"; one meaning of "untainted" is 'untouched' or 'unaffected' by the course of time. The couplet asserts that time may do its worst – whatever injuries or faults time might commit, the poet's "love," both his affection and the beloved, will live forever young in the poet's lines.

Interpretations

In Gustav Holst's opera, At the Boar's Head, the sonnet is performed as a song sung by Prince Hal in disguise as entertainment for Falstaff and Doll Tearsheet.
David Harewood reads it for the 2002 compilation album, When Love Speaks