Examples Of Flaws In Sonnet 130

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Is it possible to love someone with all the flaws they have?
Are flaws so important that it can enable someone to not love someone?
Sonnet 130 by William Shakespeare illustrates that everyone has flaws but one can still love them with all their flaws.
It is possible to be able to love someone because of their flaws.
The “mistress” is “nothing” “compare[d]” to the “sun”.
The mistress is nothing but a flicker of a candle to the bright light of the sun.
There are things that are brighter and the sun is supposed to represent the future so Shakespeare is saying that there are things that are brighter in his future than with his mistress.
“Roses” are “far more red ” than the “red” on “her lips” and “sound[s]” are “far more pleasing” than her

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