Good! Cuz they aren't. Many of them are to a young noblemen. If you read them all together it sounds like a soap opera. He spends several sonnets trying to talk the man (who it sounds like he has a thing for) into having children. Then the "dark ladY" comes on the scene. She's married but he tries for her anyway. It doesn't sound like he has any luck, but his young noblemen does...and poor Will doesn't like it much.
I do agree with you though about the one sonnet when taken by itself. It's beautiful and very against the times- a touch of realisim in a world lost to fancy.
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I do agree with you though about the one sonnet when taken by itself. It's beautiful and very against the times- a touch of realisim in a world lost to fancy.