Hamlet (sonnet reference: Sonnet 116, often titled "Let me not to the marriage of true minds")
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Sonnet 116, 'Let me not to the marriage of true minds,' argues that true love is constant and unchanging despite obstacles and time.
The sonnet asserts that love is an ever-fixed mark, not altered by external circumstances, and resists time’s changes.
Its concise philosophical meditation on the nature of love has made it one of Shakespeare’s most quoted poems in discussions of romance.
The sonnet’s language and themes resonate with portrayals of intellectual and steadfast partnerships.
Because of its famous lines and enduring sentiment, it frequently appears alongside discussions of romantic compatibility in literature and criticism.
The sonnet asserts that love is an ever-fixed mark, not altered by external circumstances, and resists time’s changes.
Its concise philosophical meditation on the nature of love has made it one of Shakespeare’s most quoted poems in discussions of romance.
The sonnet’s language and themes resonate with portrayals of intellectual and steadfast partnerships.
Because of its famous lines and enduring sentiment, it frequently appears alongside discussions of romantic compatibility in literature and criticism.
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referencing Shakespeare’s sonnet about 'the marriage of true minds' to compare to Benedick and Beatrice.


Rebecca Shinsky

Much Ado About Nothing by William Shakespeare




