Sonnet 93: So Shall I Live, Supposing Thou Art True

Sonnet 93: So Shall I Live, Supposing Thou Art True

Update: 2024-07-28
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Sonnet 93 is the third of three sonnets that pivot William Shakespeare's stance towards his young lover from one of pure praise and adulation to one that not just questions his conduct and character, but begins to actively admonish him.


It picks up directly from the closing couplet of Sonnet 92 and imagines a situation in which the young man is unfaithful to Shakespeare without Shakespeare knowing about this, and so it compares our poet to a 'deceived husband'. In doing so it reinforces the claim made by Sonnet 92, that the young man is in effect pledged to Shakespeare for life, and it further likens their relationship to a marriage.


And while this can't, of course, be read literally – not least because equal marriage did not exist at the time and Shakespeare was already married with children to Anne in Stratford – it nevertheless gives us a deep insight into how William Shakespeare views himself constellated to his young lover.

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Sonnet 93: So Shall I Live, Supposing Thou Art True

Sonnet 93: So Shall I Live, Supposing Thou Art True

Sebastian Michael