Answer:
The speaker (Shakespeare) in the sonnet praises his beloved by comparing his beloved to a “summer’s day is explained below in details.
Explanation:
Sonnet 18 is complicated and, at one level, it is as explained in the statement preceding. The nature of its opportunity quatrain is, admittedly, positive but, correspondingly disappointed by the restrictions of the sonnet custom and tradition and its application of stock comparisons, to display a love which the lover appears to surpass.
Yes they do but it’s expensive
A. People. Hope this helps
For the answer to the question above, I agree with the quotation. Literature should not be all about sound facts nor is it about fantasies. It must lie in between. We each have our own levels of understanding and our own personal fantasies. A work of literature must provide us with something new in order for the time spent in consuming it be worthwhile. The Book Thief tells us of hard facts but it also provides us with something else, how a life of young child harboring a wanted man is changed after the fact. In the Lord of the Rings, a fantasy world is so vivid and wide that you yourself can navigate through it.
Steinbeck's message about dreams is that dreams create hope and gives people motivation.
For example on pages 13 and 14, Lennie and is telling George about their dream farm and how when they make enough money they are going to live how they please.
“They dream of roots, stability, and independence.”