The lights in the sky are the souls of all the animals and humans that have passed away. They are dancing in the moonlight. It's there to remind you that they are in a better place.
The answer is: My mistress is not a perfect beauty.
Shakespeare's "Sonnet 130" is a parody of traditional sonnets at the time, in which poets compared their lovers to beautiful things like diamonds, fine pearls, flowers or goddesses. In the first four lines, Shakespeare expresses his lover does not possess a conventional beauty: her eyes are not like the sun, her lips are not red, her breasts are brownish or yellowish, and her hair looks like wires.
<span>Performances supposedly drew bad crowds and sent immoral messages.</span>