Almost all are in the verse form afterward known as Shakespearean Sonnets and deal in large part with a beautiful young man, a rival poet and a "Dark Lady" whose identities have been the subject of much debate. Some have suggested that the young man is the same as the "W.H." referred to in the publisher's dedication, possibly William Herbert[?], Earl of Pembroke, a patron of the stage. The rival poet is sometimes identified with Christopher Marlowe. However, no hard evidence that any of the sonnets' characters have real-life counterparts. The narrator himself could even be a fictional device and not a reflection of Shakespeare's feeling.
Shakespeare's repeated declarations of love for the young man suggest bisexuality to some, although others see them as supreme expressions of Platonic love[?], deliberately contrasted with the carnal attractiveness of the Dark Lady.
External link: http://www.shakespeares-sonnets.com/
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