Page 33
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Page 33, along with its darker reflection in page 34, illustrates the closing couplet of Shakespeare's first sonnet. In Page 33, the instruction of the couplet, we see Shakespeare instructing both himself and his sonnet to "pity the world", which means both to take pity on the world and to incite the world to take pity on them. To do this, he must share his message with the world, and rolling the sonnets up and putting them in a bottle is an apt metaphor for publishing them.
He is simultaneously instructing us, the readers, to show him and his sonnets pity, and not take his words quietly to our own graves.
This line demonstrates Shakespeare's optimism that someone - you, perhaps? - will pick up his message and be convinced to love their author and let his words travel with you and live on in your heart and on your tongue.
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