Respuesta :
Answer:
Quoted from William Shakespeare's "Sonnet 130".
Explanation:
In his parody of the conventional form of sonnet writing, Shakespeare talks of his love, copying the ways of conventional sonnet writing. But in his sonnet, he parodies the typical sonnet which is a form of praising and proclaiming the beauty and love of his beloved. Rather, Shakespeare talks of his love whose "breath" "reeks" and is nothing like the beauty of other mistresses.
The whole description of the alternative view of what beauty in a woman is like shows him being critical of the mistress. While other mistresses/ beloved are beautifully described by their lovers in the most majestic and most beauteous ways possible, Shakespeare inverses the theme in such a away that he majestically and beautifully criticizes the 'ugliness' of his mistress.