Answer:
The thing that stands out to me is the formality and tone of the poem. The author uses very unique language, he's comparing something or someone to a summer's day.
When I read "And often is his gold complexion dimmed" I think he's talking about the sun, I think he might be comparing life to a summer's day. He says "every fair from fair sometime declines" I think that means that with more time, something gets worse.
But no matter how bad it gets, you should stay the way you are and don't let death get the best of you.
Questions:
What exactly is he comparing to a summer's day?
What is the meaning of "thou"?
Why is the poem in the tone that it is?