If your a very poetic person, who see's life everyday through different angles even though your passing through the same routine; then yes it's probably possible everyday can be put into a poem.
I don't argue the claim because everyday brings something new, but not anyone can measure to be a poet. Some use diaries for this instance.
But, eh.
The sonnets are really difficult pieces of poetry that I want to have a connection to yet also not care about. Reason for this is because they make sense, once their broken down into modern English and interpreted; and I feel a lot of people can have some sort of relevance to these drama-filled pieces that are usually about love.
So I’m in the middle. I don’t have a good enough judgment to say what I actually feel for them. But just because I don’t have a settled choice about what I think of the Sonnets, I did like two of them a lot. Sonnet 29 and 292 grabbed my attention. Sonnet 29 beats Sonnet 292 though.
In Sonnet 29 the speaker sounds delusional. He creates a person in his mind that he wishes he could be. Because in his mind this person has a lot of the things and qualities he wished he could have. I feel that you can find people relevant to the speaker. All you can tell people like this, and help them understand is that they need to appreciate what they have or they’ll be gloomy for having something that isn’t theirs.
I wouldn’t recommend any of the Sonnets to family or friends because realistically, they wouldn’t understand. What I think about the poems really is just based on deep insight. And it should probably stay as just a thought. Because maybe I went too far; and maybe I didn’t get it so who knows. These are poems than can have one more meaning and analogy to them.
