You are a guest writer for a legal aid blog. You noticed in the comments several people have asked questions about the right to counsel and whether they have a right to counsel based on their situation. To address this need, you decide to write an article on the topic.
Analyze two cases involving the right to counsel and refer to these cases in your article.
Write a 700- to 1,050-word article about the right to counsel that addresses the following topics:
The aspects of the right to counsel for these cases
How the historical development of the right to counsel relates to the cases
When the right to counsel attaches to criminal procedure for the cases
clear the poet is enthralled by a man whom he finds attractive and is aware he is not the only one who appreciates it “every eye doth dwell”. However, the stressed syllable on “Will” (5.3) indicates a change in tone, it is a dramatic warning to the recipient that you can’t escape time; time is a cruel and oppressive ruler “tyrant” (5.3). This links with the theme of the sonnet as time is the very thing that gave the man the good looks and is the very thing that will take it all away; it is a paradox statement. The second quatrain concludes that aging destroys beauty. The tone of the poem builds up to more dramatic approach to the passing of time as its negative consequences are highlighted further. “Lusty leaves” (5.7) is alliteration and a metaphor that we are withering with age. The second quatrain concludes with the notion of beauty eventually disappearing with the body aging so we could also interpret this as a reference to the greying of hair “Beauty o’er snowed” (5.8).
A liquid prisoner pent in walls of glass
(Shakespeare 2010 [1609], 5.10)
This analogy is of making perfume from flowers; flowers aren’t long lasting but we can preserve their essence by extracting perfume from them and keeping them in glass bottles. The effect of old age is argued with “prisoner” emphasising you can’t escape the consequence of time highlighting the urgency to procreate to preserve your beauty.
‘Sonnet 20’ begins on a metaphor “A woman’s face” (20.1) as the address is male. This metaphor runs throughout the sonnet with constant comparisons to the male carrying feminine physical qualities however, nature has tweaked the creation in giving him better characteristics than that of a female;
A woman’s gentle heart, but not acquainted