{"id":"01KG6S5PA4GB0Q79JXJ0XB2KJY","cid":"bafkreieman6rsgyqkfux453sy4yyaimc7z6z7gi5cp7ez4ivixh5jrq2oa","type":"section","properties":{"description":"# 18.\n## Overview\nThis is a section of type \"section\" extracted from the text file [pdf-01KG6Q7Q25RHMFT3SJXPV18VFF.txt](arke:01KG6S2X2EBB305ENM00G16GWA), labeled \"18.\", containing the text of Shakespeare's Sonnet 18. It was extracted on January 30, 2026, by the \"structure-extraction-lambda\" process. The section spans lines 10482-10498 of the source file.\n\n## Context\nThis section is part of the chapter \"[SONNETS.](arke:01KG6S4GWYPZNAPTTX8SV5VW42)\" within the larger text file [pdf-01KG6Q7Q25RHMFT3SJXPV18VFF.txt](arke:01KG6S2X2EBB305ENM00G16GWA). The file itself is part of the [PDF Workflow Main Test 2026-01-30T00:26:53](arke:01KG6NWQ2H2K4PGG7H4ZHYCZ3Y) collection, a network test. This section comes after section \"## 17\" [01KG6S5NSNFJF4Y0F70GN4M92J](arke:01KG6S5NSNFJF4Y0F70GN4M92J) and precedes section \"19.\" [01KG6S5PA31QJT65WV04ZRPFA6](arke:01KG6S5PA31QJT65WV04ZRPFA6).\n\n## Contents\nThe section contains the complete text of Shakespeare's Sonnet 18, beginning with the famous line \"Shall I compare thee to a Summers day?\" The sonnet explores themes of beauty, mortality, and the enduring power of art, promising that the subject's \"eternal summer shall not fade\" because they live on in the \"eternal lines\" of the poem.\n","description_generated_at":"2026-01-30T06:26:14.699Z","description_model":"gemini-2.5-flash-lite","description_title":"18.","end_line":10498,"extracted_at":"2026-01-30T06:24:08.804Z","extracted_by":"structure-extraction-lambda","label":"18.","source_file":"01KG6S2X2EBB305ENM00G16GWA","start_line":10482,"text":"18.\n\nShall I compare thee to a Summers day?\nThou art more louely and more temperate:\nRough windes do shake the darling buds of Maie,\nAnd Sommers leafe hath all too short a date:\nSometime too hot the eye of heaven shines,\nAnd often is his gold complexion dimm’d,\nAnd euery faire from faire some-time declines,\nBy chance, or natures changing course vntria’d:\nBut thy eternall Sommer shall not fade,\nNor loofe possession of that faire thou ow’st,\nNor shall death brag thou wandr’st in his shade,\nWhen in eternall lines to time thou grow’st,\nSo long as men can breath or eyes can see,\nSo long liues this, and this giues life to thee.\n","title":"18."},"relationships":[{"peer":"01KG6S4GWYPZNAPTTX8SV5VW42","peer_type":"chapter","predicate":"in"},{"peer":"01KG6S2X2EBB305ENM00G16GWA","peer_type":"file","predicate":"extractedFrom"},{"peer":"01KG6NWQ2H2K4PGG7H4ZHYCZ3Y","peer_type":"collection","predicate":"collection"},{"peer":"01KG6S5NSNFJF4Y0F70GN4M92J","peer_type":"section","predicate":"prev"},{"peer":"01KG6S5PA31QJT65WV04ZRPFA6","peer_type":"section","predicate":"next"}],"ver":3,"created_at":"2026-01-30T06:24:13.636Z","ts":"2026-01-30T06:26:14.894Z","edited_by":{"method":"manual","user_id":"01KFF5C36SQEVDHC9CBNZZJH9K"}}