The narrator is on his "death-bed" and recognizes that his youth was good and he lived a good life. The "glowing of such fire" seems like it would relate to Hell, but really it refers to the fire and passion of youth, that burns out as people grow older, and is extinguished entirely by the time a person has lived a long life and is ready to die. He recognizes he "must expire," and that his life will be consumed by the joys and youth that nourished it when he was younger. Again, the narrator seems to be reassuring the other person, and telling them that he lived a long and good life, he enjoyed the passions of youth, and that he is now ready to die, and that death is inevitable.
This thou perceivest, which makes thy love more strong,
To love that well which thou must leave ere long
These final two lines are probably the most important in the sonnet, because they are telling the person the narrator is talking to that the narrator knows they love him, and that makes their love all the more important or "strong." He also recognizes that this person also understands what he has been trying to say, that he has lived a long, good life, and that he has been loved, and so now, it is time to leave. This understanding, "This thou perceivest," also makes their...
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