Object
Shakespeare's Sonnet 130 (Recited by Picard)
A specific Shakespearean sonnet (Sonnet 130) recited by Captain Jean-Luc Picard on the *Enterprise-D* bridge during a tense confrontation with Daimon Tog. Picard performs the poem's lines—'My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun'—with deliberate passion as part of a ruse to feign romantic devotion to Lwaxana Troi. The recitation convinces Tog of their fabricated affair, prompting Lwaxana to beam aboard the Ferengi ship. The sonnet serves as a narrative device to heighten tension and lend credibility to the deception, with key observers including Riker, Troi, and Tog.
4 appearances
Purpose
Recited by Picard to lend credibility to his fabricated romantic attachment to Lwaxana Troi during the confrontation with Daimon Tog
Significance
Transforms diplomatic standoff into successful bluff, forcing Tog's surrender and securing Lwaxana's release; highlights Picard's command of language as a tool for outmaneuvering adversaries
Appearances in the Narrative
When this object appears and how it's used