SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 44
Download to read offline
Theme of Carpe Diem in A Fine, a Private Place by...
The words carpe diem mean "seize the day" in Latin. It is a theme that has been used throughout the history of literature and has been a popular
philosophy in teaching from the times of Socrates and Plato up to the modern English classroom. Carpe diem says to us that life isn't something we
have forever, and every passing moment is another opportunity to make the most out of the few precious years that we have left. In the poems "A Fine, a
Private Place" by Diane Ackerman and "To His CoyMistress" by Andrew Marvell, carpe diem is the underlying theme that ties them together, yet there
are still a few key differences throughout each of these two poems that shows two very different perspectives on how one goes about seizing their day.
... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The love between the two seems that it will be eternal. Time seems to stand still in this poem, seizing a moment between two lovers and accentuating it
with nature's majesty.
The second poem by Marvell isn't quite as flowing and pretty. Marvell writes about a man who is completely infatuated with a woman and must have
sex with her before time catches up with them. The woman is shy and refuses the man, but he tells her that if he had all the time in the world, they
"would sit down, and think which way / To walk, and pass our long love's day" (Lines 3–4) and she would sit by the Indian Ganges river and collect
rubies while he sang her love songs by the side of the Humber river. His love for her is temporary however, feeding only on her physical attributes,
whereas in Ackerman's poem, the love shown is precious and makes time stand still. In the next stanza he tells the woman that one day her beauty
will no longer exist and that his "echoing song" (Line 27) will no longer sound in her "marble vault" (Line 26). He warns her to seize her opportunity
to have sex with him right away before she dies a virgin and the worms devour her. The man in Marvell's poem says whatever he can think of to make
his coy mistress sleep with him, anticipating throughout the entire poem that she will finally give in. She never does, and the poem ends in desperation
and dissatisfaction.
It seems as though Ackerman
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Gender Stereotypes And Expectations In Literature
Everyone knows that boys only want one thing, and girls, above all else, must protect their virtue. Society, through such means as literature, popular
culture, and tradition, has perpetuated these gender stereotypes and expectations for much of history. Unconscious and conscious assumptions about
gender shape how readers perceive sex in literature; men are typically considered lustful, whereas women are considered loving. However, the subjects
of sex, love, and lust in literature, as demonstrated in poems written by Robert Burns and Andrew Marvell, become increasingly nuanced when gender
stereotypes and expectations are questioned and removed. Gender roles, expectations, and stereotypes have shifted and become less clearly defined ...
Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He says that "the youthful hue / sits on [her] skin like morning dew," but that this fresh beauty will soon fade (Marvell 584; 33–34).
The description of this woman supports stereotypes of both genders. The man is lustful, and his tactic is to appeal to the woman's shallow vanity.
He appeals to her desire for love by almost offhandedly tacking on how he would like to know her heart (Marvell 583; 18). Additionally, he says that,
should they act upon his lustful desires, they would be "like amorous birds of prey" (Marvell 584; 38). The contradictory image of loving raptors
enforces the stereotype of a predatory man spouting any lovely lie to get a woman in his bed. "A Red, Red Rose" by Robert Burns is not as overtly
sexual as "To His Coy Mistress." However, Burns was notoriously promiscuous, and his subject matter was often of a sexual nature. It is safe to say
that his purpose in this poem was a sexual purpose. He says his "luve's like a red, red rose / that's newly sprung in June" (Burns 935; 1–2). He also
describes his love as a beautiful song being "sweetly played in tune" (Burns 935; 1–2). He uses this flowery language to appeal to women's
stereotypical love for beauty and emotion. He additionally appeals to an overemotional woman by using hyperbolic language to describe his love. He
claims that he will love this woman until all the seas dry up and "the rocks melt wi' the sun"
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Comparing To his Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell and To his...
Comparing To his Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell and To his Mistress Going to Bed by John Donne
In recent times I have compared and contrasted two pieces of love poetry, both of which are exceptionally lyrical and full of intellectual language that
bring the poems alive with elaborated metaphors that compare dissimilar things, as they Inare equally, yet somehow individually both metaphysical
poems. The first of these poems that I comprehended was 'To his Coy Mistress;' (written byAndrew Marvell during the 17th century), it reflects the
epic of a man who is striving to entice a unadulterated woman into going to bed with him; he does this by using a lot of romantic flattery and surreal
imagery, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Perhaps the most famous of Marvell's lyrics is "To His Coy Mistress": Like many of Marvell's best poems, it masks extraordinary subtlety and
complexity beneath a surface of smooth and deceptively simple octosyllabic couplets. It is, in fact, as perfect an example of the metaphysical mode as
anything by Donne and, for all its cool and witty tone, and passionate lyrics.
John Donne, (1572–1631) is considered the greatest of all metaphysical poets. Donne was educated at Oxford, Cambridge and Lincoln's Inn. His
works of this period, included some of his songs, sonnets (written as late as 1617), problems and paradoxes, which consisted of cynical, realistic
and often sexual lyrics, essays and verse satires. Donne's court career was ruined by the discovery of his marriage in 1601 to Anne More and we
also imprisoned for a short time; later in 1601, his poems became a lot more serious. After a long period of financial uncertainty and desperation,
during which he was twice a member of Parliament, Donne yielded to the wishes of King James I and took orders in 1625. Two years later his wife
died. He was made reader in divinity at Lincoln's inn, a royal chaplain, and in 1621 Dean of St. Paul', a position he held until his death.
Society in these time periods where very rigorous towards the issue of wedlock and divorce; the community would disapprove and condemn it very
reprehensibly, and factors
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Metaphysical And Victorian Concept Of Love Essay
The Metaphysical and Victorian concept of love is as diverse as it can be particularly comparing the intense love shown in 'Porphyria 's Lover ' by
Robert Browning with the playful love in nature in 'To His Coy Mistress ' by Andrew Marvell. Love has multiple definitions and it has so far remained
among the most complex subject that require a single particular definition to define its meaning. Plato once said "At the touch of love everyone
becomes a poet" and that 's why may be we have so many diverse poetry on the subject of love with so many different definitions of love that are
available. Shakespeare wrote in his Sonnet 116 defining love, "Love is not love which alters when alteration finds, or bends with the remover to
remove", talking about the passion and loyalty, a belief unassailable, "That look on tempests and is never shaken". Such intensity that Shakespeare
shows and the partial playful nature that Plato hints has the possibilities for influencing a writer to produce unique individual thoughts, with different
approach and equally persuading in nature.
The term metaphysical poets was coined by the critic Samuel Johnson to describe a loose group of 17th–century English poets whose work was
characterized by the inventive use of conceits, and by a greater emphasis on the spoken rather than lyrical quality of their verse. These poets were not
formally affiliated and few were highly regarded until 20th century attention established their importance. Given the lack
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Style and Tone in Two Poems: в
ЂњTo His Coy Mistress” by...
In this essay I will compare two poems: "To His Coy Mistress" by Andrew Marvell and "The Ruined Maid" by Thomas Hardy. I will look at the style
and the tones that are used in both of these poems in order to compare them. "To His Coy Mistress" is one–way argumentative conversation featuring
one horny young man trying to convince his reluctant mistress to give up her virginity to him before she gets old. He uses the argument that she
needs to have sex now because her youth and beauty will fade as she ages. He thinks they should seize the moment because life is short and she would
not want to die a virgin, and he will not want her when she gets old. The beginning of this poem tells the main argument, "Had we but world enough,
and... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He says to her "Thy beauty shall no more be found in thy marble vault... then worms shall try That long preserved virginity, And your quaint honour
turn to dust...But none, I think do embrace." The vivid imagery Marvell uses here is haunting. He is just telling her that her beauty will be gone;
he will no longer want her; the time will expire; her body will be buried; she will decompose; turn into ashes. Her honor and his wait will mean
nothing. In the last part the man goes right back to his selfish desperate plea for sex. "Now therefore, while the youthful hue sits on thy skin like
morning dew ...Now let us sport while we may. He is saying while we are still young; you are still beautiful and there is still time. Let's do it! On
the other hand, "The Ruined Maid", is a conversation between two women. I think the entire poem is ironic because the story is about a chance
meeting between two old acquaintances Melia, the ruined maid, and another lady she knew when she was a farm girl and lived poorly. Melia is the
complete opposite of what her acquaintance thought she would be as a "ruined" woman. She was considered ruined because she had lost her
virginity out of wedlock or she works as a prostitute. The lady approaches Melia in disbelief because Melia is wearing nice clothes and looks
prosperous; she picks out all the things that have changed about Melia, throughout the poem. For instance, her initial response is "O
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Comparison Of Robert Herrick's To The Virgins And Andrew...
Robert Herrick's "To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time" and Andrew Marvell's "To His Coy Mistress" both address the central theme of the passage
of time and the adequate use of time. The two different poems were written nine years apart feature different styles, word choice, and length; however,
this does not detract from being able to discern the similarities. Both poems tell the reader to make use of one's time on Earth through relationships
since life is short and death is final. "To His Coy Mistress" begins with a speaker and a woman (presumably a girlfriend) who explains even if there
was enough time that they could not be in a relationship. The male compliments her body and perhaps sexual interest can be inferred. The second
stanza mentions
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Imagery In Andrew Marvell's To His Coy Mistress
To his coy mistress, a poem written by Andrew Marvell, who tries to persuade a women(unknown) to sleep with him. In this poem Marvell uses
many powerful poetic techniques such as imagery, rhetorical questions, paradoxes and metaphors, all these techniques were used throughout the
poem to set an atmosphere. Marvell uses imagery to create the atmosphere of the personality and character of the young man. The writer uses a
metaphors to say that life is short and we should just get on with the relationship " But at my back I always hear Times winged chariot hurrying
near" and "While the youthful hue sits on the skin like the morning dew... let us sport" these quotes prove that Marvell is begging her to stop
wasting time before there too old. He uses alliteration and says "this coyness, lady, were no crime", he addresses her as "coy" (shy) this suggest that
he wants something from her that she isn't prepared to give him. Moreover, the image of how death is lurking the woman fills her with fear, to again
convince the woman to sleep with the writer. Unlike in the first stanza where the writer gives no importance for the woman to make her decision, in
the second stanza Marvell demands her to urgently make a decision:... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
She described herself as the "girl" in the first stanza, then again there is the idea of time again in the third stanza. "Time it self's a feather" shows
us the effect of growing old on the couple, like a feather, is very light and they seem not knowing that they are aging, as it is soo "gentle". She then
says "Do they know they're old, These two who are my father and my mother?" this quote explains to us that they were not like this before. in the
last line she describes their relationship before as "fire", making the reader feel as if they were happy and lively, then ruins that effect by saying, but
now it has "grown cold", like a dying fire over
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Flea By John Donne And His Coy Mistress By Andrew Marvell
During the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, poetry was one of the most prevalent writing styles. There were poets like John Donne and
Andrew Marvell who participated in a type of poetry referred to as metaphysical. Metaphysical poetry essentially is poetry that deals with things that
are more philosophical than anything else. This type of poetry also is very emotion based but also has logically aspects. These poets have written
several bodies of work that can fall under the metaphysical umbrella. Two examples of metaphysical poems written by these two poets are The Flea
and To His Coy Mistress. Being metaphysical poetry is not the only thing these two poems have in common.
The Flea by John Donne and To His Coy Mistress by Andrew... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
We are introduced to yet another speaker who is using his words to persuade a woman into premarital sex. Even though the intent was the same in both
poems, each speaker had their own unique means of convincing the woman.
The authors take two very different approaches to persuade a woman to participate in the same act. Their approaches are reflective in their use of
certain language. In The Flea, the speaker is taking the approach of comparing the act to the happenings of a flea that bit both the speaker and the
woman. The speaker uses this metaphor through the entirety of the poem. The speaker goes on to say that the flea has already mixed their blood,
yet it is not seen as a sin. "In this flea our two bloods mingled be; Thou know'st that this cannot be said A sin, nor shame, nor loss of maidenhead
(Donne,____)." The speaker takes this logic and says that the flea mixing their blood is taking it a step further than just the act of premarital sex, so
because they were not punished for such an act as their blood actually mixing then how can they possibly be punished for having sex before marriage
.The speaker into His Coy Mistress takes a different approach from the very beginning by blatantly saying that the women 's coyness towards him
could be seen as a crime. "Had we but world enough and time, This coyness, lady, were no crime"(Marvell____). The speaker is using this as a means
on again romanticizing the situation. He is saying that in a
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Andrew Marvell's To His Coy Mistress Essay
Andrew Marvell's To His Coy Mistress
Andrew Marvell writes an elaborate poem that not only speaks to his coy mistress but also to the reader. He suggests to his coy mistress that time is
inevitably ticking and that he (the speaker) wishes for her to act upon his wish and have a sexual relationship. Marvell simultaneously suggest to the
reader that he/she must act upon their desires, to hesitate no longer and Віseize the moment?before time expires. Marvell uses a dramatic sense of
imagery and exaggeration in order to relay his message to the reader and to his coy mistress. The very first two lines of the poem suggest that it
would be fine for him and his mistress to have a slow and absorbing relationship but there simply isnВ№t enough ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
The speaker in this poem seems frustrated; he delicately tries to inform his coy mistress that their death is near, and they still have not had sexual
intercourse. In lines 17–33 the poem seems to lose the exaggeration sense and suddenly becomes serious. He (the speaker) reinsures his coy mistress
that Віyou deserve this state?(state of praise and high acknowledgment), ВіBut at my back I always hear, TimeВ№s winged chariot hurrying near?
Andrew Marvell uses and interesting image in line 22 (the line mentioned above) when suggesting to his coy mistress that death is near. He substitutes
the word Віdeath?for a more gentle, delicate term of ВіTimeВ№s winged chariot? This term was probably used to prevent from frightening such a coy
mistress. Marvell continues to involve the readerВ№s imagination through unimaginable images. What do ВіDeserts of vast eternity?look like? In fact,
Marvell probably used such abstract images to suggest to his coy mistress that their future is indeterminable, and ВіThy beauty shall no more be found?
Perhaps, beauty is what the coy mistress is so concerned with and the speaker in this case is trying to frighten her to have sex with him quicker. He
continues to use intense imagery when describing to his coy mistress that even after death the Віworms shall try That long preserved virginity? The
speaker now abstractly describes that holding on to your virginity for
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Analysis of To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell Essay
Analysis of To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell
Andrew Marvell's elaborate sixteenth century carpe diem poem, 'To His Coy Mistress', not only speaks to his coy mistress, but also to the reader.
Marvell's suggests to his coy mistress that time is inevitably rapidly progressing and for this he wishes for her to reciprocate his desires and to initiate
a sexual relationship. Marvell simultaneously suggests to the reader that he or she should act upon their desires as well, to hesitate no longer and seize
the moment before time, and ultimately life, expires. Marvell makes use of allusion, metaphor, and grand imagery in order to convey a mood of
majestic endurance and innovatively explicate the carpe diem motif.
To show the passage of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
His love is so great it would, ?grow vaster than empires? (11–12). Although Marvell tries to equate his love for his mistress to plants, his argument is
undermined by a plant?s biological incapableness of contemplation and reciprocal physical affection. Nevertheless, the speaker continues his praises of
love, but points out that there is not enough time for further praise because time is passing quickly.
The poem then acquires a more serious tone when the poem loses its exaggerations and embellishments. He reassures his coy mistress that ?you
deserve this state? of praise and high acknowledgment,
But at my back I always hear
Time?s wingГЁd chariot hurrying near. (21–22)
Rather than explicitly saying death is near, Marvell substitutes life?s bleakness with a ?winged chariot.? He slowly becomes more frustrated with her
?long–preserved virginity? and tires to inform his mistress that death is near and they still have not had intercourse. His frustration can be seen in his
sexual pun on the word ?quaint? which symbolically refers to female genitalia. The intense imagery of genitalia is again echoed when Marvell
describes to his coy mistress that even after death the ?worms shall try that long–preserved virginity? (27–28). Here the worms take on a phallic
symbol, reinforcing his sexual desires. The speaker abstractly states that holding onto her virginity will do her no good because she will be
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Comparing The Flea By Andrew Marvell And John Donne
Andrew Marvell and John Donne are two poets known for their amorous poems. Donne's The Flea can be seen as a frantic and intense assertion
regarding the woman, who the poem is about, and what it would take for the supposed mistress to sleep with him. Marvell's To His Coy Mistress is
also, although not too similar to Donne, a 'rational and sensible' assertion regarding his mistress, asking her to take advantage of the opportunity he is
presenting her while trying to get her to sleep with him by describing her overall physical attractiveness and refinement at the same time. Donne and
Marvell, while sharing similar aims, are different in the ways they portray women. Donne's The Flea is an insisting argument regarding the woman's
virginity. He... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Marvell's approach of persuasion is different as a whole. He depends on flattery and encomiums to charm and allure to the woman's feelings. It is
clear that Marvell has more respect for his mistress because he makes it known that the mistress is also interested in him the same way he is in her.
There are reciprocal feelings involved. While Donne sees his mistress as inferior, Marvell sees his mistress as an equal, and as the poem develops,
the descriptions he used to describe the woman can be seen as descriptions used to describe a goddess. In conclusion, when comparing and contrasting
Marvell's and Donne's poems, they both approximately share similar aims. The connection is in their shared objective of trying to persuade their
mistress' to sleep with them. While Donne's structure of a female is simple and demeaning to women in general because his dominant fixation makes
him believe that he can trounce his mistress, Marvell's structure of a female is the opposite; he considers his mistress an equal and treats her with
respect, and also structures her as beautiful and cherishes her
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Flea, By Andrew Marvell
John Donne 's, "The Flea," and Andrew Marvell's To His Coy Mistress are persuasive poem in which the speaker is attempting to establish a sexual
union with his significant other. These poems is spoken by a male lover to his female beloved as an attempt to convince her to sleep with him. John
Donne and Marvell brings out and shapes this meaning through his collective use of conceit, rhythm, and rhyme scheme. The basic theme of the
poems is the speaker's need to turn his "coy mistress" into a "willing mistress".
Donne uses the flea as a conceit, to represent a sexual union with his significant other. Marvell using his way with words to convince his lover to a
sexual union. In the first stanza in The Flea, a flea bites the speaker and woman. He responds to this incident by saying, "And in this flea our
bloods mingled be." (line 4). He is suggesting that they are united in this flea and would equally be united in intimacy. In the first stanza of "To His
Coy Mistress", the speaker tells his woman that if they had more time and space that her coyness wouldn't be a crime. He says this, "Had we but
World enough, and Time, This coyness lady were no crime". (line 1,2) Marvell also would compliment her and admire her. In the "Flea", the speaker
tries to marry the man and woman while in "To His Coy Mistress" the man is not trying to marry the
Duncan 2 two but trying to get the lady to sleep with him by using time. Donne states, "This flea is you and I, and this our marriage bed, and
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Carpe Diem In To His Coy Mistress By Andrew Marvell
The poem To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell, speaks to his coy mistress about how time is rapidly passing and he wishes her to reciprocate
his feelings along with sexual desires. In this poem I feel like Marvell is also talking to the reader and encouraging them to act upon their desires.
Ultimately live life to the fullest because time is running out. This poem is all about Carpe Diem with a satirical aspect on love. Essentially Marvell
is trying to get this mistress to sleep with him. He wants her to abandon her false modesty and give in to his requests, so that all his problems can be
fixed with sex. In lines 1–20 Marvell starts out talking about how ideally, he would spend eternity loving her before having sex with her. Verbs like
sit, think, and walk are associated with slowing down but they are used to show they have no time, "We would sit down, and think which way to
walk, and pass our long love's day."(Marvell, "To His Coy Mistress," 3–4) So, he would love her, but they don't have time. There is an aspect of
exaggeration via exoticism seen in Ganges vs Humbler. She is by the Ganges with rubies while he is by the Humbler complaining. I think this really
hints at the reality of what he is trying to get at because "rubies" represent talismans that are supposed to preserve virginity (Mays, pg 765, footnote 7).
There is a controlling aspect of the speaker where he then again states he would wait if there was the time. Throughout the stanza the passion grows and
he
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Slick With Words By Andrew Marvell
Slick With Words
(Compare and Contrast Between the Poems To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell and To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time by Robert Herrick)
There are always those people that you meet that just really know how to use their words. Everything that they say just kind of draws you in
because it is so intriguing. Today we like to call these type of people "sweet talkers." More often than not these characters are known to be more so
of the male gender rather than female. Often, these males are often using the sweet talking to the females trying to draw them in. Many poets from
around the 1600's to the 1900's would write poems talking of these people. Sometimes it was to warn others of it, and other times it was actually to
display ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
They aren't just looking at this in a way that it is for love by any means, both are doing that as something for fun. They both see it as a sport for them,
as in something that they will do from time to time because it is enjoyable for them. In the poem To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time the speaker
says, "The glorious lamp of heaven, the sun,/ The higher he's a–getting,/ The sooner will his race be run,/ And nearer he's to setting." (Page 510, Lines
5–8) Here it shows that in this poem it is something as a race against time for this to happen. They don't have much time, so the have to get it done
quickly so that that the time doesn't pass. It is like a big race against time. In To His Coy Mistress, the speaker says, "...At every pore with instant
fires,/ Now let us sport us while we may,/ And now, like amorous birds of prey..." (Page 508, Lines 36
–38) This speaker literally says it directly in the
lines, he says let's sport as in it is totally a game. They do this for fun, as in there is some sort of goal that they achieve in doing this as a sport
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Virgins By Robert Herrick And His Coy Mistress By...
"To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time" by Robert Herrick and "To His Coy Mistress" by Andrew Marvell, are two different, yet similar poems.
While both are presented in Carpe Diem form, each poem approaches seizing the day in alternative ways. Herrick's poem is a caution to young, virgin
women that they should make the most of the moment, to find love now and not wait. Marvell's poem is directly addressing a specific person, and
slowly seducing them. Eventually declaring that they should act immediately on their urges. These two poems have similar themes, but the one
constant throughout, is time.
The speakers use imagery and metaphors to convey the effects of time and the transient prime of youth. Herrick's poem is crafted in four stanzas using
a rhyming scheme of ABAB, and is written in four quatrains. Beginning in his first stanza, the speaker mentions of assembling young women and
telling them to grab life and live now. Herrick writes, "Gather ye rosebuds while ye may / Old time is still a flying / And this same flower that smiles
today / Tomorrow will be dying" (lines 1–4). The speaker uses the images of rosebuds to symbolize youth and beauty. Once the flower peaks and
blooms, its beauty will fade. So, too, will the beauty of women as they grow older. Furthermore, in the second stanza, the speaker sets the tone of the
poem by writing, "The glorious lamp of heaven, the sun / The high he's a–getting / The sooner will his race be run / And nearer he's to setting" (5–8).
The
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Poem Analysis Of To His Coy Mistress By Andrew Marvell
To his Coy Mistress" by Andrew Marvell, he revealed the endeavors of a man towards demanding his sweetheart's warmth and declines of the
unknown mistress to lay down with the honorable man being referred to, and the refined man's reaction is to disclose to her that, if had he enough
time, he could spend whole hundreds of years respecting her excellence and her beauty; be that as it may, human life is short and tomorrow is not
guarantee he doesn't have this time, thus they ought to appreciate each other now while regardless they can, as nobody in death can grasp or feel
delight. In his tones of adoration and slavishness reflect how the suiter guarantees that if the time stopped he would passionately worship each
component of his coy mistress, however since time wait for no man he utilizes this guarantees to lure in his fancy woman to make love with him.
The poem is written in the form of a love poem using the traditional love elegy format also known as 'carpe diem' and is divided into three stanzas
or poetic paragraphs. It's spoken by a nameless man, who doesn't reveal any physical or biographical details about himself, to a nameless woman,
who is also anonymous. The beauty of the language and the overwhelming focus on the woman's beauty, the respect shown therein, makes the poem
quite progressive and intriguing. The man aims not only to smooth talk but also to impress her. To confront the concept of time, he uses biblical
references to mark the permanent nature of reality. By using a story out of the Old Testament the image of the great flood that purged the earth as a
start point and then used the image that Armageddon will ultimately occur at the conversion of the Jews as an end point, the man tries to show the
vastness of predicted human existence. At the same time however he subtly hints toward the second more nihilistic section of the poem. This imagery
it is interesting in two respects; first it suggests that physical human life has been ended by God and will be ended by him again. Thus, providing a
backdrop for the speaker's argument that in reality life is temperamental and therefore procreation should not be delayed at the expense of morality.
The image is interesting in a second way as it may be
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
To His Coy Mistress
To his Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell is about a man's lust for a woman. The narrator uses terms like coy to describe his mistress. He also
describes sex by using the word ball. The narrator also compares their love to a vegetable that is steadily growing. The narrator uses words wisely
in his appeal to his lover. The narrator is trying to rush her into making a decision about loving him. The narrator called his love interest "coy"
because she wouldn't commit to him. The definition of coy is "affectedly and often flirtatiously shy or modest," the narrator seems to be growing
tired of the woman not committing to him. The narrator is trying to tell the woman that he will love her forever hoping that it will make her fall
for him once and for all, "My vegetable love should grow Vaster than empires, and more slow"(Marvell). The narrator is lusting for this woman and
will stop at nothing until she is his. The narrator wants his love with his mistress to grow steadily until it reaches its climax. The narrator is willing
to spend time with his mistress while falling deeper and deeper in love. The narrator compares his love to a vegetable because vegetables grow
slowly and steadily just like his love. But there is one downfall to his statement, vegetables only grow seasonally and once they hit... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
The narrator wants to have sex with his "coy mistress." The use of words like ball and strength likens sex to a game. The narrator thinks of sex as a
wonderful game of pleasure. The narrator also wants his mistress to bring their hardships from their everyday lives to the bedroom. The narrator went
from asking his love interest for her commitment to their relationship to a passionate request for
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Comparing Beggar Woman by William King and To His Coy...
Comparing Beggar Woman by William King and To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell 'Beggar Woman'(William King) and 'To His Coy
Mistress'(Andrew Marvell) are two poems written in the 17th century when society was very different to how it is today: women had no status,
rights, or independence. All aspects of society were male dominated, they ruled, and so all laws and acts were in the favour of males. The poems are
great examples of how society was when they were written, they also mirror the roles each gender played in the various aspect of life, the males active
and controlling, the women passive, and they had to be compliant. At the beginning of this poem, there is a description of a gentleman out hunting,
which is an... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
When the man first exchanges with the woman he uses a 'speak when you're spoken to'. Then when they walk into the woods the man stays on the
horse while the woman is made to walk by his side, still wearing the baby. I do not believe it crosses the mind of the gentleman to offer the woman
some help with her burden, even though it is slowing him from getting what he wants, he will wait, for principal: he must not be seen to assist, or
sympathise with the lower classes in anyway, even when not in public. It probably also makes him feel big, and he thinks, makes her feel as if
he's in control, a show of supposed power. Conversation which then follows is suggestive of the woman's profession. "'Sitting' says she 's' not
usual in my trade'" this, I believe is a sort of innuendo 'Let's be honest, I'm usually on my back'. The baby in the poem is described as a 'burthen' on
her, aside from the physical aspect, I believe because she has neither the income nor the lifestyle to bring up the child in any kind of security. The
Beggar Woman tricks the man into taking the baby by making every excuse so as to force him to take the baby, if he wants sex; however she does
this not particularly skillfully but the man is under the illusion he is acting of his own free will. Out of desperation, he says "'Were the child tied to
me, d'ye think 'twould do?'" this is the answer the woman has been
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell and Our Love Now by...
To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell and Our Love Now by Martyn
Lowery both see men trying to use methods of persuasion to get what they want. How successful are they?
I have recently studied 'To His Coy Mistress' by Andrew Marvell, written in the 17th Century and 'Our Love Now' by Martyn Lowery, written in the
19th century. Attitudes tolove have changed a lot since the 17th Century. When 'To His Coy Mistress' was written, men were in charge of the
relationship. It would take a lot longer for this relationship to progress than it would today. The man would court the woman for months before
anything progressed. He would write her letters and poems, and then eventually, if he loved her, he would ask her to marry him. They... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
but she says 'There is always a scar..' implying the wound in their relationship is too deep to mend fully. In this poem it seems like she has the final
word. It is a modern poem about love.
Marvell uses different methods of persuasions. He bombards her as the poem is very long and has no stanzas, so she has to keep reading and listening
to his arguments. He has also divided the poem into three sections. The first section is about him romancing and flattering her.
He shows his love for her by using time, place and exaggeration. 'Had we but world enough, and time / This coyness, lady, were no crime.' shows
Marvell using time. He is telling the woman that if they had all the time in the world her shyness would not matter. 'They by the
Indian Ganges' side / Should'st rubies find: I by the tide / Of Humber would complain.' This shows Marvell using place and distance to persuade
her. He tells her that she could sit by the Indian Ganges, and he would sit by the Humber in England and wish for her. He then goes on to say, that
if she wishes; she can keep him at arms length, and that his feelings will wait until she is ready. This makes her feel that he is not pressuring her in
to anything she does not want to do. Marvell uses a lot of exaggeration, for example 'I would / Love you ten years before the flood..' He is referring
to the bible, making him seem religious and that he supports the religious beliefs of sex after marriage,
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Emphasizing The True Meaning Of Poems By Andrew Marvell...
Kinsey Jordan
Mrs. Russler
English Honors I
February 4, 2015
"Emphasizing the True Meaning of Poems" Around the seventeenth century the poets Andrew Marvell and John Donne expressed their feelings
through poetry. Both John Donne, born in 1572 and Andrew Marvell, born in 1621 inEngland, are known for their ideas of metaphysical poetry.
Metaphysical poetry is a persuasive poem that uses a conceit. It focuses on imagery, paradoxes, arguments, philosophy and religion.Andrew Marvell's
"To His Coy Mistress" and John Donne's "A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning," focus on the theme of love, which was trending at that time. Although
both poems justify the importance and essence of love, the tone differs in each poem making them distant from each other. The figurative language also
makes the two poems different. However, they both focus on the idea of Carpe Diem, enjoying the moment and not worrying about the future. Through
comparing these poems, the differences and similarities result in the true understanding and effectiveness of the poems. In "To His Coy Mistress,"
Andrew Marvell does not perceive true, fervent love, but rather that time and beauty will not last. The tone of this poem is sad, but the author seems to
make it happier. There is an example shown in the first stanza;
"Had we but world enough and time...we would sit down, and think which way to walk, and pass our long love's day." (1–4) Marvell appears to be
straying from the idea of Carpe Diem; stating that if
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Love in HJohn DonneВґs A Valediction Forbidding Mourning...
Some of the most analyzed aspects of emotion and the life, by literary greats throughout the past several centuries, have been the issue of death and the
physical, spiritual, and emotional attachments that can be defined as love. Even though writers of prose and poetry have long belabored these two
specific areas of discussion, the depth and diversity in approach is something that can only be described with regards to the differential between
personalities and the world you of the author in question. Accordingly, the following analysis will be concentric upon discussing and analyzing the
approach and understanding of love that two specific poets exhibit within their respective work. The first of these poets that will be analyzed is John ...
Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Instead, the author focuses a great deal of energy on examining the fact that even though the time to act is now and an urgency, tension, and
immediacy defines the love and passion that the subject has for the Mistress, a deeper and more profound realization of what defines love and the
eternity of passion and interest that the subject could direct for this Mistress if only she opened her heart and her body to the subject is reflected in
a variety of different ways. For instance, after the exhortation to stop dismissing the advances of the suitor, Marvell references the fact that in so
doing the woman would be able to experience love as she had never before seen it. Ultimately, what is presented to the reader is an argument for the
immediacy, passion, and necessity to experience love in the moment. However, due to the fact that a woman would likely find the emotion of
immediacy and the need to seize the day as alarming and definitive of a passing craze or crush, the poetry goes to great lengths to prove that the nature
of the emotions that are being defined are not short–lived but will instead last for far longer than life itself is able to exist. By means of contrast, John
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Comparing To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell and Sonnet...
Comparing To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell and Sonnet 138 by William Shakespeare
I am comparing 'To His Coy Mistress' by Andrew Marvell (1640) and 'Sonnet 138' by William Shakespeare (1590). The similarities between both
poems are that they both use a certain amount of syllables throughout each poem. 'To His Coy Mistress' uses 8 syllables per line, and 'Sonnet 138' uses
10 syllables per line. Another obvious similarity is that they both end with a couplet. They both also tell a story. The differences in the poems are that
'To His Coy Mistress' is arguing why they should get on with life, and Carpe diem whereas 'Sonnet 138' is telling us about how he doesn't trust her, yet
he loves her. They ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The first stage is saying if we had enough time, I could spend all the ages of this world loving you and flattering you until you were content. I would
spend all my life giving you everything you deserve and you could be in one place and me in another, but it wouldn't matter as time will never run out
and we will always be in love. Marvell then goes on to say that he would have loved her before God sent the flood and that she could refuse him
forever if that was what she wanted.
'And you should, if you please, refuse
Till the conversion of the Jews'
This quote shows that she could say no to him for as long as she wanted, even until all the Jews were converted to be a Roman Catholic. At the time
this seemed very unlikely, as Jews were being persecuted for their beliefs and refused to change their religion. Marvell then tells his lady that his love
for her would grow and grow without ever dying out.
'My vegetable love should grow
Vaster than empires, and more slow' –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
In this line 'My vegetable love' is a double entendre, because he is talking about himself but he is also saying that their love would develop naturally
and grow to be bigger than the empire, but, it would be taken nice and slowly. In the next few lines he starts to praise her body by starting at the top.
He praises her eyes and her forehead, as it was
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Poem Analysis On His Coy Mistress By Andrew Marvell
Andrew Marvell wrote a unique love poem in "To His Coy Mistress," as this poem expresses far more than one might expect or even perceive upon
the first reading. Enveloped in this ode to a cherished muse are expressions of the "carpe diem" philosophy, laments about the impending doom of
death, and hopes to transcend contemporary abilities to live forever in the love of another. While Marvell's primary purpose in writing this piece may
have been to woo a young maiden, he made a far more significant contribution to the era's literary culture in the process. Marvell most directly
addressed "To His Coy Mistress" to a woman he intended to court, as he spends a majority of the piece lamenting that he didn 't have time sufficient to
praise her features. In the opening stanza, Marvell states that, "Had we but world enough, and time.... An hundred years should go yo praise.... An age
at least to every part, / And the last age should show your heart" (Marvell 1–18). While Marvell ones not directly praise or describe his muse in any
way, he does emphasize how extraordinarily praiseworthy she be, and this idea forms the basis for the philosophical wonderings and realizations that
comprised the following stanzas. Thus, Marvell addressed his poem at a potential lover for the purpose of courting her on an unknown occasion, but
the real significance of the poem lies in the later ideas he presented to fulfill this purpose. In his second stanza, Marvell takes a drastic turn from the
romantic
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Comparing the Attitudes Towards Love and Relationships in...
Comparing the Attitudes Towards Love and Relationships in The Beggar Woman by William King and To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell
In this essay I will be comparing two poems, The Beggar Woman and To His Coy Mistress. I will be looking at how the themes of love and
relationships are dealt with. I will also be looking at the historical context of the poems.
Firstly in The Beggar Woman, written around 1663 to 1712, by William King. The story within the poem is about a gentleman who, whilst he is out
hunting, wants to do another kind of 'sport', i.e. looking for a woman to have sex with. He found a woman who was a beggar. He asked her if she
wanted to have sex in the woods, and, to his delight, she ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
"A gentleman in hunting rode astray,
More out of choice than that he lost his way:
He let his company the hare pursue,
For he himself had other game in view:"
This quote shows that he was chasing a woman and that he is not looking for anything more than sex. He just wants a bit of fun like any sport would
give him.
When reading the poems they create images of what is happening are created. In The Beggar Woman, William King does not use any similes or
metaphors. I think this is because he needs to keep things simple for his audience. When he wrote it, he relied on his descriptive words to create a
mental picture for the reader. For example, "mounts the infant with a gentle toss upon her generous friend, and like a cross, the sheet she with a
dextrous motion winds" and "her cheeks were fresh and linen clean." When reading this line, you can imagine her cheeks; they are smooth, rosy, red,
beaming cheeks. Both these quotes make you 'see' an image created by his cleverly written words.
In To His Coy Mistress,Andrew Marvell does use metaphors and similes because he thinks the audience expects them as they are upper class. Some
examples of the imagery created by metaphors and similes are "vegetable love," which is a metaphor; "times' winged chariot" and "his slow chapped
power", which are personification; "like morning dew" and "like
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
To His Coy Mistress By Andrew Marvell
To the Virgins, To Make Much of Time by Robert Herrick, and To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell, are two poems that are very similar but
they have a very different way of portraying their meanings of love, sex, and virginity. In the beginning of the poem To the Virgins, To Make Much
of Time, Herrick states, " gather ye rosebuds, while ye may" to symbolize the idea that you should take advantage of your opportunities while you still
can, because time doesn't last forever. He basically is saying that you should have sex when you're younger, when the time is the best. Rather than
waiting until you're older, because then it is not the same. He justifies that idea by using the metaphor, " when youth and blood are warmer". By the
end of the poem... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In Marvell's poem he seems to be speaking to one specific women whom he seeks to have sex with. In Herrick's poem he is addressing all young
women or virgins in general to embrace their sexuality. Since Herrick was a priest, he encourages women to marry before it is too late and in
Marvell's poem he speaks nothing of marriage. The tone of the stories are not quite the same either. In Herrick's poem he speaks with a more relaxed
and casual tone compared to Marvell's poem, where he speaks with more intensity and seriousness. In my opinion I think that these two authors each
use a way of persuasive and depending who you are as a women it is going to affect you differently. Also I think that times have really changed since
these poems have been written and I don't think that men are quite as aggressive with their interest in women or getting through the " iron gates" . As
you can see these poems are very similar by subject. Though they are also different in how they interpret their views on time, love, and
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Herick Vs Marvel
Out of all of the stories and poems in the history of the world, many of them will have similarities and differences. Merriman conveys, "If human life
were not limited by space and time, the beloved's coyness would not harm the lover and the beloved. They would sit and plan how to pass their long
time." The poem "To His Coy Mistress" by Andrew Marvell is all about a man trying to convince a woman to do something she doesn't really want to
do. The poem "To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time" by Robert Herrick is about a man talking to many woman not to die without living. In the
poems "To His Coy Mistress" by Andrew Marvell and "To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time" by Robert Herrick there are many comparison to be
made.
One comparison to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Larson explains about "To His Coy Mistress, "Marvell makes use of allusion, metaphor, and grand imagery in order to convey a mood of majestic
endurance and innovatively explicate the carpe diem motif." Marvell is telling his love to seize the day that is at hand and not wait for another one.
Herrick also believes that all of the virgins should seize the day that is at hand. He claims in line 9, "That age is best which is the first." Life is better
when you are young, so do things while it
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell
Andrew Marvell's poem, "To His Coy Mistress" is an equally beautiful and provocative piece of writing. Written in iambic form as a three–part
proposition addressed to the "coy mistress," the poem is permeated with literary devices such as tone, alliteration, imagery, hyperbole, as well as
similes and metaphors. Marvell's speaker acknowledges the idea that mortality is of little to no value after death. Through the speaker, Marvell is
suggesting that one can avoid the regrets of not participating in the adventurous aspects of life by seizing the day, thus supporting the Carpe Diem
philosophy. The three–part proposition can be identified through the change of the poem's tone as well as the change of pace. The first argument has a
sly and devious tone. "Had we but world enough, and time, This coyness, lady, were no crime." (lines 1–2). The use of the punctuations, the commas
and the period, hinders the pace of the poem. In doing so, it shows the insignificance of time at that moment. The insignificance of time at the moment
is further emphasized when the speaker tells his mistress that they "would sit down, and think which way, To walk, and pass [their] long love's day"
(lines 3–4). The use of alliteration creates a carefree tone, as if the speaker was daydreaming and sighing as he was trying to woo his mistress. Marvell
uses delicate and sublime imagery to flatter the mistress with a seemingly disingenuous exaggeration of her physical beauty. Because of the unrealistic
use
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Metaphysical Poems
Metaphysical Poets
John Donne and Andrew Marvell were considered metaphysical poets based on their use of conceit and wit in depicting similar situations through
different metaphors. They would use original analogies to create fitting and insightful comparisons, usually to persuade.
John Donne and Andrew Marvell have been called metaphysical poets. This is a," name given to a group of English lyric poets of the 17th century"
(Metaphysical poets)" The term metaphysical poets came to be used almost one hundred years after the death of the two poets. John Donne died John
Donne in1631 and Andrew Marvell died in 1678. The term later became known as 'metaphysical poetry,' (which was referred to by contemporaries, as
'strong lived'. The ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In the second stanza, the speaker argues for the life of the flea, as his lady has moved to kill it. Almost desperate, the speaker describes the flea as holy.
"This flea is you and I, and this/Our marriage bed, and marriage temple is" (lines 12–13). He fails to save the flea, as reflected, "[p]urpled thy nail in
blood of innocence?" She killed the flea and the speaker's last chance of having relations with her. The speaker at this point realizes that his chance to
have sex with this lady is gone. The speaker realized her killing the flea was his final rejection.
In "To His Coy Mistress," the speaker is attempting to use a Carpe Diem method to persuade the young lady to make love to him. The speaker
attempts to persuade the lady with seize the day. The speaker continues to tell the woman about how short time is, and how they must hurry
because no one ever knows how much time is left. This is evident in by how the poem begins, "Had we but world enough, and time,"(page 527) As
the poem starts to speed up you realize the speaker is becoming almost desperate. His promises and analogies become so farfetched."... I would Love
you ten years before the flood" (line 8). Marvell uses symbolism, comparisons and metaphors to show the speaker as this passionate lover and the lady
would be foolish not to give in to his request.
Clearly the two speakers are Metaphysical poets. They have gone in two different directions to try to
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Seduction Eileen McAuley To His Coy Mistress Andrew...
The Seduction Eileen McAuley To His Coy Mistress Andrew Marvell Eileen
McAuley's The Seduction is set against the bleak surroundings of Merseyside.
'The Seduction' Eileen McAuley
'To His Coy Mistress' Andrew Marvell
Eileen McAuley's 'The Seduction' is set against the bleak surroundings of Merseyside. The purpose of the story is to show a teenage girl's
predicament after getting drunk at a party. The poet contrasts the girl's ideas of love and sex with reality. This is done effectively by using techniques
such as similes and alliteration. The poem shows how young teenage girls can be easily seduced under the influence of alcohol. 'The Seduction' also
shows how young girls can be manipulated by the media.
McAuley ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This line shows us how she has lost her innocence and is no longer pure. Another event that is linked to innocence is when the girl rips up all her
magazines 'until they were just bright paper, like confetti strewn on the carpet'.
Confetti is something that is usually used in weddings. McAuley cleverly uses the word 'confetti' to show the destruction of the girls' innocence purity
and romantic illusions.
There are many contrasts in the poem 'The Seduction'. A major contrast is the difference between the girl's past views on romance and her future.
The girl views of romance are naive before her seduction. 'She stifled a giggle, reminder of numerous stories from teenage magazines'. By using the
word 'giggle' McAuley shows that girls' views are childish. McAuley also shows that the girl is very keen on the teenage magazines by using the word
'numerous'. This is because it shows that the girl has paid close attention to the magazines, also that she possibly collects them because she has read
many of them.
McAuley contrasts the girl's naive views with the girls' imminent future. McAuley presents the future of the girl as bleak by revealing what the girl
will miss. 'Where you walk hand' in hand in an acne'd wonderland'. This line describes childhood and teenage life. It shows how the girl is going to
miss important parts of her childhood.
Another poem concerned with sexual attraction is Andrew Marvell's 'To
His Coy Mistress
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
A Comparison of †To His Coy Mistress’ by Andrew Marvell...
A Comparison of 'To His Coy Mistress' by Andrew Marvell and 'To His Mistress Going to Bed' by John Donne
'To His Coy Mistress' and 'To His Mistress Going to Bed' are both poems about men seducing women. They centre around sex rather than love or
romance. Sixteenth and seventeenth century attitudes to love and relationships were much stricter going as far as wealthy people asking their
perspective lovers to court them via love poem or letter. Though this has changed from the sixteenth and seventeenth century to today, little else has. It
is still most common for a man to initiate a relationship, and men are still perceived as the most sex obsessed. However, even though we are led to
believe that their ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This suggests that he is confident that she wants to have sex with him but she is just playing hard to get, enjoying the chase! He seems to think that his
lover is naГЇve because he uses false flattery and promises her all that she wants, tells her everything that she wants to hear. He tells her "Two
hundred to adore each breast: But thirty thousand to the rest". Thus is an example of both, he is saying that this is what she is worth and this is
the value she will have so long a she sleeps with him. He begins trying to persuade her with luxurious imagery (like the Indian Ganges and rubies).
He then progresses on to scare tactics, telling her that she soon will be dead so she must make the most of it whilst she still can! Although he
doesn't use those specific words he makes his meaning pretty obvious with phrases like, "the graves a fine and private place, But none, I think do
there embrace". However in 'To His Mistress Going to Bed' there is no persuasion just description. This couple seem to already be established and John
Donne's lover does not require persuasion, as said earlier she is willing. Whereas in Andrew Marvell's poem he uses false flattery telling her all she
wants to hear. Donne is genuine he loves his mistress and thinks of sex as a part of their relationship. When he does flatter her, it's less flattery, more
complements, his words are more realistic, he says things
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Analysis Of Bermudas By Andrew Marvell
The poem "Bermudas" is written by Andrew Marvell in seventeenth century celebrating the establishment of a new colony in the island called
Bermuda. This poem is inspired Marvell wrote the poem in couplets of rhyming iambic tetrameter. Marvell structured the poem as a song of praise,
sung by the group of English colonists as they arrive to the islands by boat. The sonnet starts with the storyteller presenting the scene on the sea off the
"remote Bermudas", where a gathering of English settlers in a "small boat" are singing. Marvell compares the Bermuda islands to a bigger watercraft,
as they "ride in the ocean 's chest unespied." He quickly exhibits the parallel picture of the pilgrims in their own "small boat" and strikes a tone of
harmony ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
As a poet, he began writing at a young age though his initial poems that were published. while he was still in college, were in Greek and Latin. It is
ironical that much of his sarcastic political satires were not published during his lifetime, and he became recognized as a major poet only after his
death. The life of this enigmatic poet has always fascinated historians due to the scarcity of information about his personal life.
Nature and the title of the poem:
As we see the title of the very poetry we can easily understand it is chosen with the context. Bermuda is an island located in the Atlantic ocean. As it is
written at the title about an island it is so obvious that natural details would be there. And so the poet deals with the matter so effectively.
Textual reference of natural details:
"That led us through the watery maze" The oceans around the Bermuda island are stormy and hazardous to explore. The natural obstacle face by the
people who wanted to come there is expressed by the beautiful phrase watery maze. Going through the maze is very difficult and creates anxiety. After
reaching destination through this path relief comes in mind and the joy cannot be explained in words. Comparing to that situation after the hazardous,
fearful way through the rough ocean the pilgrims of England were so happy to find the island and praising god for leading them to this bountiful land.
"He gave us this eternal spring"
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
"To His Coy Mistress"
"To His Coy Mistress" Andrew Marvell's "To His Coy Mistress is a sieze the moment kind of poem in which an anonomyous young man tries to woo
the hand of his mistress. This kind of poem gives the reader the idea that time is not only precious, but scarce. The speaker uses many smooth tatics to
persuade the young girl, starting with compliments and ending with a more forceful, morbid appraoch. "To His Coy Mistress" is not only witty but
imgagistic, full of wordplay, and percieved differently by both males and females. Andrew Marvell was born March 31st, 1621 in yorkshire, England.
Becasue he was the son of an Anglican preist, Marvell grew up in an extremely Godly Home. He got his prmary education at Hull Grammar school. At
only the age of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
By saying "Of Humber would complain. I would/ love you ten years before the flood," ("Andrew Marvell" 276) he is letting his mistress know that
he adores her. Starting out it seems like the speaker is the only one in love, but by the end of the poem it is clear that she is equally as passionate
as he. Finally there is beauty. The speaker seduces her by validating her conciet. He describes ever way she is beautiful in detail. This poem is
disguised as a syllogism, a three part argument with a final concusion. It is concluded that the speakers overall reasoning is illogical. Although,
Marvell's poem is described as "sophisticated, evocative, and emotionally moving," ("Andrew Marvell" 280) Recent criticisms say that a female reader
could read this poem and look at it different than a male. The reader, as a female, may percieve it as crude and vulgur. It could be seens as smutt.
Where as a male would see it as a smooth, masculine approach to woo a woman. In the beginning of the poem, the female reader could identify the
tone of the passage as passionate, but later goes into a more forceful tone. A man reading the poem would pick up a more masculine appeal to love
(Kelly 283). Some believe that the text of the poem is aimed to attempt the reader, particularly the male population, in a different way to seduce a
woman. (Pittock) The second criticism found was about imagery. Marvell's poem is seen differently by every person. Poets use imagery so one
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Carpe Diem In Andrew Marvell's Poem To His Coy Mistress
Andrew Marvell's poem "To His Coy Mistress," originally published in 1681, encompasses the Carpe Diem ideology through a dramatic monologue in
which the narrator speaks to his "coy mistress." While the poem uses literary devices to illustrate the recurring theme outlining time's limitations and
that the narrator and his mistress need to have sex immediately, it also contrasts with the Petrarchan standard of the idealized woman. Within the first
24 lines of the poem, Marvell uses diction, literary devices such as the erotic blazon and enjambment, and iambic tetrameter rhythm to prove that people
cannot control time, time goes on and will eventually end, and women should refrain from reluctance and have sex with men while they still can.
Marvell introduces his main theme that time is constantly plunging forward, as well as the narrator's irritation with his mistress's hesitancy, within the
first few lines of the poem. Introducing his impatience with his mistress, the narrator declares, "Had we but world enough, and time, / This coyness,
lady, were no crime" (1–2). These lines encompass the narrator's "Carpe Diem", seize the day, attitude while also proving his exasperation with his
mistress, who would rather be cautious and not have sex with him at this moment in the poem. Interestingly, Marvell chose to use "coyness" instead of
"hesitancy". Using a sharper, more pungent term like coyness, shows the narrator's discontent with his mistress's tentativeness, making the reader think
the mistress is the one causing this problem rather than the narrator. Additionally, the iambic tetrameter rhythm that persists throughout the poem
reiterates that time maintains its constant rhythm. Continuing his onslaught that time is running out, the narrator discloses that he "would / Love you
ten years before the Flood, / And you should if you please refuse / Till the conversion of the Jews" (7–10). By proposing exaggerated declarations of
love to his mistress, the narrator is showing her how ridiculous her actions are in their short amount of time left together. Additionally, he is admitting
that if he had an eternity to prove his love to her, he would use it. Following these declarations, the narrator goes on to share how he
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Poet's Treatment of Seduction in To His Coy Mistress...
The Poet's Treatment of Seduction in To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell and The Passionate Shepherd To His Love by Christopher Marlowe
Andrew Marvell the writer of 'To His Coy Mistress' was an English poet and satirist. He was born in Winestead, Yorkshire, and went to Hull
Grammar School and the University of Cambridge. He was once a member of parliament in 1659. It was possible that he got married to Mary Palmer
but it remains in doubt.
Other well–known and much–anthologised poems he wrote are: 'The Garden', 'The Definition of Love', and 'Bermudas'.
Christopher Marlowe was around just under thirty years before Andrew Marvell. Marlowe was also an English poet and also a playwright. He was ...
Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The man seems to get a bit violent by the end of the poem.
The poem I am comparing with 'To His Coy Mistress' is 'The Passionate Shepherd To His Love' by Christopher Marlowe. This poem is about a
shepherd who is trying to convince his love to come live with him. My first impressions of this poem is that the shepherd cares a lot for his love and
only wants to be with her, so he is going out of his way – offering her lots of precious gifts – to try and convince her to live with him.
In the poem 'To His Coy Mistress' the man tries to seduce his mistress by saying things like being shy is a crime, 'This coyness, lady, were no
crime.' She losing her looks and she's not getting any prettier, 'Thy beauty shall no more be found;' and then resorts to saying if she doesn't lose her
virginity soon, she will die a virgin and the worms will take her virginity from her in her coffin, '…worms shall try that long served virginity:' –
this comes across as a bit of a threat, which indicates he is getting impatient and violent.
In the poem 'The Passionate Shepherd to His Love' Christopher Marlowe treats seduction in a completely different way than Andrew Marvell does in
'To His Coy Mistress'. In 'The Passionate Shepherd to His Love' the shepherd tries to seduce his love by offering to make her many wonderful things,
'Will I make thee
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
A Comparison of †To His Coy Mistress’ by Andrew Marvell...
A Comparison of 'To His Coy Mistress' by Andrew Marvell and 'Cousin Kate' by Christina Rossetti Andrew Marvell (1621
–1678) was a British writer.
He was a poet during the Renaissance period. He was one of the metaphysical poets, known for his works like 'To His Coy Mistress'. He was an
assistant to John Milton and a Member of Parliament. Christina Rossetti (1830–1894) was a British writer. She was one of the greatest Victorian poets.
She lived a reclusive life and was educated at home. She was part of the Pre–Raphaelite movement in the Victorian Period. She had a very strong
Christian Faith and this was shown several times in some of her poems. To His Coy Mistress is a lyrical and metaphysical... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Cousin Kate only loves the lord because of his money that is what the cottage maiden tells the audience. It is a poem about betrayal. The cottage
maiden feels betrayed by her cousin and tells the audience that if it had been the other way round the cottage maiden would not have gone off
with the lord but would have refused his proposal. She says "I would have refused his proposal and spit into his face." Christina Rossetti is trying
to portray the cottage maiden as a bitter and angry woman. I think that the cottage maiden didn't really have a good relationship with her cousin
because if she did then her cousin, Kate, wouldn't have betrayed her. Also the relationship between her and the Lord couldn't have been love or he
wouldn't have left her. I think their relationship was material and superficial. I think the serious message in this poem is that you should be more
cautious and aware of the people around you. You should not make yourself vulnerable to anyone. If something is too good to be true you should
keep well clear of it. For example she says "Why did a great Lord find me out, And praise my flaxen hair?" The cottage maiden is questioning herself.
She is confused but also irritated at the same time. She doesn't understand why a man of such high stand in society with great wealth would pick her, a
cottage maiden that lives in poverty. From this the audience can
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell Essay
To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell It is a metaphysical poem, which means its lyric contains many striking images, is very intense and uses
strong metaphors. It is concerned with a young man who is trying to persuade a young woman to have sex with him by charming and rushing her
into it because he only has one thing on his mind. In the poem he uses three different arguments, flattery, fear and passion to persuade her to his point
of view. In the first section Andrew Marvell uses flattery, he does this by telling her that if he had all the time in the world he would use it by telling
her how beautiful she is and stare into her eyes but he doesn't have this time and he knows this so he's using his charm and... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
My vegetable love should grow Vaster than empires, and more slow;' The language in the first stanza uses assonance such as 'And the last age
should show your heart' He also uses alliteration such as: 'We would sit down and think which way' and 'An age at least to every part' He uses this
in the poem to give it rhythm to engage the reader and make it easier for the reader to get a flow to the lyrical rhythm of the poem. At the very
beginning of the poem he uses the word crime straight the way to make her feel guilty and also that she kind of owes him something, 'Had we but
world enough, and time This coy Lady, were no crime' He uses a lot of exaggeration to project how much he really 'wants' her, to make her feel
flattered, by telling her all the time he would spend on her and all the love he would give her and then telling her all of what's he's told her is the
least he would do, 'Nor would I love at lower rate' That quote could also be perceived as metaphorically paying for what he wants. The second stanza
based on fear and persuading her by using strong and powerful images almost scares her into having sex with him. He uses the most powerful imagery
of destruction, war, 'Time's winged chariot
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Comparing Shakespeare's Sonnet 18 with To his Coy...
Comparing Shakespeare's Sonnet 18 with To his Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell I will be comparing two poems, 'Shall I Compare Thee...?' with
'To His Coy Mistress', I will examine the purposes of each poem and the techniques used by the two poets to convey ideas and to achieve purposes.
Sonnet 18 was written by William's Shakespeare between 1564 and 1616. The poem 'To his Coy Mistress' was written by Andrew Marvell. The
Purposes of the two poems are different, the purpose of Sonnet 18 is for Shakespeare to write this poem for a girl or woman he likes, to praise her by
comparing her to wonderful things in life, such a Summer, also to grant her immortality through lines of the poem; meaning as long as the poem will
exist and be... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Marvell does this to put her under pressure to have sex with him; this is a fear tactic and a persuasive technique. He also associates the passing of
time with her beauty fading, to make her more self conscious and see that she should have sex with him beauty fades and she becomes ugly, then
nobody will have sex with her. He uses fear tactics throughout the poem to persuade her to have sex with him; this affects the mood of the poem
making it more threatening and tenser. For example; 'To talk and pass our long love's day' In line 11, Marvell talks about sex using phallic imagery
when saying 'vegetable love', this makes it humorous which will affect the mood making it less tense and relaxing. Marvell uses many different
tactics, such as exaggeration, by comparing her to the Indian Ganges; 'Thou by the Indian Ganges' side' This affects the mood of the poem making it
flattery, imagery such as this will flatter the girl and persuade her to have sex with him, and this establishes that this technique is persuasive. Marvell
is Romantic in the poem in line 19; 'For, lady, you deserve this state' This makes this part of the poem calm and sensitive, which contrasts to the
following verses of the poem as they are threatening and
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Andrew Marvell, “to His Coy Mistress”
Andrew Marvell, "To His Coy Mistress" In 'To His Coy Mistress' the speaker carefully constructs a subtle and logical argument as to why his addressee
should sexually unite with him. The speaker attempts this proposition through finesse in manipulating reason, form and imagery. The reasoning
employed would be familiar to a reader educated in Renaissance England, as it is reminiscent of classical philosophical logic, entailing a statement, a
counter–statement and a resolution. In line with this method Marvell's speaker codes his argument in classical imagery. To understand this argument I
will be approaching the poem in three clearly defined sections, which are denoted in the poem with indented lines. The first of these section... Show
more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The next section runs from lines 21 to 32, here the speaker moves away from the hypothetical to reality but retains the melodramatic language used
in the previous section to sustain the tenacity of his points. Time here is portrayed as chasing the speaker as opposed to being something the speaker
is in control of as in the end of the last section. This is done using the image of a 'winged chariot' (l.22), this has classical associations with Greek
mythology which relates to his form of argument. The meter of the poem is restrictively regular, this structure emphasises the idea that time is
constantly progressing; reflecting the speaker's argument. Space is no longer inhabited by images of movement and life like the rivers previously
mentioned but instead: 'before us lie / Deserts of vast eternity' (ll. 23–4). The desert has strong connotations with deathliness, an issue that the speaker
gruesomely develops upon and progresses within this section. The speaker implies on lines 26–7 that the only exploration of the mistress's body that
will be undertaken will be by the worms that are decomposing her body if she remains in her coy state. This thought that her sexuality should not be
wasted is elaborated upon with a crude pun on line 29: 'And your quaint honor turn to dust' which, as the Norton Anthology of Poetry explains in the
footnote, is a play on the Middle English noun queynte which means female genitals. These images of
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Poetry by William King, Martyn Lowery, Andrew Marvell, Liz...
Poetry by William King, Martyn Lowery, Andrew Marvell, Liz Lochhead, John Cooper Clarke and Elizabeth Jennings
Introduction.
The hearts and partners theme contains the following poems:
'The Beggar Woman' by William King (Pre 1900) 'Our Love Now' by Martyn Lowery 'To His Coy Mistress' byAndrew Marvell (Pre 1900)
'Rapunzstiltskin' by Liz Lochhead 'i wanna be yours' by John Cooper Clarke 'One Flesh' by Elizabeth Jennings
As the title suggests, hearts and partners deals with love and relationships. In your exam you will be expected to make comparisons between the
different poems and this lesson will help you to make the connections you need to do this.
Poetic techniques
The ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
'To His Coy Mistress' is a passionate plea by a young man to his 'mistress' to go to bed with him. He uses flattery ('an hundred years should go to
praise / thine eyes'), fear ('thy beauty shall no more be found') and enthusiasm ('Let us roll all our strength, and all / Our sweetness, up into one ball')
to persuade her to give up her virginity. He is only concerned with moving his relationship on to the sexual stage and, apart from the pleasure this will
bring, he has no thought of its consequences.
The woman in 'The Beggar Woman' at first seems anything but reluctant to have sex with the gentleman she meets, but in fact she has a different
agenda. She has a baby strapped to her back and by exploiting the gentleman's lust ('I should be loth / to come so far and disoblige you both') she is
able to transfer it to him. She then leaves him with the child as a lesson in the consequences of casual sex.
I trust the child to you with all my heart But, ere you get another, 'ten't amiss To try a year or two how you'll keep this.
'One Flesh' is a meditation by a child on her parents who are now too old for sex. They sleep in the same room but in separate beds and 'chastity faces
them'. This seems natural to the daughter ('strangely apart, yet strangely close
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

More Related Content

More from Tiffany Castro

Lesson 5 Thesis Statements
Lesson 5 Thesis StatementsLesson 5 Thesis Statements
Lesson 5 Thesis StatementsTiffany Castro
 
This Persuasive Writing Pack Includes A Range Of Worksh
This Persuasive Writing Pack Includes A Range Of WorkshThis Persuasive Writing Pack Includes A Range Of Worksh
This Persuasive Writing Pack Includes A Range Of WorkshTiffany Castro
 
Thesis Statement And Topic Sentence
Thesis Statement And Topic SentenceThesis Statement And Topic Sentence
Thesis Statement And Topic SentenceTiffany Castro
 
Impressive Sample Scholarship Essays Base
Impressive Sample Scholarship Essays BaseImpressive Sample Scholarship Essays Base
Impressive Sample Scholarship Essays BaseTiffany Castro
 
How To Write An Essay In 6 Simple Steps ScoolWork - How To Writ
How To Write An Essay In 6 Simple Steps ScoolWork - How To WritHow To Write An Essay In 6 Simple Steps ScoolWork - How To Writ
How To Write An Essay In 6 Simple Steps ScoolWork - How To WritTiffany Castro
 
Academic Writing From Par
Academic Writing From ParAcademic Writing From Par
Academic Writing From ParTiffany Castro
 
Best Website For Essay By Custo
Best Website For Essay By CustoBest Website For Essay By Custo
Best Website For Essay By CustoTiffany Castro
 
Electoral College Essay Example StudyHippo.C
Electoral College Essay Example  StudyHippo.CElectoral College Essay Example  StudyHippo.C
Electoral College Essay Example StudyHippo.CTiffany Castro
 
You Are Here Now Buy Essay Writin
You Are Here Now Buy Essay WritinYou Are Here Now Buy Essay Writin
You Are Here Now Buy Essay WritinTiffany Castro
 
002 Essay Example Personal Thatsnotus
002 Essay Example Personal  Thatsnotus002 Essay Example Personal  Thatsnotus
002 Essay Example Personal ThatsnotusTiffany Castro
 
Frightening Informative Essay Introduction Examples Thatsnotus
Frightening Informative Essay Introduction Examples  ThatsnotusFrightening Informative Essay Introduction Examples  Thatsnotus
Frightening Informative Essay Introduction Examples ThatsnotusTiffany Castro
 
Example Of Philosophical Essay
Example Of Philosophical EssayExample Of Philosophical Essay
Example Of Philosophical EssayTiffany Castro
 
A Poster With An Image Of Writing
A Poster With An Image Of WritingA Poster With An Image Of Writing
A Poster With An Image Of WritingTiffany Castro
 
Position Paper Sample Format Philippines Positi
Position Paper Sample Format  Philippines PositiPosition Paper Sample Format  Philippines Positi
Position Paper Sample Format Philippines PositiTiffany Castro
 
Freelance Essay Writer Jobs Uky Interpret
Freelance Essay Writer Jobs Uky InterpretFreelance Essay Writer Jobs Uky Interpret
Freelance Essay Writer Jobs Uky InterpretTiffany Castro
 
Paper Becomes Expensive In Luo Yang. Thi
Paper Becomes Expensive In Luo Yang. ThiPaper Becomes Expensive In Luo Yang. Thi
Paper Becomes Expensive In Luo Yang. ThiTiffany Castro
 
What Does A Research Paper Look Like For A Science Fair
What Does A Research Paper Look Like For A Science FairWhat Does A Research Paper Look Like For A Science Fair
What Does A Research Paper Look Like For A Science FairTiffany Castro
 
When You Start Your Essay The Day Its Due Meme Uni
When You Start Your Essay The Day Its Due Meme  UniWhen You Start Your Essay The Day Its Due Meme  Uni
When You Start Your Essay The Day Its Due Meme UniTiffany Castro
 

More from Tiffany Castro (20)

Lesson 5 Thesis Statements
Lesson 5 Thesis StatementsLesson 5 Thesis Statements
Lesson 5 Thesis Statements
 
Works Cited Page
Works Cited PageWorks Cited Page
Works Cited Page
 
This Persuasive Writing Pack Includes A Range Of Worksh
This Persuasive Writing Pack Includes A Range Of WorkshThis Persuasive Writing Pack Includes A Range Of Worksh
This Persuasive Writing Pack Includes A Range Of Worksh
 
Thesis Statement And Topic Sentence
Thesis Statement And Topic SentenceThesis Statement And Topic Sentence
Thesis Statement And Topic Sentence
 
Impressive Sample Scholarship Essays Base
Impressive Sample Scholarship Essays BaseImpressive Sample Scholarship Essays Base
Impressive Sample Scholarship Essays Base
 
How To Write An Essay In 6 Simple Steps ScoolWork - How To Writ
How To Write An Essay In 6 Simple Steps ScoolWork - How To WritHow To Write An Essay In 6 Simple Steps ScoolWork - How To Writ
How To Write An Essay In 6 Simple Steps ScoolWork - How To Writ
 
Academic Writing From Par
Academic Writing From ParAcademic Writing From Par
Academic Writing From Par
 
Best Website For Essay By Custo
Best Website For Essay By CustoBest Website For Essay By Custo
Best Website For Essay By Custo
 
Electoral College Essay Example StudyHippo.C
Electoral College Essay Example  StudyHippo.CElectoral College Essay Example  StudyHippo.C
Electoral College Essay Example StudyHippo.C
 
You Are Here Now Buy Essay Writin
You Are Here Now Buy Essay WritinYou Are Here Now Buy Essay Writin
You Are Here Now Buy Essay Writin
 
002 Essay Example Personal Thatsnotus
002 Essay Example Personal  Thatsnotus002 Essay Example Personal  Thatsnotus
002 Essay Example Personal Thatsnotus
 
Frightening Informative Essay Introduction Examples Thatsnotus
Frightening Informative Essay Introduction Examples  ThatsnotusFrightening Informative Essay Introduction Examples  Thatsnotus
Frightening Informative Essay Introduction Examples Thatsnotus
 
Example Of Philosophical Essay
Example Of Philosophical EssayExample Of Philosophical Essay
Example Of Philosophical Essay
 
A Poster With An Image Of Writing
A Poster With An Image Of WritingA Poster With An Image Of Writing
A Poster With An Image Of Writing
 
Pin On Essay Samples
Pin On Essay SamplesPin On Essay Samples
Pin On Essay Samples
 
Position Paper Sample Format Philippines Positi
Position Paper Sample Format  Philippines PositiPosition Paper Sample Format  Philippines Positi
Position Paper Sample Format Philippines Positi
 
Freelance Essay Writer Jobs Uky Interpret
Freelance Essay Writer Jobs Uky InterpretFreelance Essay Writer Jobs Uky Interpret
Freelance Essay Writer Jobs Uky Interpret
 
Paper Becomes Expensive In Luo Yang. Thi
Paper Becomes Expensive In Luo Yang. ThiPaper Becomes Expensive In Luo Yang. Thi
Paper Becomes Expensive In Luo Yang. Thi
 
What Does A Research Paper Look Like For A Science Fair
What Does A Research Paper Look Like For A Science FairWhat Does A Research Paper Look Like For A Science Fair
What Does A Research Paper Look Like For A Science Fair
 
When You Start Your Essay The Day Its Due Meme Uni
When You Start Your Essay The Day Its Due Meme  UniWhen You Start Your Essay The Day Its Due Meme  Uni
When You Start Your Essay The Day Its Due Meme Uni
 

Recently uploaded

Framing an Appropriate Research Question 6b9b26d93da94caf993c038d9efcdedb.pdf
Framing an Appropriate Research Question 6b9b26d93da94caf993c038d9efcdedb.pdfFraming an Appropriate Research Question 6b9b26d93da94caf993c038d9efcdedb.pdf
Framing an Appropriate Research Question 6b9b26d93da94caf993c038d9efcdedb.pdfUjwalaBharambe
 
Judging the Relevance and worth of ideas part 2.pptx
Judging the Relevance  and worth of ideas part 2.pptxJudging the Relevance  and worth of ideas part 2.pptx
Judging the Relevance and worth of ideas part 2.pptxSherlyMaeNeri
 
Introduction to AI in Higher Education_draft.pptx
Introduction to AI in Higher Education_draft.pptxIntroduction to AI in Higher Education_draft.pptx
Introduction to AI in Higher Education_draft.pptxpboyjonauth
 
Crayon Activity Handout For the Crayon A
Crayon Activity Handout For the Crayon ACrayon Activity Handout For the Crayon A
Crayon Activity Handout For the Crayon AUnboundStockton
 
DATA STRUCTURE AND ALGORITHM for beginners
DATA STRUCTURE AND ALGORITHM for beginnersDATA STRUCTURE AND ALGORITHM for beginners
DATA STRUCTURE AND ALGORITHM for beginnersSabitha Banu
 
Full Stack Web Development Course for Beginners
Full Stack Web Development Course  for BeginnersFull Stack Web Development Course  for Beginners
Full Stack Web Development Course for BeginnersSabitha Banu
 
ROOT CAUSE ANALYSIS PowerPoint Presentation
ROOT CAUSE ANALYSIS PowerPoint PresentationROOT CAUSE ANALYSIS PowerPoint Presentation
ROOT CAUSE ANALYSIS PowerPoint PresentationAadityaSharma884161
 
Planning a health career 4th Quarter.pptx
Planning a health career 4th Quarter.pptxPlanning a health career 4th Quarter.pptx
Planning a health career 4th Quarter.pptxLigayaBacuel1
 
ACC 2024 Chronicles. Cardiology. Exam.pdf
ACC 2024 Chronicles. Cardiology. Exam.pdfACC 2024 Chronicles. Cardiology. Exam.pdf
ACC 2024 Chronicles. Cardiology. Exam.pdfSpandanaRallapalli
 
HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...
HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...
HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...Nguyen Thanh Tu Collection
 
ENGLISH 7_Q4_LESSON 2_ Employing a Variety of Strategies for Effective Interp...
ENGLISH 7_Q4_LESSON 2_ Employing a Variety of Strategies for Effective Interp...ENGLISH 7_Q4_LESSON 2_ Employing a Variety of Strategies for Effective Interp...
ENGLISH 7_Q4_LESSON 2_ Employing a Variety of Strategies for Effective Interp...JhezDiaz1
 
Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)
Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)
Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)Mark Reed
 
Atmosphere science 7 quarter 4 .........
Atmosphere science 7 quarter 4 .........Atmosphere science 7 quarter 4 .........
Atmosphere science 7 quarter 4 .........LeaCamillePacle
 
Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...
Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...
Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...Jisc
 
Types of Journalistic Writing Grade 8.pptx
Types of Journalistic Writing Grade 8.pptxTypes of Journalistic Writing Grade 8.pptx
Types of Journalistic Writing Grade 8.pptxEyham Joco
 
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPT
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPTECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPT
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPTiammrhaywood
 
Like-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdf
Like-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdfLike-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdf
Like-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdfMr Bounab Samir
 
Quarter 4 Peace-education.pptx Catch Up Friday
Quarter 4 Peace-education.pptx Catch Up FridayQuarter 4 Peace-education.pptx Catch Up Friday
Quarter 4 Peace-education.pptx Catch Up FridayMakMakNepo
 

Recently uploaded (20)

Framing an Appropriate Research Question 6b9b26d93da94caf993c038d9efcdedb.pdf
Framing an Appropriate Research Question 6b9b26d93da94caf993c038d9efcdedb.pdfFraming an Appropriate Research Question 6b9b26d93da94caf993c038d9efcdedb.pdf
Framing an Appropriate Research Question 6b9b26d93da94caf993c038d9efcdedb.pdf
 
Judging the Relevance and worth of ideas part 2.pptx
Judging the Relevance  and worth of ideas part 2.pptxJudging the Relevance  and worth of ideas part 2.pptx
Judging the Relevance and worth of ideas part 2.pptx
 
Introduction to AI in Higher Education_draft.pptx
Introduction to AI in Higher Education_draft.pptxIntroduction to AI in Higher Education_draft.pptx
Introduction to AI in Higher Education_draft.pptx
 
Crayon Activity Handout For the Crayon A
Crayon Activity Handout For the Crayon ACrayon Activity Handout For the Crayon A
Crayon Activity Handout For the Crayon A
 
DATA STRUCTURE AND ALGORITHM for beginners
DATA STRUCTURE AND ALGORITHM for beginnersDATA STRUCTURE AND ALGORITHM for beginners
DATA STRUCTURE AND ALGORITHM for beginners
 
Full Stack Web Development Course for Beginners
Full Stack Web Development Course  for BeginnersFull Stack Web Development Course  for Beginners
Full Stack Web Development Course for Beginners
 
ROOT CAUSE ANALYSIS PowerPoint Presentation
ROOT CAUSE ANALYSIS PowerPoint PresentationROOT CAUSE ANALYSIS PowerPoint Presentation
ROOT CAUSE ANALYSIS PowerPoint Presentation
 
Planning a health career 4th Quarter.pptx
Planning a health career 4th Quarter.pptxPlanning a health career 4th Quarter.pptx
Planning a health career 4th Quarter.pptx
 
ACC 2024 Chronicles. Cardiology. Exam.pdf
ACC 2024 Chronicles. Cardiology. Exam.pdfACC 2024 Chronicles. Cardiology. Exam.pdf
ACC 2024 Chronicles. Cardiology. Exam.pdf
 
HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...
HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...
HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...
 
Rapple "Scholarly Communications and the Sustainable Development Goals"
Rapple "Scholarly Communications and the Sustainable Development Goals"Rapple "Scholarly Communications and the Sustainable Development Goals"
Rapple "Scholarly Communications and the Sustainable Development Goals"
 
Raw materials used in Herbal Cosmetics.pptx
Raw materials used in Herbal Cosmetics.pptxRaw materials used in Herbal Cosmetics.pptx
Raw materials used in Herbal Cosmetics.pptx
 
ENGLISH 7_Q4_LESSON 2_ Employing a Variety of Strategies for Effective Interp...
ENGLISH 7_Q4_LESSON 2_ Employing a Variety of Strategies for Effective Interp...ENGLISH 7_Q4_LESSON 2_ Employing a Variety of Strategies for Effective Interp...
ENGLISH 7_Q4_LESSON 2_ Employing a Variety of Strategies for Effective Interp...
 
Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)
Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)
Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)
 
Atmosphere science 7 quarter 4 .........
Atmosphere science 7 quarter 4 .........Atmosphere science 7 quarter 4 .........
Atmosphere science 7 quarter 4 .........
 
Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...
Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...
Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...
 
Types of Journalistic Writing Grade 8.pptx
Types of Journalistic Writing Grade 8.pptxTypes of Journalistic Writing Grade 8.pptx
Types of Journalistic Writing Grade 8.pptx
 
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPT
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPTECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPT
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPT
 
Like-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdf
Like-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdfLike-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdf
Like-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdf
 
Quarter 4 Peace-education.pptx Catch Up Friday
Quarter 4 Peace-education.pptx Catch Up FridayQuarter 4 Peace-education.pptx Catch Up Friday
Quarter 4 Peace-education.pptx Catch Up Friday
 

Theme Of Carpe Diem In A Fine, A Private Place By...

  • 1. Theme of Carpe Diem in A Fine, a Private Place by... The words carpe diem mean "seize the day" in Latin. It is a theme that has been used throughout the history of literature and has been a popular philosophy in teaching from the times of Socrates and Plato up to the modern English classroom. Carpe diem says to us that life isn't something we have forever, and every passing moment is another opportunity to make the most out of the few precious years that we have left. In the poems "A Fine, a Private Place" by Diane Ackerman and "To His CoyMistress" by Andrew Marvell, carpe diem is the underlying theme that ties them together, yet there are still a few key differences throughout each of these two poems that shows two very different perspectives on how one goes about seizing their day. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The love between the two seems that it will be eternal. Time seems to stand still in this poem, seizing a moment between two lovers and accentuating it with nature's majesty. The second poem by Marvell isn't quite as flowing and pretty. Marvell writes about a man who is completely infatuated with a woman and must have sex with her before time catches up with them. The woman is shy and refuses the man, but he tells her that if he had all the time in the world, they "would sit down, and think which way / To walk, and pass our long love's day" (Lines 3–4) and she would sit by the Indian Ganges river and collect rubies while he sang her love songs by the side of the Humber river. His love for her is temporary however, feeding only on her physical attributes, whereas in Ackerman's poem, the love shown is precious and makes time stand still. In the next stanza he tells the woman that one day her beauty will no longer exist and that his "echoing song" (Line 27) will no longer sound in her "marble vault" (Line 26). He warns her to seize her opportunity to have sex with him right away before she dies a virgin and the worms devour her. The man in Marvell's poem says whatever he can think of to make his coy mistress sleep with him, anticipating throughout the entire poem that she will finally give in. She never does, and the poem ends in desperation and dissatisfaction. It seems as though Ackerman ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2. Gender Stereotypes And Expectations In Literature Everyone knows that boys only want one thing, and girls, above all else, must protect their virtue. Society, through such means as literature, popular culture, and tradition, has perpetuated these gender stereotypes and expectations for much of history. Unconscious and conscious assumptions about gender shape how readers perceive sex in literature; men are typically considered lustful, whereas women are considered loving. However, the subjects of sex, love, and lust in literature, as demonstrated in poems written by Robert Burns and Andrew Marvell, become increasingly nuanced when gender stereotypes and expectations are questioned and removed. Gender roles, expectations, and stereotypes have shifted and become less clearly defined ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He says that "the youthful hue / sits on [her] skin like morning dew," but that this fresh beauty will soon fade (Marvell 584; 33–34). The description of this woman supports stereotypes of both genders. The man is lustful, and his tactic is to appeal to the woman's shallow vanity. He appeals to her desire for love by almost offhandedly tacking on how he would like to know her heart (Marvell 583; 18). Additionally, he says that, should they act upon his lustful desires, they would be "like amorous birds of prey" (Marvell 584; 38). The contradictory image of loving raptors enforces the stereotype of a predatory man spouting any lovely lie to get a woman in his bed. "A Red, Red Rose" by Robert Burns is not as overtly sexual as "To His Coy Mistress." However, Burns was notoriously promiscuous, and his subject matter was often of a sexual nature. It is safe to say that his purpose in this poem was a sexual purpose. He says his "luve's like a red, red rose / that's newly sprung in June" (Burns 935; 1–2). He also describes his love as a beautiful song being "sweetly played in tune" (Burns 935; 1–2). He uses this flowery language to appeal to women's stereotypical love for beauty and emotion. He additionally appeals to an overemotional woman by using hyperbolic language to describe his love. He claims that he will love this woman until all the seas dry up and "the rocks melt wi' the sun" ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 3. Comparing To his Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell and To his... Comparing To his Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell and To his Mistress Going to Bed by John Donne In recent times I have compared and contrasted two pieces of love poetry, both of which are exceptionally lyrical and full of intellectual language that bring the poems alive with elaborated metaphors that compare dissimilar things, as they Inare equally, yet somehow individually both metaphysical poems. The first of these poems that I comprehended was 'To his Coy Mistress;' (written byAndrew Marvell during the 17th century), it reflects the epic of a man who is striving to entice a unadulterated woman into going to bed with him; he does this by using a lot of romantic flattery and surreal imagery, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Perhaps the most famous of Marvell's lyrics is "To His Coy Mistress": Like many of Marvell's best poems, it masks extraordinary subtlety and complexity beneath a surface of smooth and deceptively simple octosyllabic couplets. It is, in fact, as perfect an example of the metaphysical mode as anything by Donne and, for all its cool and witty tone, and passionate lyrics. John Donne, (1572–1631) is considered the greatest of all metaphysical poets. Donne was educated at Oxford, Cambridge and Lincoln's Inn. His works of this period, included some of his songs, sonnets (written as late as 1617), problems and paradoxes, which consisted of cynical, realistic and often sexual lyrics, essays and verse satires. Donne's court career was ruined by the discovery of his marriage in 1601 to Anne More and we also imprisoned for a short time; later in 1601, his poems became a lot more serious. After a long period of financial uncertainty and desperation, during which he was twice a member of Parliament, Donne yielded to the wishes of King James I and took orders in 1625. Two years later his wife died. He was made reader in divinity at Lincoln's inn, a royal chaplain, and in 1621 Dean of St. Paul', a position he held until his death. Society in these time periods where very rigorous towards the issue of wedlock and divorce; the community would disapprove and condemn it very reprehensibly, and factors ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4. The Metaphysical And Victorian Concept Of Love Essay The Metaphysical and Victorian concept of love is as diverse as it can be particularly comparing the intense love shown in 'Porphyria 's Lover ' by Robert Browning with the playful love in nature in 'To His Coy Mistress ' by Andrew Marvell. Love has multiple definitions and it has so far remained among the most complex subject that require a single particular definition to define its meaning. Plato once said "At the touch of love everyone becomes a poet" and that 's why may be we have so many diverse poetry on the subject of love with so many different definitions of love that are available. Shakespeare wrote in his Sonnet 116 defining love, "Love is not love which alters when alteration finds, or bends with the remover to remove", talking about the passion and loyalty, a belief unassailable, "That look on tempests and is never shaken". Such intensity that Shakespeare shows and the partial playful nature that Plato hints has the possibilities for influencing a writer to produce unique individual thoughts, with different approach and equally persuading in nature. The term metaphysical poets was coined by the critic Samuel Johnson to describe a loose group of 17th–century English poets whose work was characterized by the inventive use of conceits, and by a greater emphasis on the spoken rather than lyrical quality of their verse. These poets were not formally affiliated and few were highly regarded until 20th century attention established their importance. Given the lack ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 5. Style and Tone in Two Poems: в ЂњTo His Coy Mistress” by... In this essay I will compare two poems: "To His Coy Mistress" by Andrew Marvell and "The Ruined Maid" by Thomas Hardy. I will look at the style and the tones that are used in both of these poems in order to compare them. "To His Coy Mistress" is one–way argumentative conversation featuring one horny young man trying to convince his reluctant mistress to give up her virginity to him before she gets old. He uses the argument that she needs to have sex now because her youth and beauty will fade as she ages. He thinks they should seize the moment because life is short and she would not want to die a virgin, and he will not want her when she gets old. The beginning of this poem tells the main argument, "Had we but world enough, and... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He says to her "Thy beauty shall no more be found in thy marble vault... then worms shall try That long preserved virginity, And your quaint honour turn to dust...But none, I think do embrace." The vivid imagery Marvell uses here is haunting. He is just telling her that her beauty will be gone; he will no longer want her; the time will expire; her body will be buried; she will decompose; turn into ashes. Her honor and his wait will mean nothing. In the last part the man goes right back to his selfish desperate plea for sex. "Now therefore, while the youthful hue sits on thy skin like morning dew ...Now let us sport while we may. He is saying while we are still young; you are still beautiful and there is still time. Let's do it! On the other hand, "The Ruined Maid", is a conversation between two women. I think the entire poem is ironic because the story is about a chance meeting between two old acquaintances Melia, the ruined maid, and another lady she knew when she was a farm girl and lived poorly. Melia is the complete opposite of what her acquaintance thought she would be as a "ruined" woman. She was considered ruined because she had lost her virginity out of wedlock or she works as a prostitute. The lady approaches Melia in disbelief because Melia is wearing nice clothes and looks prosperous; she picks out all the things that have changed about Melia, throughout the poem. For instance, her initial response is "O ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6. Comparison Of Robert Herrick's To The Virgins And Andrew... Robert Herrick's "To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time" and Andrew Marvell's "To His Coy Mistress" both address the central theme of the passage of time and the adequate use of time. The two different poems were written nine years apart feature different styles, word choice, and length; however, this does not detract from being able to discern the similarities. Both poems tell the reader to make use of one's time on Earth through relationships since life is short and death is final. "To His Coy Mistress" begins with a speaker and a woman (presumably a girlfriend) who explains even if there was enough time that they could not be in a relationship. The male compliments her body and perhaps sexual interest can be inferred. The second stanza mentions ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 7. Imagery In Andrew Marvell's To His Coy Mistress To his coy mistress, a poem written by Andrew Marvell, who tries to persuade a women(unknown) to sleep with him. In this poem Marvell uses many powerful poetic techniques such as imagery, rhetorical questions, paradoxes and metaphors, all these techniques were used throughout the poem to set an atmosphere. Marvell uses imagery to create the atmosphere of the personality and character of the young man. The writer uses a metaphors to say that life is short and we should just get on with the relationship " But at my back I always hear Times winged chariot hurrying near" and "While the youthful hue sits on the skin like the morning dew... let us sport" these quotes prove that Marvell is begging her to stop wasting time before there too old. He uses alliteration and says "this coyness, lady, were no crime", he addresses her as "coy" (shy) this suggest that he wants something from her that she isn't prepared to give him. Moreover, the image of how death is lurking the woman fills her with fear, to again convince the woman to sleep with the writer. Unlike in the first stanza where the writer gives no importance for the woman to make her decision, in the second stanza Marvell demands her to urgently make a decision:... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... She described herself as the "girl" in the first stanza, then again there is the idea of time again in the third stanza. "Time it self's a feather" shows us the effect of growing old on the couple, like a feather, is very light and they seem not knowing that they are aging, as it is soo "gentle". She then says "Do they know they're old, These two who are my father and my mother?" this quote explains to us that they were not like this before. in the last line she describes their relationship before as "fire", making the reader feel as if they were happy and lively, then ruins that effect by saying, but now it has "grown cold", like a dying fire over ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8. The Flea By John Donne And His Coy Mistress By Andrew Marvell During the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, poetry was one of the most prevalent writing styles. There were poets like John Donne and Andrew Marvell who participated in a type of poetry referred to as metaphysical. Metaphysical poetry essentially is poetry that deals with things that are more philosophical than anything else. This type of poetry also is very emotion based but also has logically aspects. These poets have written several bodies of work that can fall under the metaphysical umbrella. Two examples of metaphysical poems written by these two poets are The Flea and To His Coy Mistress. Being metaphysical poetry is not the only thing these two poems have in common. The Flea by John Donne and To His Coy Mistress by Andrew... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... We are introduced to yet another speaker who is using his words to persuade a woman into premarital sex. Even though the intent was the same in both poems, each speaker had their own unique means of convincing the woman. The authors take two very different approaches to persuade a woman to participate in the same act. Their approaches are reflective in their use of certain language. In The Flea, the speaker is taking the approach of comparing the act to the happenings of a flea that bit both the speaker and the woman. The speaker uses this metaphor through the entirety of the poem. The speaker goes on to say that the flea has already mixed their blood, yet it is not seen as a sin. "In this flea our two bloods mingled be; Thou know'st that this cannot be said A sin, nor shame, nor loss of maidenhead (Donne,____)." The speaker takes this logic and says that the flea mixing their blood is taking it a step further than just the act of premarital sex, so because they were not punished for such an act as their blood actually mixing then how can they possibly be punished for having sex before marriage .The speaker into His Coy Mistress takes a different approach from the very beginning by blatantly saying that the women 's coyness towards him could be seen as a crime. "Had we but world enough and time, This coyness, lady, were no crime"(Marvell____). The speaker is using this as a means on again romanticizing the situation. He is saying that in a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 9. Andrew Marvell's To His Coy Mistress Essay Andrew Marvell's To His Coy Mistress Andrew Marvell writes an elaborate poem that not only speaks to his coy mistress but also to the reader. He suggests to his coy mistress that time is inevitably ticking and that he (the speaker) wishes for her to act upon his wish and have a sexual relationship. Marvell simultaneously suggest to the reader that he/she must act upon their desires, to hesitate no longer and Віseize the moment?before time expires. Marvell uses a dramatic sense of imagery and exaggeration in order to relay his message to the reader and to his coy mistress. The very first two lines of the poem suggest that it would be fine for him and his mistress to have a slow and absorbing relationship but there simply isnВ№t enough ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The speaker in this poem seems frustrated; he delicately tries to inform his coy mistress that their death is near, and they still have not had sexual intercourse. In lines 17–33 the poem seems to lose the exaggeration sense and suddenly becomes serious. He (the speaker) reinsures his coy mistress that Віyou deserve this state?(state of praise and high acknowledgment), ВіBut at my back I always hear, TimeВ№s winged chariot hurrying near? Andrew Marvell uses and interesting image in line 22 (the line mentioned above) when suggesting to his coy mistress that death is near. He substitutes the word Віdeath?for a more gentle, delicate term of ВіTimeВ№s winged chariot? This term was probably used to prevent from frightening such a coy mistress. Marvell continues to involve the readerВ№s imagination through unimaginable images. What do ВіDeserts of vast eternity?look like? In fact, Marvell probably used such abstract images to suggest to his coy mistress that their future is indeterminable, and ВіThy beauty shall no more be found? Perhaps, beauty is what the coy mistress is so concerned with and the speaker in this case is trying to frighten her to have sex with him quicker. He continues to use intense imagery when describing to his coy mistress that even after death the Віworms shall try That long preserved virginity? The speaker now abstractly describes that holding on to your virginity for ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10. Analysis of To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell Essay Analysis of To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell Andrew Marvell's elaborate sixteenth century carpe diem poem, 'To His Coy Mistress', not only speaks to his coy mistress, but also to the reader. Marvell's suggests to his coy mistress that time is inevitably rapidly progressing and for this he wishes for her to reciprocate his desires and to initiate a sexual relationship. Marvell simultaneously suggests to the reader that he or she should act upon their desires as well, to hesitate no longer and seize the moment before time, and ultimately life, expires. Marvell makes use of allusion, metaphor, and grand imagery in order to convey a mood of majestic endurance and innovatively explicate the carpe diem motif. To show the passage of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... His love is so great it would, ?grow vaster than empires? (11–12). Although Marvell tries to equate his love for his mistress to plants, his argument is undermined by a plant?s biological incapableness of contemplation and reciprocal physical affection. Nevertheless, the speaker continues his praises of love, but points out that there is not enough time for further praise because time is passing quickly. The poem then acquires a more serious tone when the poem loses its exaggerations and embellishments. He reassures his coy mistress that ?you deserve this state? of praise and high acknowledgment, But at my back I always hear Time?s wingГЁd chariot hurrying near. (21–22) Rather than explicitly saying death is near, Marvell substitutes life?s bleakness with a ?winged chariot.? He slowly becomes more frustrated with her ?long–preserved virginity? and tires to inform his mistress that death is near and they still have not had intercourse. His frustration can be seen in his sexual pun on the word ?quaint? which symbolically refers to female genitalia. The intense imagery of genitalia is again echoed when Marvell describes to his coy mistress that even after death the ?worms shall try that long–preserved virginity? (27–28). Here the worms take on a phallic symbol, reinforcing his sexual desires. The speaker abstractly states that holding onto her virginity will do her no good because she will be ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 11. Comparing The Flea By Andrew Marvell And John Donne Andrew Marvell and John Donne are two poets known for their amorous poems. Donne's The Flea can be seen as a frantic and intense assertion regarding the woman, who the poem is about, and what it would take for the supposed mistress to sleep with him. Marvell's To His Coy Mistress is also, although not too similar to Donne, a 'rational and sensible' assertion regarding his mistress, asking her to take advantage of the opportunity he is presenting her while trying to get her to sleep with him by describing her overall physical attractiveness and refinement at the same time. Donne and Marvell, while sharing similar aims, are different in the ways they portray women. Donne's The Flea is an insisting argument regarding the woman's virginity. He... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Marvell's approach of persuasion is different as a whole. He depends on flattery and encomiums to charm and allure to the woman's feelings. It is clear that Marvell has more respect for his mistress because he makes it known that the mistress is also interested in him the same way he is in her. There are reciprocal feelings involved. While Donne sees his mistress as inferior, Marvell sees his mistress as an equal, and as the poem develops, the descriptions he used to describe the woman can be seen as descriptions used to describe a goddess. In conclusion, when comparing and contrasting Marvell's and Donne's poems, they both approximately share similar aims. The connection is in their shared objective of trying to persuade their mistress' to sleep with them. While Donne's structure of a female is simple and demeaning to women in general because his dominant fixation makes him believe that he can trounce his mistress, Marvell's structure of a female is the opposite; he considers his mistress an equal and treats her with respect, and also structures her as beautiful and cherishes her ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12. The Flea, By Andrew Marvell John Donne 's, "The Flea," and Andrew Marvell's To His Coy Mistress are persuasive poem in which the speaker is attempting to establish a sexual union with his significant other. These poems is spoken by a male lover to his female beloved as an attempt to convince her to sleep with him. John Donne and Marvell brings out and shapes this meaning through his collective use of conceit, rhythm, and rhyme scheme. The basic theme of the poems is the speaker's need to turn his "coy mistress" into a "willing mistress". Donne uses the flea as a conceit, to represent a sexual union with his significant other. Marvell using his way with words to convince his lover to a sexual union. In the first stanza in The Flea, a flea bites the speaker and woman. He responds to this incident by saying, "And in this flea our bloods mingled be." (line 4). He is suggesting that they are united in this flea and would equally be united in intimacy. In the first stanza of "To His Coy Mistress", the speaker tells his woman that if they had more time and space that her coyness wouldn't be a crime. He says this, "Had we but World enough, and Time, This coyness lady were no crime". (line 1,2) Marvell also would compliment her and admire her. In the "Flea", the speaker tries to marry the man and woman while in "To His Coy Mistress" the man is not trying to marry the Duncan 2 two but trying to get the lady to sleep with him by using time. Donne states, "This flea is you and I, and this our marriage bed, and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 13. Carpe Diem In To His Coy Mistress By Andrew Marvell The poem To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell, speaks to his coy mistress about how time is rapidly passing and he wishes her to reciprocate his feelings along with sexual desires. In this poem I feel like Marvell is also talking to the reader and encouraging them to act upon their desires. Ultimately live life to the fullest because time is running out. This poem is all about Carpe Diem with a satirical aspect on love. Essentially Marvell is trying to get this mistress to sleep with him. He wants her to abandon her false modesty and give in to his requests, so that all his problems can be fixed with sex. In lines 1–20 Marvell starts out talking about how ideally, he would spend eternity loving her before having sex with her. Verbs like sit, think, and walk are associated with slowing down but they are used to show they have no time, "We would sit down, and think which way to walk, and pass our long love's day."(Marvell, "To His Coy Mistress," 3–4) So, he would love her, but they don't have time. There is an aspect of exaggeration via exoticism seen in Ganges vs Humbler. She is by the Ganges with rubies while he is by the Humbler complaining. I think this really hints at the reality of what he is trying to get at because "rubies" represent talismans that are supposed to preserve virginity (Mays, pg 765, footnote 7). There is a controlling aspect of the speaker where he then again states he would wait if there was the time. Throughout the stanza the passion grows and he ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14. Slick With Words By Andrew Marvell Slick With Words (Compare and Contrast Between the Poems To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell and To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time by Robert Herrick) There are always those people that you meet that just really know how to use their words. Everything that they say just kind of draws you in because it is so intriguing. Today we like to call these type of people "sweet talkers." More often than not these characters are known to be more so of the male gender rather than female. Often, these males are often using the sweet talking to the females trying to draw them in. Many poets from around the 1600's to the 1900's would write poems talking of these people. Sometimes it was to warn others of it, and other times it was actually to display ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... They aren't just looking at this in a way that it is for love by any means, both are doing that as something for fun. They both see it as a sport for them, as in something that they will do from time to time because it is enjoyable for them. In the poem To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time the speaker says, "The glorious lamp of heaven, the sun,/ The higher he's a–getting,/ The sooner will his race be run,/ And nearer he's to setting." (Page 510, Lines 5–8) Here it shows that in this poem it is something as a race against time for this to happen. They don't have much time, so the have to get it done quickly so that that the time doesn't pass. It is like a big race against time. In To His Coy Mistress, the speaker says, "...At every pore with instant fires,/ Now let us sport us while we may,/ And now, like amorous birds of prey..." (Page 508, Lines 36 –38) This speaker literally says it directly in the lines, he says let's sport as in it is totally a game. They do this for fun, as in there is some sort of goal that they achieve in doing this as a sport ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 15. The Virgins By Robert Herrick And His Coy Mistress By... "To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time" by Robert Herrick and "To His Coy Mistress" by Andrew Marvell, are two different, yet similar poems. While both are presented in Carpe Diem form, each poem approaches seizing the day in alternative ways. Herrick's poem is a caution to young, virgin women that they should make the most of the moment, to find love now and not wait. Marvell's poem is directly addressing a specific person, and slowly seducing them. Eventually declaring that they should act immediately on their urges. These two poems have similar themes, but the one constant throughout, is time. The speakers use imagery and metaphors to convey the effects of time and the transient prime of youth. Herrick's poem is crafted in four stanzas using a rhyming scheme of ABAB, and is written in four quatrains. Beginning in his first stanza, the speaker mentions of assembling young women and telling them to grab life and live now. Herrick writes, "Gather ye rosebuds while ye may / Old time is still a flying / And this same flower that smiles today / Tomorrow will be dying" (lines 1–4). The speaker uses the images of rosebuds to symbolize youth and beauty. Once the flower peaks and blooms, its beauty will fade. So, too, will the beauty of women as they grow older. Furthermore, in the second stanza, the speaker sets the tone of the poem by writing, "The glorious lamp of heaven, the sun / The high he's a–getting / The sooner will his race be run / And nearer he's to setting" (5–8). The ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16. Poem Analysis Of To His Coy Mistress By Andrew Marvell To his Coy Mistress" by Andrew Marvell, he revealed the endeavors of a man towards demanding his sweetheart's warmth and declines of the unknown mistress to lay down with the honorable man being referred to, and the refined man's reaction is to disclose to her that, if had he enough time, he could spend whole hundreds of years respecting her excellence and her beauty; be that as it may, human life is short and tomorrow is not guarantee he doesn't have this time, thus they ought to appreciate each other now while regardless they can, as nobody in death can grasp or feel delight. In his tones of adoration and slavishness reflect how the suiter guarantees that if the time stopped he would passionately worship each component of his coy mistress, however since time wait for no man he utilizes this guarantees to lure in his fancy woman to make love with him. The poem is written in the form of a love poem using the traditional love elegy format also known as 'carpe diem' and is divided into three stanzas or poetic paragraphs. It's spoken by a nameless man, who doesn't reveal any physical or biographical details about himself, to a nameless woman, who is also anonymous. The beauty of the language and the overwhelming focus on the woman's beauty, the respect shown therein, makes the poem quite progressive and intriguing. The man aims not only to smooth talk but also to impress her. To confront the concept of time, he uses biblical references to mark the permanent nature of reality. By using a story out of the Old Testament the image of the great flood that purged the earth as a start point and then used the image that Armageddon will ultimately occur at the conversion of the Jews as an end point, the man tries to show the vastness of predicted human existence. At the same time however he subtly hints toward the second more nihilistic section of the poem. This imagery it is interesting in two respects; first it suggests that physical human life has been ended by God and will be ended by him again. Thus, providing a backdrop for the speaker's argument that in reality life is temperamental and therefore procreation should not be delayed at the expense of morality. The image is interesting in a second way as it may be ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 17. To His Coy Mistress To his Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell is about a man's lust for a woman. The narrator uses terms like coy to describe his mistress. He also describes sex by using the word ball. The narrator also compares their love to a vegetable that is steadily growing. The narrator uses words wisely in his appeal to his lover. The narrator is trying to rush her into making a decision about loving him. The narrator called his love interest "coy" because she wouldn't commit to him. The definition of coy is "affectedly and often flirtatiously shy or modest," the narrator seems to be growing tired of the woman not committing to him. The narrator is trying to tell the woman that he will love her forever hoping that it will make her fall for him once and for all, "My vegetable love should grow Vaster than empires, and more slow"(Marvell). The narrator is lusting for this woman and will stop at nothing until she is his. The narrator wants his love with his mistress to grow steadily until it reaches its climax. The narrator is willing to spend time with his mistress while falling deeper and deeper in love. The narrator compares his love to a vegetable because vegetables grow slowly and steadily just like his love. But there is one downfall to his statement, vegetables only grow seasonally and once they hit... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The narrator wants to have sex with his "coy mistress." The use of words like ball and strength likens sex to a game. The narrator thinks of sex as a wonderful game of pleasure. The narrator also wants his mistress to bring their hardships from their everyday lives to the bedroom. The narrator went from asking his love interest for her commitment to their relationship to a passionate request for ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18. Comparing Beggar Woman by William King and To His Coy... Comparing Beggar Woman by William King and To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell 'Beggar Woman'(William King) and 'To His Coy Mistress'(Andrew Marvell) are two poems written in the 17th century when society was very different to how it is today: women had no status, rights, or independence. All aspects of society were male dominated, they ruled, and so all laws and acts were in the favour of males. The poems are great examples of how society was when they were written, they also mirror the roles each gender played in the various aspect of life, the males active and controlling, the women passive, and they had to be compliant. At the beginning of this poem, there is a description of a gentleman out hunting, which is an... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... When the man first exchanges with the woman he uses a 'speak when you're spoken to'. Then when they walk into the woods the man stays on the horse while the woman is made to walk by his side, still wearing the baby. I do not believe it crosses the mind of the gentleman to offer the woman some help with her burden, even though it is slowing him from getting what he wants, he will wait, for principal: he must not be seen to assist, or sympathise with the lower classes in anyway, even when not in public. It probably also makes him feel big, and he thinks, makes her feel as if he's in control, a show of supposed power. Conversation which then follows is suggestive of the woman's profession. "'Sitting' says she 's' not usual in my trade'" this, I believe is a sort of innuendo 'Let's be honest, I'm usually on my back'. The baby in the poem is described as a 'burthen' on her, aside from the physical aspect, I believe because she has neither the income nor the lifestyle to bring up the child in any kind of security. The Beggar Woman tricks the man into taking the baby by making every excuse so as to force him to take the baby, if he wants sex; however she does this not particularly skillfully but the man is under the illusion he is acting of his own free will. Out of desperation, he says "'Were the child tied to me, d'ye think 'twould do?'" this is the answer the woman has been ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 19. To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell and Our Love Now by... To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell and Our Love Now by Martyn Lowery both see men trying to use methods of persuasion to get what they want. How successful are they? I have recently studied 'To His Coy Mistress' by Andrew Marvell, written in the 17th Century and 'Our Love Now' by Martyn Lowery, written in the 19th century. Attitudes tolove have changed a lot since the 17th Century. When 'To His Coy Mistress' was written, men were in charge of the relationship. It would take a lot longer for this relationship to progress than it would today. The man would court the woman for months before anything progressed. He would write her letters and poems, and then eventually, if he loved her, he would ask her to marry him. They... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... but she says 'There is always a scar..' implying the wound in their relationship is too deep to mend fully. In this poem it seems like she has the final word. It is a modern poem about love. Marvell uses different methods of persuasions. He bombards her as the poem is very long and has no stanzas, so she has to keep reading and listening to his arguments. He has also divided the poem into three sections. The first section is about him romancing and flattering her. He shows his love for her by using time, place and exaggeration. 'Had we but world enough, and time / This coyness, lady, were no crime.' shows Marvell using time. He is telling the woman that if they had all the time in the world her shyness would not matter. 'They by the Indian Ganges' side / Should'st rubies find: I by the tide / Of Humber would complain.' This shows Marvell using place and distance to persuade her. He tells her that she could sit by the Indian Ganges, and he would sit by the Humber in England and wish for her. He then goes on to say, that if she wishes; she can keep him at arms length, and that his feelings will wait until she is ready. This makes her feel that he is not pressuring her in to anything she does not want to do. Marvell uses a lot of exaggeration, for example 'I would / Love you ten years before the flood..' He is referring to the bible, making him seem religious and that he supports the religious beliefs of sex after marriage, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20. Emphasizing The True Meaning Of Poems By Andrew Marvell... Kinsey Jordan Mrs. Russler English Honors I February 4, 2015 "Emphasizing the True Meaning of Poems" Around the seventeenth century the poets Andrew Marvell and John Donne expressed their feelings through poetry. Both John Donne, born in 1572 and Andrew Marvell, born in 1621 inEngland, are known for their ideas of metaphysical poetry. Metaphysical poetry is a persuasive poem that uses a conceit. It focuses on imagery, paradoxes, arguments, philosophy and religion.Andrew Marvell's "To His Coy Mistress" and John Donne's "A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning," focus on the theme of love, which was trending at that time. Although both poems justify the importance and essence of love, the tone differs in each poem making them distant from each other. The figurative language also makes the two poems different. However, they both focus on the idea of Carpe Diem, enjoying the moment and not worrying about the future. Through comparing these poems, the differences and similarities result in the true understanding and effectiveness of the poems. In "To His Coy Mistress," Andrew Marvell does not perceive true, fervent love, but rather that time and beauty will not last. The tone of this poem is sad, but the author seems to make it happier. There is an example shown in the first stanza; "Had we but world enough and time...we would sit down, and think which way to walk, and pass our long love's day." (1–4) Marvell appears to be straying from the idea of Carpe Diem; stating that if ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 21. Love in HJohn DonneВґs A Valediction Forbidding Mourning... Some of the most analyzed aspects of emotion and the life, by literary greats throughout the past several centuries, have been the issue of death and the physical, spiritual, and emotional attachments that can be defined as love. Even though writers of prose and poetry have long belabored these two specific areas of discussion, the depth and diversity in approach is something that can only be described with regards to the differential between personalities and the world you of the author in question. Accordingly, the following analysis will be concentric upon discussing and analyzing the approach and understanding of love that two specific poets exhibit within their respective work. The first of these poets that will be analyzed is John ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Instead, the author focuses a great deal of energy on examining the fact that even though the time to act is now and an urgency, tension, and immediacy defines the love and passion that the subject has for the Mistress, a deeper and more profound realization of what defines love and the eternity of passion and interest that the subject could direct for this Mistress if only she opened her heart and her body to the subject is reflected in a variety of different ways. For instance, after the exhortation to stop dismissing the advances of the suitor, Marvell references the fact that in so doing the woman would be able to experience love as she had never before seen it. Ultimately, what is presented to the reader is an argument for the immediacy, passion, and necessity to experience love in the moment. However, due to the fact that a woman would likely find the emotion of immediacy and the need to seize the day as alarming and definitive of a passing craze or crush, the poetry goes to great lengths to prove that the nature of the emotions that are being defined are not short–lived but will instead last for far longer than life itself is able to exist. By means of contrast, John ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22. Comparing To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell and Sonnet... Comparing To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell and Sonnet 138 by William Shakespeare I am comparing 'To His Coy Mistress' by Andrew Marvell (1640) and 'Sonnet 138' by William Shakespeare (1590). The similarities between both poems are that they both use a certain amount of syllables throughout each poem. 'To His Coy Mistress' uses 8 syllables per line, and 'Sonnet 138' uses 10 syllables per line. Another obvious similarity is that they both end with a couplet. They both also tell a story. The differences in the poems are that 'To His Coy Mistress' is arguing why they should get on with life, and Carpe diem whereas 'Sonnet 138' is telling us about how he doesn't trust her, yet he loves her. They ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The first stage is saying if we had enough time, I could spend all the ages of this world loving you and flattering you until you were content. I would spend all my life giving you everything you deserve and you could be in one place and me in another, but it wouldn't matter as time will never run out and we will always be in love. Marvell then goes on to say that he would have loved her before God sent the flood and that she could refuse him forever if that was what she wanted. 'And you should, if you please, refuse Till the conversion of the Jews' This quote shows that she could say no to him for as long as she wanted, even until all the Jews were converted to be a Roman Catholic. At the time this seemed very unlikely, as Jews were being persecuted for their beliefs and refused to change their religion. Marvell then tells his lady that his love for her would grow and grow without ever dying out. 'My vegetable love should grow Vaster than empires, and more slow' ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– In this line 'My vegetable love' is a double entendre, because he is talking about himself but he is also saying that their love would develop naturally and grow to be bigger than the empire, but, it would be taken nice and slowly. In the next few lines he starts to praise her body by starting at the top. He praises her eyes and her forehead, as it was
  • 23. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24. Poem Analysis On His Coy Mistress By Andrew Marvell Andrew Marvell wrote a unique love poem in "To His Coy Mistress," as this poem expresses far more than one might expect or even perceive upon the first reading. Enveloped in this ode to a cherished muse are expressions of the "carpe diem" philosophy, laments about the impending doom of death, and hopes to transcend contemporary abilities to live forever in the love of another. While Marvell's primary purpose in writing this piece may have been to woo a young maiden, he made a far more significant contribution to the era's literary culture in the process. Marvell most directly addressed "To His Coy Mistress" to a woman he intended to court, as he spends a majority of the piece lamenting that he didn 't have time sufficient to praise her features. In the opening stanza, Marvell states that, "Had we but world enough, and time.... An hundred years should go yo praise.... An age at least to every part, / And the last age should show your heart" (Marvell 1–18). While Marvell ones not directly praise or describe his muse in any way, he does emphasize how extraordinarily praiseworthy she be, and this idea forms the basis for the philosophical wonderings and realizations that comprised the following stanzas. Thus, Marvell addressed his poem at a potential lover for the purpose of courting her on an unknown occasion, but the real significance of the poem lies in the later ideas he presented to fulfill this purpose. In his second stanza, Marvell takes a drastic turn from the romantic ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 25. Comparing the Attitudes Towards Love and Relationships in... Comparing the Attitudes Towards Love and Relationships in The Beggar Woman by William King and To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell In this essay I will be comparing two poems, The Beggar Woman and To His Coy Mistress. I will be looking at how the themes of love and relationships are dealt with. I will also be looking at the historical context of the poems. Firstly in The Beggar Woman, written around 1663 to 1712, by William King. The story within the poem is about a gentleman who, whilst he is out hunting, wants to do another kind of 'sport', i.e. looking for a woman to have sex with. He found a woman who was a beggar. He asked her if she wanted to have sex in the woods, and, to his delight, she ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... "A gentleman in hunting rode astray, More out of choice than that he lost his way: He let his company the hare pursue, For he himself had other game in view:" This quote shows that he was chasing a woman and that he is not looking for anything more than sex. He just wants a bit of fun like any sport would give him. When reading the poems they create images of what is happening are created. In The Beggar Woman, William King does not use any similes or metaphors. I think this is because he needs to keep things simple for his audience. When he wrote it, he relied on his descriptive words to create a mental picture for the reader. For example, "mounts the infant with a gentle toss upon her generous friend, and like a cross, the sheet she with a dextrous motion winds" and "her cheeks were fresh and linen clean." When reading this line, you can imagine her cheeks; they are smooth, rosy, red, beaming cheeks. Both these quotes make you 'see' an image created by his cleverly written words. In To His Coy Mistress,Andrew Marvell does use metaphors and similes because he thinks the audience expects them as they are upper class. Some examples of the imagery created by metaphors and similes are "vegetable love," which is a metaphor; "times' winged chariot" and "his slow chapped
  • 26. power", which are personification; "like morning dew" and "like ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 27. To His Coy Mistress By Andrew Marvell To the Virgins, To Make Much of Time by Robert Herrick, and To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell, are two poems that are very similar but they have a very different way of portraying their meanings of love, sex, and virginity. In the beginning of the poem To the Virgins, To Make Much of Time, Herrick states, " gather ye rosebuds, while ye may" to symbolize the idea that you should take advantage of your opportunities while you still can, because time doesn't last forever. He basically is saying that you should have sex when you're younger, when the time is the best. Rather than waiting until you're older, because then it is not the same. He justifies that idea by using the metaphor, " when youth and blood are warmer". By the end of the poem... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In Marvell's poem he seems to be speaking to one specific women whom he seeks to have sex with. In Herrick's poem he is addressing all young women or virgins in general to embrace their sexuality. Since Herrick was a priest, he encourages women to marry before it is too late and in Marvell's poem he speaks nothing of marriage. The tone of the stories are not quite the same either. In Herrick's poem he speaks with a more relaxed and casual tone compared to Marvell's poem, where he speaks with more intensity and seriousness. In my opinion I think that these two authors each use a way of persuasive and depending who you are as a women it is going to affect you differently. Also I think that times have really changed since these poems have been written and I don't think that men are quite as aggressive with their interest in women or getting through the " iron gates" . As you can see these poems are very similar by subject. Though they are also different in how they interpret their views on time, love, and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28. Herick Vs Marvel Out of all of the stories and poems in the history of the world, many of them will have similarities and differences. Merriman conveys, "If human life were not limited by space and time, the beloved's coyness would not harm the lover and the beloved. They would sit and plan how to pass their long time." The poem "To His Coy Mistress" by Andrew Marvell is all about a man trying to convince a woman to do something she doesn't really want to do. The poem "To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time" by Robert Herrick is about a man talking to many woman not to die without living. In the poems "To His Coy Mistress" by Andrew Marvell and "To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time" by Robert Herrick there are many comparison to be made. One comparison to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Larson explains about "To His Coy Mistress, "Marvell makes use of allusion, metaphor, and grand imagery in order to convey a mood of majestic endurance and innovatively explicate the carpe diem motif." Marvell is telling his love to seize the day that is at hand and not wait for another one. Herrick also believes that all of the virgins should seize the day that is at hand. He claims in line 9, "That age is best which is the first." Life is better when you are young, so do things while it ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 29. To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell Andrew Marvell's poem, "To His Coy Mistress" is an equally beautiful and provocative piece of writing. Written in iambic form as a three–part proposition addressed to the "coy mistress," the poem is permeated with literary devices such as tone, alliteration, imagery, hyperbole, as well as similes and metaphors. Marvell's speaker acknowledges the idea that mortality is of little to no value after death. Through the speaker, Marvell is suggesting that one can avoid the regrets of not participating in the adventurous aspects of life by seizing the day, thus supporting the Carpe Diem philosophy. The three–part proposition can be identified through the change of the poem's tone as well as the change of pace. The first argument has a sly and devious tone. "Had we but world enough, and time, This coyness, lady, were no crime." (lines 1–2). The use of the punctuations, the commas and the period, hinders the pace of the poem. In doing so, it shows the insignificance of time at that moment. The insignificance of time at the moment is further emphasized when the speaker tells his mistress that they "would sit down, and think which way, To walk, and pass [their] long love's day" (lines 3–4). The use of alliteration creates a carefree tone, as if the speaker was daydreaming and sighing as he was trying to woo his mistress. Marvell uses delicate and sublime imagery to flatter the mistress with a seemingly disingenuous exaggeration of her physical beauty. Because of the unrealistic use ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30. Metaphysical Poems Metaphysical Poets John Donne and Andrew Marvell were considered metaphysical poets based on their use of conceit and wit in depicting similar situations through different metaphors. They would use original analogies to create fitting and insightful comparisons, usually to persuade. John Donne and Andrew Marvell have been called metaphysical poets. This is a," name given to a group of English lyric poets of the 17th century" (Metaphysical poets)" The term metaphysical poets came to be used almost one hundred years after the death of the two poets. John Donne died John Donne in1631 and Andrew Marvell died in 1678. The term later became known as 'metaphysical poetry,' (which was referred to by contemporaries, as 'strong lived'. The ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In the second stanza, the speaker argues for the life of the flea, as his lady has moved to kill it. Almost desperate, the speaker describes the flea as holy. "This flea is you and I, and this/Our marriage bed, and marriage temple is" (lines 12–13). He fails to save the flea, as reflected, "[p]urpled thy nail in blood of innocence?" She killed the flea and the speaker's last chance of having relations with her. The speaker at this point realizes that his chance to have sex with this lady is gone. The speaker realized her killing the flea was his final rejection. In "To His Coy Mistress," the speaker is attempting to use a Carpe Diem method to persuade the young lady to make love to him. The speaker attempts to persuade the lady with seize the day. The speaker continues to tell the woman about how short time is, and how they must hurry because no one ever knows how much time is left. This is evident in by how the poem begins, "Had we but world enough, and time,"(page 527) As the poem starts to speed up you realize the speaker is becoming almost desperate. His promises and analogies become so farfetched."... I would Love you ten years before the flood" (line 8). Marvell uses symbolism, comparisons and metaphors to show the speaker as this passionate lover and the lady would be foolish not to give in to his request. Clearly the two speakers are Metaphysical poets. They have gone in two different directions to try to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 31. The Seduction Eileen McAuley To His Coy Mistress Andrew... The Seduction Eileen McAuley To His Coy Mistress Andrew Marvell Eileen McAuley's The Seduction is set against the bleak surroundings of Merseyside. 'The Seduction' Eileen McAuley 'To His Coy Mistress' Andrew Marvell Eileen McAuley's 'The Seduction' is set against the bleak surroundings of Merseyside. The purpose of the story is to show a teenage girl's predicament after getting drunk at a party. The poet contrasts the girl's ideas of love and sex with reality. This is done effectively by using techniques such as similes and alliteration. The poem shows how young teenage girls can be easily seduced under the influence of alcohol. 'The Seduction' also shows how young girls can be manipulated by the media. McAuley ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This line shows us how she has lost her innocence and is no longer pure. Another event that is linked to innocence is when the girl rips up all her magazines 'until they were just bright paper, like confetti strewn on the carpet'. Confetti is something that is usually used in weddings. McAuley cleverly uses the word 'confetti' to show the destruction of the girls' innocence purity and romantic illusions. There are many contrasts in the poem 'The Seduction'. A major contrast is the difference between the girl's past views on romance and her future. The girl views of romance are naive before her seduction. 'She stifled a giggle, reminder of numerous stories from teenage magazines'. By using the word 'giggle' McAuley shows that girls' views are childish. McAuley also shows that the girl is very keen on the teenage magazines by using the word 'numerous'. This is because it shows that the girl has paid close attention to the magazines, also that she possibly collects them because she has read many of them. McAuley contrasts the girl's naive views with the girls' imminent future. McAuley presents the future of the girl as bleak by revealing what the girl will miss. 'Where you walk hand' in hand in an acne'd wonderland'. This line describes childhood and teenage life. It shows how the girl is going to miss important parts of her childhood.
  • 32. Another poem concerned with sexual attraction is Andrew Marvell's 'To His Coy Mistress ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 33. A Comparison of †To His Coy Mistress’ by Andrew Marvell... A Comparison of 'To His Coy Mistress' by Andrew Marvell and 'To His Mistress Going to Bed' by John Donne 'To His Coy Mistress' and 'To His Mistress Going to Bed' are both poems about men seducing women. They centre around sex rather than love or romance. Sixteenth and seventeenth century attitudes to love and relationships were much stricter going as far as wealthy people asking their perspective lovers to court them via love poem or letter. Though this has changed from the sixteenth and seventeenth century to today, little else has. It is still most common for a man to initiate a relationship, and men are still perceived as the most sex obsessed. However, even though we are led to believe that their ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This suggests that he is confident that she wants to have sex with him but she is just playing hard to get, enjoying the chase! He seems to think that his lover is naГЇve because he uses false flattery and promises her all that she wants, tells her everything that she wants to hear. He tells her "Two hundred to adore each breast: But thirty thousand to the rest". Thus is an example of both, he is saying that this is what she is worth and this is the value she will have so long a she sleeps with him. He begins trying to persuade her with luxurious imagery (like the Indian Ganges and rubies). He then progresses on to scare tactics, telling her that she soon will be dead so she must make the most of it whilst she still can! Although he doesn't use those specific words he makes his meaning pretty obvious with phrases like, "the graves a fine and private place, But none, I think do there embrace". However in 'To His Mistress Going to Bed' there is no persuasion just description. This couple seem to already be established and John Donne's lover does not require persuasion, as said earlier she is willing. Whereas in Andrew Marvell's poem he uses false flattery telling her all she wants to hear. Donne is genuine he loves his mistress and thinks of sex as a part of their relationship. When he does flatter her, it's less flattery, more complements, his words are more realistic, he says things ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34. Analysis Of Bermudas By Andrew Marvell The poem "Bermudas" is written by Andrew Marvell in seventeenth century celebrating the establishment of a new colony in the island called Bermuda. This poem is inspired Marvell wrote the poem in couplets of rhyming iambic tetrameter. Marvell structured the poem as a song of praise, sung by the group of English colonists as they arrive to the islands by boat. The sonnet starts with the storyteller presenting the scene on the sea off the "remote Bermudas", where a gathering of English settlers in a "small boat" are singing. Marvell compares the Bermuda islands to a bigger watercraft, as they "ride in the ocean 's chest unespied." He quickly exhibits the parallel picture of the pilgrims in their own "small boat" and strikes a tone of harmony ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... As a poet, he began writing at a young age though his initial poems that were published. while he was still in college, were in Greek and Latin. It is ironical that much of his sarcastic political satires were not published during his lifetime, and he became recognized as a major poet only after his death. The life of this enigmatic poet has always fascinated historians due to the scarcity of information about his personal life. Nature and the title of the poem: As we see the title of the very poetry we can easily understand it is chosen with the context. Bermuda is an island located in the Atlantic ocean. As it is written at the title about an island it is so obvious that natural details would be there. And so the poet deals with the matter so effectively. Textual reference of natural details: "That led us through the watery maze" The oceans around the Bermuda island are stormy and hazardous to explore. The natural obstacle face by the people who wanted to come there is expressed by the beautiful phrase watery maze. Going through the maze is very difficult and creates anxiety. After reaching destination through this path relief comes in mind and the joy cannot be explained in words. Comparing to that situation after the hazardous, fearful way through the rough ocean the pilgrims of England were so happy to find the island and praising god for leading them to this bountiful land. "He gave us this eternal spring" ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 35. "To His Coy Mistress" "To His Coy Mistress" Andrew Marvell's "To His Coy Mistress is a sieze the moment kind of poem in which an anonomyous young man tries to woo the hand of his mistress. This kind of poem gives the reader the idea that time is not only precious, but scarce. The speaker uses many smooth tatics to persuade the young girl, starting with compliments and ending with a more forceful, morbid appraoch. "To His Coy Mistress" is not only witty but imgagistic, full of wordplay, and percieved differently by both males and females. Andrew Marvell was born March 31st, 1621 in yorkshire, England. Becasue he was the son of an Anglican preist, Marvell grew up in an extremely Godly Home. He got his prmary education at Hull Grammar school. At only the age of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... By saying "Of Humber would complain. I would/ love you ten years before the flood," ("Andrew Marvell" 276) he is letting his mistress know that he adores her. Starting out it seems like the speaker is the only one in love, but by the end of the poem it is clear that she is equally as passionate as he. Finally there is beauty. The speaker seduces her by validating her conciet. He describes ever way she is beautiful in detail. This poem is disguised as a syllogism, a three part argument with a final concusion. It is concluded that the speakers overall reasoning is illogical. Although, Marvell's poem is described as "sophisticated, evocative, and emotionally moving," ("Andrew Marvell" 280) Recent criticisms say that a female reader could read this poem and look at it different than a male. The reader, as a female, may percieve it as crude and vulgur. It could be seens as smutt. Where as a male would see it as a smooth, masculine approach to woo a woman. In the beginning of the poem, the female reader could identify the tone of the passage as passionate, but later goes into a more forceful tone. A man reading the poem would pick up a more masculine appeal to love (Kelly 283). Some believe that the text of the poem is aimed to attempt the reader, particularly the male population, in a different way to seduce a woman. (Pittock) The second criticism found was about imagery. Marvell's poem is seen differently by every person. Poets use imagery so one ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36. Carpe Diem In Andrew Marvell's Poem To His Coy Mistress Andrew Marvell's poem "To His Coy Mistress," originally published in 1681, encompasses the Carpe Diem ideology through a dramatic monologue in which the narrator speaks to his "coy mistress." While the poem uses literary devices to illustrate the recurring theme outlining time's limitations and that the narrator and his mistress need to have sex immediately, it also contrasts with the Petrarchan standard of the idealized woman. Within the first 24 lines of the poem, Marvell uses diction, literary devices such as the erotic blazon and enjambment, and iambic tetrameter rhythm to prove that people cannot control time, time goes on and will eventually end, and women should refrain from reluctance and have sex with men while they still can. Marvell introduces his main theme that time is constantly plunging forward, as well as the narrator's irritation with his mistress's hesitancy, within the first few lines of the poem. Introducing his impatience with his mistress, the narrator declares, "Had we but world enough, and time, / This coyness, lady, were no crime" (1–2). These lines encompass the narrator's "Carpe Diem", seize the day, attitude while also proving his exasperation with his mistress, who would rather be cautious and not have sex with him at this moment in the poem. Interestingly, Marvell chose to use "coyness" instead of "hesitancy". Using a sharper, more pungent term like coyness, shows the narrator's discontent with his mistress's tentativeness, making the reader think the mistress is the one causing this problem rather than the narrator. Additionally, the iambic tetrameter rhythm that persists throughout the poem reiterates that time maintains its constant rhythm. Continuing his onslaught that time is running out, the narrator discloses that he "would / Love you ten years before the Flood, / And you should if you please refuse / Till the conversion of the Jews" (7–10). By proposing exaggerated declarations of love to his mistress, the narrator is showing her how ridiculous her actions are in their short amount of time left together. Additionally, he is admitting that if he had an eternity to prove his love to her, he would use it. Following these declarations, the narrator goes on to share how he ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 37. The Poet's Treatment of Seduction in To His Coy Mistress... The Poet's Treatment of Seduction in To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell and The Passionate Shepherd To His Love by Christopher Marlowe Andrew Marvell the writer of 'To His Coy Mistress' was an English poet and satirist. He was born in Winestead, Yorkshire, and went to Hull Grammar School and the University of Cambridge. He was once a member of parliament in 1659. It was possible that he got married to Mary Palmer but it remains in doubt. Other well–known and much–anthologised poems he wrote are: 'The Garden', 'The Definition of Love', and 'Bermudas'. Christopher Marlowe was around just under thirty years before Andrew Marvell. Marlowe was also an English poet and also a playwright. He was ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The man seems to get a bit violent by the end of the poem. The poem I am comparing with 'To His Coy Mistress' is 'The Passionate Shepherd To His Love' by Christopher Marlowe. This poem is about a shepherd who is trying to convince his love to come live with him. My first impressions of this poem is that the shepherd cares a lot for his love and only wants to be with her, so he is going out of his way – offering her lots of precious gifts – to try and convince her to live with him. In the poem 'To His Coy Mistress' the man tries to seduce his mistress by saying things like being shy is a crime, 'This coyness, lady, were no crime.' She losing her looks and she's not getting any prettier, 'Thy beauty shall no more be found;' and then resorts to saying if she doesn't lose her virginity soon, she will die a virgin and the worms will take her virginity from her in her coffin, '…worms shall try that long served virginity:' – this comes across as a bit of a threat, which indicates he is getting impatient and violent. In the poem 'The Passionate Shepherd to His Love' Christopher Marlowe treats seduction in a completely different way than Andrew Marvell does in 'To His Coy Mistress'. In 'The Passionate Shepherd to His Love' the shepherd tries to seduce his love by offering to make her many wonderful things, 'Will I make thee
  • 38. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 39. A Comparison of †To His Coy Mistress’ by Andrew Marvell... A Comparison of 'To His Coy Mistress' by Andrew Marvell and 'Cousin Kate' by Christina Rossetti Andrew Marvell (1621 –1678) was a British writer. He was a poet during the Renaissance period. He was one of the metaphysical poets, known for his works like 'To His Coy Mistress'. He was an assistant to John Milton and a Member of Parliament. Christina Rossetti (1830–1894) was a British writer. She was one of the greatest Victorian poets. She lived a reclusive life and was educated at home. She was part of the Pre–Raphaelite movement in the Victorian Period. She had a very strong Christian Faith and this was shown several times in some of her poems. To His Coy Mistress is a lyrical and metaphysical... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Cousin Kate only loves the lord because of his money that is what the cottage maiden tells the audience. It is a poem about betrayal. The cottage maiden feels betrayed by her cousin and tells the audience that if it had been the other way round the cottage maiden would not have gone off with the lord but would have refused his proposal. She says "I would have refused his proposal and spit into his face." Christina Rossetti is trying to portray the cottage maiden as a bitter and angry woman. I think that the cottage maiden didn't really have a good relationship with her cousin because if she did then her cousin, Kate, wouldn't have betrayed her. Also the relationship between her and the Lord couldn't have been love or he wouldn't have left her. I think their relationship was material and superficial. I think the serious message in this poem is that you should be more cautious and aware of the people around you. You should not make yourself vulnerable to anyone. If something is too good to be true you should keep well clear of it. For example she says "Why did a great Lord find me out, And praise my flaxen hair?" The cottage maiden is questioning herself. She is confused but also irritated at the same time. She doesn't understand why a man of such high stand in society with great wealth would pick her, a cottage maiden that lives in poverty. From this the audience can ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40. To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell Essay To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell It is a metaphysical poem, which means its lyric contains many striking images, is very intense and uses strong metaphors. It is concerned with a young man who is trying to persuade a young woman to have sex with him by charming and rushing her into it because he only has one thing on his mind. In the poem he uses three different arguments, flattery, fear and passion to persuade her to his point of view. In the first section Andrew Marvell uses flattery, he does this by telling her that if he had all the time in the world he would use it by telling her how beautiful she is and stare into her eyes but he doesn't have this time and he knows this so he's using his charm and... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... My vegetable love should grow Vaster than empires, and more slow;' The language in the first stanza uses assonance such as 'And the last age should show your heart' He also uses alliteration such as: 'We would sit down and think which way' and 'An age at least to every part' He uses this in the poem to give it rhythm to engage the reader and make it easier for the reader to get a flow to the lyrical rhythm of the poem. At the very beginning of the poem he uses the word crime straight the way to make her feel guilty and also that she kind of owes him something, 'Had we but world enough, and time This coy Lady, were no crime' He uses a lot of exaggeration to project how much he really 'wants' her, to make her feel flattered, by telling her all the time he would spend on her and all the love he would give her and then telling her all of what's he's told her is the least he would do, 'Nor would I love at lower rate' That quote could also be perceived as metaphorically paying for what he wants. The second stanza based on fear and persuading her by using strong and powerful images almost scares her into having sex with him. He uses the most powerful imagery of destruction, war, 'Time's winged chariot ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 41. Comparing Shakespeare's Sonnet 18 with To his Coy... Comparing Shakespeare's Sonnet 18 with To his Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell I will be comparing two poems, 'Shall I Compare Thee...?' with 'To His Coy Mistress', I will examine the purposes of each poem and the techniques used by the two poets to convey ideas and to achieve purposes. Sonnet 18 was written by William's Shakespeare between 1564 and 1616. The poem 'To his Coy Mistress' was written by Andrew Marvell. The Purposes of the two poems are different, the purpose of Sonnet 18 is for Shakespeare to write this poem for a girl or woman he likes, to praise her by comparing her to wonderful things in life, such a Summer, also to grant her immortality through lines of the poem; meaning as long as the poem will exist and be... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Marvell does this to put her under pressure to have sex with him; this is a fear tactic and a persuasive technique. He also associates the passing of time with her beauty fading, to make her more self conscious and see that she should have sex with him beauty fades and she becomes ugly, then nobody will have sex with her. He uses fear tactics throughout the poem to persuade her to have sex with him; this affects the mood of the poem making it more threatening and tenser. For example; 'To talk and pass our long love's day' In line 11, Marvell talks about sex using phallic imagery when saying 'vegetable love', this makes it humorous which will affect the mood making it less tense and relaxing. Marvell uses many different tactics, such as exaggeration, by comparing her to the Indian Ganges; 'Thou by the Indian Ganges' side' This affects the mood of the poem making it flattery, imagery such as this will flatter the girl and persuade her to have sex with him, and this establishes that this technique is persuasive. Marvell is Romantic in the poem in line 19; 'For, lady, you deserve this state' This makes this part of the poem calm and sensitive, which contrasts to the following verses of the poem as they are threatening and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 42. Andrew Marvell, “to His Coy Mistress” Andrew Marvell, "To His Coy Mistress" In 'To His Coy Mistress' the speaker carefully constructs a subtle and logical argument as to why his addressee should sexually unite with him. The speaker attempts this proposition through finesse in manipulating reason, form and imagery. The reasoning employed would be familiar to a reader educated in Renaissance England, as it is reminiscent of classical philosophical logic, entailing a statement, a counter–statement and a resolution. In line with this method Marvell's speaker codes his argument in classical imagery. To understand this argument I will be approaching the poem in three clearly defined sections, which are denoted in the poem with indented lines. The first of these section... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The next section runs from lines 21 to 32, here the speaker moves away from the hypothetical to reality but retains the melodramatic language used in the previous section to sustain the tenacity of his points. Time here is portrayed as chasing the speaker as opposed to being something the speaker is in control of as in the end of the last section. This is done using the image of a 'winged chariot' (l.22), this has classical associations with Greek mythology which relates to his form of argument. The meter of the poem is restrictively regular, this structure emphasises the idea that time is constantly progressing; reflecting the speaker's argument. Space is no longer inhabited by images of movement and life like the rivers previously mentioned but instead: 'before us lie / Deserts of vast eternity' (ll. 23–4). The desert has strong connotations with deathliness, an issue that the speaker gruesomely develops upon and progresses within this section. The speaker implies on lines 26–7 that the only exploration of the mistress's body that will be undertaken will be by the worms that are decomposing her body if she remains in her coy state. This thought that her sexuality should not be wasted is elaborated upon with a crude pun on line 29: 'And your quaint honor turn to dust' which, as the Norton Anthology of Poetry explains in the footnote, is a play on the Middle English noun queynte which means female genitals. These images of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 43. Poetry by William King, Martyn Lowery, Andrew Marvell, Liz... Poetry by William King, Martyn Lowery, Andrew Marvell, Liz Lochhead, John Cooper Clarke and Elizabeth Jennings Introduction. The hearts and partners theme contains the following poems: 'The Beggar Woman' by William King (Pre 1900) 'Our Love Now' by Martyn Lowery 'To His Coy Mistress' byAndrew Marvell (Pre 1900) 'Rapunzstiltskin' by Liz Lochhead 'i wanna be yours' by John Cooper Clarke 'One Flesh' by Elizabeth Jennings As the title suggests, hearts and partners deals with love and relationships. In your exam you will be expected to make comparisons between the different poems and this lesson will help you to make the connections you need to do this. Poetic techniques The ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... 'To His Coy Mistress' is a passionate plea by a young man to his 'mistress' to go to bed with him. He uses flattery ('an hundred years should go to praise / thine eyes'), fear ('thy beauty shall no more be found') and enthusiasm ('Let us roll all our strength, and all / Our sweetness, up into one ball') to persuade her to give up her virginity. He is only concerned with moving his relationship on to the sexual stage and, apart from the pleasure this will bring, he has no thought of its consequences. The woman in 'The Beggar Woman' at first seems anything but reluctant to have sex with the gentleman she meets, but in fact she has a different agenda. She has a baby strapped to her back and by exploiting the gentleman's lust ('I should be loth / to come so far and disoblige you both') she is able to transfer it to him. She then leaves him with the child as a lesson in the consequences of casual sex. I trust the child to you with all my heart But, ere you get another, 'ten't amiss To try a year or two how you'll keep this. 'One Flesh' is a meditation by a child on her parents who are now too old for sex. They sleep in the same room but in separate beds and 'chastity faces
  • 44. them'. This seems natural to the daughter ('strangely apart, yet strangely close ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...