To His Coy Mistress Essay

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    The writer describes himself as a “holy grail [monk] that [has] hit the books too much”, suggesting he has obtained his mastery of language through intensive study. This double entendre, however, is also a reference to the infamous Monty Python and The Holy Grail procession scene, undermining the writer and likening English to a religion blindly followed by brain-dead

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    Love, Here Is My Hat

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    measures that this couple goes through to feel a flicker in their relationship. A lack of lust is a component of the relationship that is very clear the narrator. In a desperate attempt to create a glimmer of hope for their future, the narrator speaks his mind on the issue: “We’re

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    “The Wife of Bath’s Tale” by Geoffrey Chaucer and “The Flea” by John Donne; in both cases it is a means to an end: in the first the old woman wants to get “the thing that most of all Women desire” and in the second the lover seeks “How little which his lover (thou) deniest him (me)” and uses an allusion to marriage to achieve this. In “The Wife of Bath’s Tale” the old woman seems to ask the knight a naïve request; there is no hint that what she will ask of him is to marry her: “Swear me true

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    The Flea by John Donne, is a poem where the speaker is trying to convince his lover to have sex with him. The narrator describes the social context of them having sex, as compared to a flea, which does not help his plea for sex. So then, “what is love and what does it mean in today’s world? “The Flea”, written in 1633, is a poem of seduction lyrics using metaphors of a man courting a woman on the different aspects of their love. It consists of 3 stanzas with a rhyme scheme of 9 lines each ending

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    ” is intended to arouse the Lady’s appetites. The intricacies of the debate are manifold, but the essence of Comus’s argument is simply stated: that appetites are naturally licit and innocent when gratified. Having exhibited “all the pleasures” in his palace, Comus alleges that such plenitude or bounty was provided by Nature for

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    unhappiness. Firstly, the characterization of the speaker Prufrock shows how his indecisiveness links with his constant unhappiness. Early on in the poem, Prufrock says “And indeed

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    Carpe Diem

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    Diem” with the use of imagery within his poem. For example, in the second stanza the writer states, “But at my back I always hear Time’s winged chariot hurrying near” (Marvell 21-22) in the span of one couplet. In this instance, the writer uses visual and sound imagery to convey the message of the quick passage of time in relation to one’s life to his mistress. Later, in the third stanza the writer uses physical imagery, which completely and utterly conveys his theme of “Carpe Diem” when he states

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    comparison, in which a word or phrase ordinarily and primarily used for one thing is applied to another.” These three poems give examples of a metaphor in a poem to help develop a theme are “Crossing the Bar,” “I taste a liquor never brewed,” and “To his Coy Mistress.” The first poem that uses a metaphor to help develop a

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    of carpe diem, to seize the day. William Shakespeares, “Carpe Diem,” as well as Andrew Marvells, “To His Coy Mistress,” convey the fleeting romance in the renaissance era using traditional dramatic monologues in order to portray the purpose of carpe diem as a resolution in such dilemmas as well as motto towards life itself. In William Shakespeares, “Carpe Diem,” the speaker tries to persuade his beloved to take a leap of faith and fall in love. In the poem, the speaker states, “In delay there lies

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    ‘To His Coy Mistress’ Is a love poem by Andrew Marvel. The poem is ‘carpe diem’ which translates to seize the day, this means the poem does not take its time its blunt and straight to the point. The poem contains a thesis, antithesis and synthesis, the main argument points of the poem. The poem is split into three stanza’s which are used to persuade the woman to give up her virginity before her beauty dies. It is a conventional poem for its time in the 17th century. In the first stanza Marvel

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