Both (To His Coy Mistress) by Andrew Marvell published in 1682 and (The Flea) by John Donne published in are trying to convince a girl to lose their virginity to them. Each poem goes about it a different way though. Marvell is trying to do it through flattery, while Donne is trying to pressure her into it. The pace of Marvell’s poem changes at the second stanza, but Donne’s poem stays the same throughout. Their individual take on women also seems to differ from each other. In Donne’s poem you can
Love in The Flea and To his Coy Mistress Compare the ways John Donne in his poem The Flea and Andrew Marvell in his poem To his Coy Mistress present the theme of love. Donne and Marvell’s poems have both similarities and differences, as they both present the theme of love in an unconventional way and dwell on it superficially. This can be seen by the way in which both authors show their views on love, though are clearly just using them as attempts to seduce their mistresses, who are clearly
In the two poems “The Flea” and “To His Coy Mistress” Donne and Marvell make it very clear to readers that no matter the time period lust is always relevant. The only difference between the two poems is how men will attempt to persuade women into giving their virginity. During both poems it is made clear that a woman giving her virginity before marriage is one of the worse things possible. In “The Flea” Donne writes: “Thou know’st that this cannot be said a sin, or shame, or loss of maidenhead
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
In Andrew Marvell’s “To His Coy Mistress,” figurative language functions to add a poetic hue to to the author’s words that will, in his view, entice his mistress into having sexual relations with him. The poem is a barrage of innuendos and suggestions that effectively work together to form a compelling argument.The speaker utilizes hyperbolic theoretical scenarios and personified depictions of time to seductively convince his prospective paramour that his desire for sex is both ardently urgent and
“Warning”, “To His Coy Mistress”, and short story, “The Story of an Hour” express the significance of life and the importance of time itself. The reason why life should be lived to the absolute fullest within the two poems and short story are varied based off the main character’s perspectives on life. Jenny Joseph expressed frustration about behavioral expectations and excitement of growing old in her poem “Warning.” Andrew Marvell emphasized the long for lust in his poem, “To His Coy Mistress.” Lastly
Andrew Marvell’s, “To His Coy Mistress”, uses many forms of figurative language to present the tone and meaning of the poem to the reader. The meaning is about how the speaker and his love should act on their love while they have the chance. They will not live forever so they must make the most of the time they do have. This type of meaning is a called carpe diem, meaning seize the day. The will to live out their love is urgently expressed. Andrew Marvell use of allusion, hyperbole, and imagery to
Andrew Marvell’s To His Coy Mistress is a carpe diem poem, one that focuses on ‘seizing the day,’ because the speaker uses mortality along with religious terminology to justify his reasoning for needing to sleep with his mistress. He uses an antediluvian time frame, a time before the biblical flood, to set a frame of reference regarding his extended love. The speaker appeals to his mistress’s sense of devoutness by exploiting the religious connotations of phrases such as “Flood” (Marvell), “conversion
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
In the poem, “To His Coy Mistress”, by Andrew Marvell, a young man is trying to persuade his mistress to have sexual relations with him. In the first stanza, he attempts to entice his mistress by saying he would compliment and admire every part of her if time permitted. However, life is too short and there is not enough time so she might as well have sex with him now. In the final stanza, he exclaims that time is inevitably advancing and that she should seize the opportunity and give into her desires