Thursday, December 19, 2019

Love in To His Coy Mistress, Shall I Compare Thee, Let Me...

Love in To His Coy Mistress, Shall I Compare Thee, Let Me Not, and The Flea The four poems I am going to be comparing are, â€Å"To His Coy Mistress,† â€Å"Shall I Compare Thee,† â€Å"Let Me Not,† and â€Å"The Flea.† All four of these poems are based on the subject matter of love. The four poems have a lot in common but each poem touches a different aspect of love. Two of the poems, â€Å"Shall I Compare Thee†, and â€Å"Let Me Not†, are sonnets and both were written by Shakespeare. â€Å"To His Coy Mistress† is written by Andrew Marvell and â€Å"The Flea† was written by John Donne. All four of the poems have three parts to them each posing a different argument. I will be analysing and comparing the four poems in the purpose of the poem, the nature of†¦show more content†¦Shakespeare is praising his mistress when he says she is ‘better than the best’ because summer is the best time of the year and Shakespeare is saying she is better than summer. â€Å"Thou art more lovely and more temperate† shows that he is saying she is perfect and constantly exquisite†. The word â€Å"darling† gives the poem an affectionate tone. Shakespeare is also writing to show off his writing skills, this is shown in the last line when he says, â€Å"So long lives this and this gives live to thee†, because he says his writing will live on forever. It is also written to give his loved one a reminder of mortality. â€Å"Nor shall death brag† is the reminder of death and it is personified because it implies death can’t take her. The purposes of ‘Let Me Not’ were to flatter Shakespeare’s loved one, remind his beloved of mortality, define love and to show how love is threatened by other things. Romantic flattery is shown when Shakespeare says, â€Å"rosie lips and cheeks†, it is also describing his beloved. The reminder of death is shown when the poem says, â€Å"edge of doome†; this is even more effective than just death because it is describing love until the end of the world. The â€Å"edge of doome† also defines love and pontificates it to the end of time. ‘Let Me Not’ is an imperative because it is a strongShow MoreRelated Look again at the three seventeenth century poems, To His Coy Mistress,1589 Words   |  7 PagesLook again at the three seventeenth century poems, To His Coy Mistress, The Flea, and Shall I compare thee. In what ways have the three poets used, or departed from, the conventions of their time and why do you think they have been successful in ... 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He starts with a rhetorical question to whichRead MoreHow the Negative and Positive Impacts of Love Are Explored Using Various Main Characters in the Play ‘Much Ado About Nothing’5155 Words   |  21 Pagesand positive impacts of love are explored using various main characters in the play ‘Much ado About Nothing’. The play was written by Shakespeare in the Elizabethan era and therefore love was portrayed in a very different way, they would have seen a woman as less important in a relationship; in this era however we have very different views and see both genders as equal. Consequently as the play progresses the Elizabethan audience would relate a lot more to the courtly love that Hero and Claudio compriseRead MoreIgbo Dictionary129408 Words   |  518 Pages Abbreviations: Parts of speech of headwords have been indicated in this edition as follows adj. aux. v. cf. coll. conj. dem. E. enc. esp. ext. suff. H. infl. suff. int. int. lit. n. num. p.n. prep. pron. poss. quant. usu. v. Y . adjective auxiliary verb compare colloquial conjunction demonstrative English enclitic especially extensional suffix Hausa inflectional suffix interjection interrogative literally noun numeral proper name preposition pronoun possessive pronoun quantifier usually verb Yoruba derived

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