Sunday, June 2, 2019
Analysis of To His Coy Mistress Essay -- To His Coy Mistress, Andrew M
   To his coy mistress is about  versed feelings and infatuation, based on   the Italian tradition of courtly  love - it is filled with compliments   and references to sexual activity and deviancy but is generally a one   sided love, the whole poem is about the man wooing the woman and   persuading her that she should have sex with him. Throughout the  start-off   stanza the poet writes how he would love the woman, had they had all   the time in the world. The love is much  mislead.   I would love you ten years before the flood   This is clearly an exaggerated statement because the flood happened   before Christ, before the poet or the woman even existed. This   portrays that he would love her forever.   My vegetable love would grow vasterand to a greater extent slow   The poet is  talk of the town about time, about his love growing slowly but   surely over time. The reference to a vegetable the natural fruit of   the earth symbolises how the love for the woman will grow over years,      from a seed getting bigger over time- its natural and deep rooted   love.   The end of the poem becomes more persuasive and hasted. The poet gets   more desperate for the woman to accept his offer and to agree to sleep   with him.   A clear indication of a change in  calibre is  carryn in stanza two   BUT times winged chariot hurrying near   Where the word But is placed at the start of the sentence  unremarkably   indicates that the statement before the but is about to be   contradicted with a sentence of the opposite meaning (he was good BUT   he is being bad)   the use of  avatar verbs add to the tone of the poem making   time seem as a winged chariot emphasises the rush that the poet is in,...  ...time   Seemed night at noon  twenty-four hour period   Though in the poem the reader is not given a sense of hurrying and   anticipation but a sense of confusion portraying the  emotional   distress the poet is going through.   As the poem progresses into the third and last stanza the    poet writes   of his rejection and his pain cause by the subject he had so   hopelessly fallen in love with.   Is loves bed always snow?   this is a rhetorical question, comparing the of love which is thought   to be warm and loving with passionate heat and  informality (positive) to   snow cold harsh snow, with no colour, which is bleak and which brings   death to all living things (negative) - again the poet is using   contrasting aspects in one sentence to show confusion too.   The poet has been made to feel that love is a horrible, harsh and   bitter feeling.                  
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