Saturday, October 12, 2019
To His Coy Mistress - by Andrew Marvel Essay -- English Literature:
To his coy mistress by Andrew Marvel - review.    'To his coy mistress' was written by Andrew Marvel, his exceeding love  for his lover, but with closer analysis it is more intimate and is  more persuasive. The poem is persuading his mistress to have sex with  him, and have children however; it sounds more like he wants the  pleasure, not the children. It was written in the 1600s.    The poem can be split into 3 stanzas; the first stanza is romantic and  flattering, but also persuasive. The implication of the first stanza  she is playing hard to get or shy, and the shyness wouldn't matter if  they had more time.    He is saying he would love her forever and is trying to be romantic,  but persuasive. He mentions 'my vegetable love should grow' which  could have many implications, because it could refer to a sexual  undertone, his love for her is natural or there is slow growing, so  the metaphor is quite effective. In some stanzas of the poem he  exaggerates because for example, a person would not just sit and  admire another person for 'an hundred years' yet the poem says 'an  hundre...                      
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