Sunday, August 4, 2019
Sieze The Day :: essays research papers
   Sieze the Day!    à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Andrew Marvell wrote his short poem ââ¬Å"To His Coy  Mistressâ⬠ in a persuasive tone to allow the speaker to  convince his mistress, the listener, to succumb to his want.   Marvell uses meter, imagery, and tone to persuade his lady  to further commit in their relationship. This poem has a  very strong carpe diem or seize the day theme which Marvell  conveys throughout the poem.  à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  In general, the meter of the poem is iambic tetrameter.   Marvell uses pauses as well as enjambment to break up the  neat pattern that the rhyme scheme of the poem imposes. The  first two lines, for example, contain internal pauses that  break the tetrameter into shorter units; ââ¬Å"Had we but world  enough, and time, This coyness, lady, were no crime.â⬠ The  third line contains no pauses and runs directly into the  fourth, so that the rhyme runs opposite the rhythm of the  couplet. Near the end of the poem, the lines seem to be  coming out faster than at the beginning, creating a sense of  urgency as the speaker talks. These last few lines are the  lines in which the speaker talks about how the two should  seize the day and live life to the fullest.   à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  The use of imagery throughout the poem is also an  effective means of conveying his message to the lady. His  references to the Great Flood and the conversion of the Jews  are both examples of biblical imagery. The timelessness of  the Bible backs up his eternal love towards his lady. The  references of the tomb are perhaps the greatest images of  all, the images of death. Nothing depicts the urgency and  shortness of life better than the expectation of death.   Images implied in the last stanza are those of a race  against time. The goal is to try to beat time, and although  time will eventually win, the ââ¬Å"runnersâ⬠ must try to keep up  with time for as long as possible, and actually beat it for  awhile with the moment of love. And because no way exists  to beat time, Marvell suggests that they must live with life  they have to the fullest.  à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Marvellââ¬â¢s excellent use of tone also helps to prove his  argument with his mistress. In the first section, the poem  takes a loving, romantic tone; ââ¬Å"We would sit down, and  think which way to walk, and pass our long loveââ¬â¢s day.â⬠   Marvellââ¬â¢s romantic style of writing helps to prove his  allegation that he loves his mistress more than anything in  the world. The tone undergoes a drastic change in the  second stanza, however; ââ¬Å"I always hear timeââ¬â¢s winged  chariot hurrying near.  					    
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