Ryan Schmidt
English 114
David Upchurch
10/2/96
Either you have sex with me or you die.
This is a very strong
statement which,
when said, has to get someone's attention; and that is
exactly what
Andrew Marvell intends for the reader in this poem. He
wants the
undivided attention of this mistress so that he can scare her
and rush her into
making a decision the way he wants and in due time.
Filled with time
flavored symbolism, this carpe diem poem, "To His Coy
Mistress" by
Andrew Marvell, exemplifies the seize the day
theme.
The cyclical, life symbolizing river, the water
flowing by like
time, is the
first place Marvell places the
characters. And even
though they are
very far apart, time still flows by for them both. As
the water flows,
this concept begins to hint at the shortness of time,
for them to have
sex, the source of new life. He then
proceeds to
claim that he
could love her ten years before the flood, something
already ancient,
and up to the end of the world, using the
juxtapositioning
of the two views of time enhance his argument and to
convince to
accept his offer by telling her of his long-term commitment
for her in the
short-term. This flood also symbolizes
life in the
fresh start of
the new covenant. Because time keeps
going, with or
without them,
they must be active participants and not just the static
spectator. Otherwise, the fate Marvell relates would
become their
reality.
Marvell's vegetable love is rather oxymoronic. Love is not
normally like the
uncaring, thoughtless, and noncommunicating plant.
And yet his love
is vegetable in that it is not
adaptable. She is the
water, food, and
light for his love; and as long as she is there, he
will love
her. She is evrerything that supports
his love, and if she
is not there, his
vegetable could not be supported and would die.
His
idea of love
seems to just be to say that he loves her for the
possibility that
he can share carnal knowledge; however, this is why he
tries to convince
her to seize the day. And because of
this love he
felt they must
take advantage of what time they have.
Next comes the threat of punishment if she
happens to continue
down her dark
path of stubborn unwillingness to engage with him.
Suddenly the
desert is before them and beauty is gone forever. The
life giving and
symbolic water is gone. She's dead and
the worms are
her only
company. These worms are symbolic of two
different ideas.
First they are
phallic in shape and do stand as phallic symbols. They
are also another
cyclical representation of time, in that they are part
of the cycle that
will break her body down into soil, feed the trees,
feed an animal,
etc. So he tries scare her and to force
her into the
decision to seize
the day.
Marvell then stresses the youth she still
possess and his plan to
save them. He talks about her youthful hue and the
morning (of life /
youth) glow to
remind her what she needs to save from the imposing grip
of her
grave. He gets very aggressive and
speeds up the meter to add
effect and
urgency to his pleas. Then he talks
about birds of prey,
Schmidt3
hurrying, and
devouring to really twist the proverbial
knife and to
convince
her. After adoring her body for ages and
wading through
innuendo, he says
let us roll all our strength and all our sweetness
into one ball and
says he wants to spend the rest of time with her
making the sun
run.
Although the message in this poem is universal,
throughout time,
Marvell's methods
are unique for his time. The fact that
he used death
to persuade a
less than eager woman is not new. The
way he does it,
is. According to Paul Brians, from the English
Department at
Washington State
University, Marvell's
imagery of death
is so powerful, that the poem transcends
the cliched
'lines' of more frivolous writers to become a
stirring
meditation on the importance of living fully
during the brief
span allotted us (Brians).
Andrew Marvell tries in this carpe diem poem,
"To His Coy
Mistress,"
to use time and symbols to convince her to seize the day.
He uses the
river, the worm and many direct references to time to
express the
urgency of the situation. He then says
that his love is
vegetable and
that this coy mistress is the only one that can sustain
this living
love. Then he threatens death, gets
aggressive, and shows
her that her
youth is fleeting, and that if she does not change, she
will be
miserable.
Works Cited
Brians, Paul.
"Study Guide for Classic English Love Poems," Paul
Brians' Homepage.
n. pag. On-line. Internet. 3 Sept. 1996. Available:
http://www.wsu.edu:8000/~/love-in-the-arts/classic_english_love-
poems.html
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