Wednesday, May 6, 2020

Love vs. Lust in Andrew Marvells Poem, To His Coy...

I know that there is a unique difference between love and lust. In the Andrew Marvell poem â€Å"To His Coy Mistress,† I would argue over the issue of love versus lust. In this poem, we are introduced to a man who is infatuated with a young woman and wants to become intimate with her. He tries to pursue this young woman, but the woman is playfully hesitant. The man is trying to explain to the young woman if she keeps being resistant to him, they would never get a chance become intimate. Could it be that the man really does have true love for the young woman? Or is that he is just lusting for her gentle touch? In the first stanza of this poem, the man begins by expressing his feelings for the young woman. He starts off by trying to flatter†¦show more content†¦As we start the second part of the poem, the man begins to discuss the amount of time the woman and he both have left on this earth. The man states in first couple of lines, â€Å"But at my back I always hear time’s winged chariot hurrying near.† The man is trying to tell the woman that they should not wait to embrace each other physically because no one is here on this earth forever. The man describes to the woman that all they will have left in the end is the grave. In the final part of the stanza, the man says â€Å"The grave’s a fine and private place, but none I think do there embrace.† The man is trying to explain to the young woman that though the grave is a fairly private place, they will not be able to make love because they are no longer here on this earth. He also states that in the end he will no longer have the feelings he has for her now because his time here on earth will be done for. At this particular part of the poem, I would say that the man is using anything in his power to convince the young woman to sleep with him. The man seems very lustful at this point, so the love that the man somewhat conveyed for the young woman at the beginning of the poem has slowly drifted away. In the final section of the poem, the man goes from loving the woman forever, to saying that there is no time left here on this earth and that they should make love as soon

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