Thursday, February 28, 2013

To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell

The poem To His Coy Mistress is about a man adoring a woman for her beauty and other material reasons. He uses a few Biblical references and vivid imagery to explain this woman's beauty. The speaker the uses a metaphor when he states, "Time's winged chariot hurrying near" (Marvell, 22). At this point there is a shift in the poem and the speaker begins discussing how the woman's beauty will only last a short amount of time. The speaker is explaining that time moves swiftly, and with time her beauty will fade, too. This poem shows that the stereotype of men being focused on the appearance of women out weighs their feelings for a woman. He states that once the woman ages, her beauty will escape her. He is warning the woman to enjoy life while she still possesses her beauty. Later he states that there is no human way to freeze time, or in other words to have everlasting beauty.

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