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To His Coy Mistress Analysis

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Andrew Marvell’s “To His Coy Mistress,” written in the year 1681, gives readers the implication that he was a man with progressive ideas about sex that lack concern for the common ideals and moral standards of his lifetime. Marvell’s ideas and phrases in this poem have an honest and realistic basis. He does not sugarcoat what he is trying to say, yet he is able to poetically and coercively make his point known to his potential mate. Opposing styles of appeal in parts one and two blossoms into an eloquently convincing conclusion which will force his potential lover into an urgent battle between her id and her superego. This analysis breaks the poem into thirds, the first of which (part one), the speaker progresses slowly, as romance often does. Appealling to her romantic feminine interests, he tries to woo the object of his affection with beautiful words and phrases. Marvel’s appeal to a woman’s innate desire for romance …show more content…

To act like something that you are not is not natural; therefore, it is not truthful. He wants her to rebel against that untruth. More than likely, throughout life, she learned to perfect this coyness. Now the speaker is breaking apart the standard she knows is true and good. According to Oxford Dictionary’s online version, “quaint” can be taken to mean “cunningly devised” (506). Although other definitions of the word quaint exist, in this poem, the speaker obviously puts emphasis on the “coy” aspect of his mistress, so it makes sense that he would (once again) point this out in part three of his poem. The speaker implies that her unwillingness to submit to him is a result of her cunningly devised façade, or coy attitude, not her lack of desire to do so. “Though long-preserved virginity, And your quaint honour turn to dust”

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