The Passionate Shepherd to His Love Essay

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    Difference between “The Passionate Shepherd to His Love” and “The Nymph’s Reply to the Shepherd” “The Passionate Shepherd to His Love” by Christopher Marlowe and “The Nymph’s Reply to the Shepherd” by Sir Walter Raleigh are pastorals that express the author's’ feelings and thoughts about nature of love. These two poems differ with each other in their tone,imagery and point of view. In “The Passionate Shepherd to His Love”, Christopher Marlowe shows his idea that love is a passion expressed by material

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    The Passionate Shepherd

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    "The Passionate Shepherd to His Love," and Raleigh's "The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd," are both amazing poems that we can't help but want to compare and contrast. The sassy Nymph who turns away the Shepherd's declare of love. The Shepherd, who offers material objects to show his love, and the Nymph, the fair maiden who denies his feelings; the tales of unrequited love. "The Passionate Shepherd to His Love" portrays a world of love and feelings. The Shepherd offers wondrous gifts to his love

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    Shepherd To His Love

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    "The Passionate Shepherd to His Love," originally seen as a romantic and joyful poem, is changed into a more realistic story when set with the poem "The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd." Marlowe starts out discussing a variety of treasures and beauties that he offers to share with his love. However, in Raleigh's response, he points out how all of these beauties are fleeting, then says that if they were not, he may consider the Shepherd's offer. Ultimately, placing "The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd"

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    The passionate Shepard is being read as if it’s being spoken by a shepherd who’s talking to the love of his life. Knowing that the speaker in the poem is a shepherd already gives me an imaginary in my head, but it’s enhanced by the visual descriptions given in the poem. Without the use of words, such as “we will all the pleasure prove that valleys, groves, hills and field woods, or steep mountain yield, I wouldn’t have such a clear image about where the shepherd is. The use of language

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    Nymph’s Reply to the Shepherd” by Sir Walter Raleigh is a poem set as a reply to “The Passionate Shepherd to His Love” by Christopher Marlowe. Marlowe’s poem is an attempt, by a hopeful shepherd, to attract a lady to be with him together as lovers. Marlowe offers many luxurious gifts to this woman in order to convince her to be with him. He details how perfect their lives will be when they are together, and just how much he will spoil this her. “The Passionate Shepherd to His Love” is presented as a

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    The Passionate Shepherd in comparison to The Nymph’s Reply contain two vastly different mindsets. On one hand, The Shepherd really loves the Nymph and promises her all these wondrous things like ‘beds of roses”, “a thousand fragrant posies a cap of flowers”, and a “kirtle embroidered all with leaves of myrtle.” He says all these unrealistic things because he is in the heat of the moment and wants her to come move in with him so they can start a life together. While is not emphatically stated in

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    Love and beauty is a prominent phenomenon throughout the world and it was very popular in the Elizabethan age. A poet by the name Christopher Marlowe during this age also talks about loving someone unconditionally in some of his poems. He says, "Why should you love him whom the world hates so? Because he loves me more than all the world"(Marlowe, Edward III). From this quote, it can be discerned that Marlowe emphasizes love and its importance in the world. He uses various significant poetic devices

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    during the XVI century. In his poem “The Passionate Shepherd To His Love,” Christopher Marlowe uses this convention heavily; this incited the writings of numerous response poems, which ranged from humorous parodies to equally rosy replies on behalf of the shepherd’s lover. One such response is “The Nymph’s Reply” written by Sir Walter Raleigh. Raleigh’s poem features a blatant difference in tone from Marlowe’s, as the nymph denies the shepherd’s unblushing declaration of love by rephrasing all the shepherd’s

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    Christopher Marlowe’s poem “The Passionate Shepherd to His Love” is widely understood to be a combination of pastoral and carpe diem poetry that invites its subject, with the incentives of gifts and paradise, to join its speaker in a natural utopia—it embodies the trend of poetry and invention through pastoral imagination. In comparison, Walter Ralegh’s “The Nymphs Reply to the Shepherd” is on the side of reason and philosophy, widely recognized as a refuting reply that uses Marlowe’s own structure

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    The Passionate Shepherd

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    Taking place during spring under multiple weather conditions the comparisons made between the poems “The Passionate Shepherd to His Love” by Christopher Marlowe and “The Nymph’s Reply to the Shepherd” by Sir Walter Raleigh both share the similar motives of a Shepherd attaining love in a relationship through different scenarios. However, the overall message of love differs between the authors by the difference in their tone. The incorporation of iambic tetrameter in both poems proves vital to the

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