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- Seduction has been the game most played through out the centuries, as males
- attempt to convince and invite females into their beds. In Marvell's To His Coy
- Mistress and Donne's The Flea, the speakers, propose a peccadilloes offer, which is so
- cunningly backed up by a liberalistic argument and is presented to each female when
- the generous request has been declined. These arguments are designed to induce thoughts of a
- carnal nature. The persuasions used by each are completely different but are structured entirely
- for one purpose. To corner or trick the maiden into saying Yes. Though both arguements are
- supurb, Marvell's has a nicer, refined style to it.
- In To His Coy Mistress and The Flea, there is an exemplification of just how
- crafty men can be during the hunt. The speakers, in both poems, makes a modest but
- declinable offer for sex to their maiden of choice. And, upon rejection, each male begins a
- fluent yet rhetoric arguments on why the maiden should accept his simple offer of
- passion. For Marvell, the argument was that there wasn't enough time left in the world,
- and that the maiden should partake in indulgence before it is too late. But at my back I
- always hear/ Times winged Charriot hurrying near(lines 21-22). He also states the
- unpleasuarble thought of the worms enjoying her verginity instead of him. Suggesting
- that if she continues to waste time she will die a virgin. then Worms shall try/ that long
- preserv'd Virginity:(lines 27-28). Whereas Donne's argument revolves around a
- metaphorical flea. Which as claimed by the speaker, represents his union with the
- maiden in matrimony, since the flea has taken blood from them both.It suck'd me first
- and now sucks thee/And in this flea our two bloods mingled be(lines 3-4). And, since
- their bloods have already mingled together, intercourse with him wouldn't be a sin and no
- honor would be lost if she yields to him.Though know'st that this cannot be said/A sin
- nor shame nor loss of maidenhood: (lines 5-6)
- Though however similar the gist of the poems might be, the art of seduction used
- by each speaker is quite different. The speaker in To His Coy Mistress seems to change
- his tone of persuasion rapidly from stanza to stanza. At first he is sweet, comming across
- as a gentleman and overstating how many ages he would spent on a single part of her
- anatomy A hundred years should go to praise/Thine Eyes..../Two hundred to adore each
- breast (lines14-15). Then he dramatically changes to say that the worms will take her in
- her grave and that she will loose her beauty and die. In The Flea, the speaker tries to convince
- the maiden that they are one, since the flea has sucked both their blood and if she were to kill
- the flea, she would commit three sins by taking three lives, refering to his, hers, and the
- flea.And sacrilege three sins in killing three(line18). This speaker is however quick on his feet
- and very slick. The maiden kills the flea, proving his convivtions to be false. He responds
- however, by telling her that she suffers from false fears, because if she looses her
- virginity to him, she still has her honor. Just so much honor when thou yield'st to
- me/Will waste as this fleas death took life from thee(lines 26-27).
- These two unique poems containing their differences but over all more
- similarities are entertaining pieces for any reader to view and listen to the cunning speaker
- attempting to get his maiden.
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- Words: 589
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