Thursday, September 19, 2019
The main differences between poems are described by Metaphysical and Classical. :: English Literature
The main differences between poems are described by Metaphysical and Classical.    The main differences between poems are described by Metaphysical and  Classical. The most famous metaphysical poets would be John Dunn and  Marvell, and then the most famous classical poets would be Marlowe and  Johnson. Metaphysical being the more interesting makes use of  arguments to persuade this can also be described as dialectic. Then  Classical is more "Carpe Diem" (Seize the Day) being simpler and with  all the verses being the same and in a Starvea (irregular) and an  example of this is the poem To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time.    The poem, To his coy mistress is very much Carpe Diem but the poet  Andrew Marvell who wrote it was influenced by both Metaphysical and  Classical types of poetry, the way in the beginning of the poem he  seems to talk about things in a very slow way, walking, time slowing  down to try to woe the women in a much quicker, the poem also shows a  lot of Petrachan influences as when Andrew Marvell says 'Thine eyes,  and on thy forehead gaze' and 'Thy beauty shall no more be found'. The  poem is very much more in use of words that show the women in which  the poem is talking about as being a goddess as I said earlier; this  seems to play a large part in the poem.    Another poem which is also very Carpe Diem is, to the virgins, to make  much of time, this poem uses irregular (starvea) stress' and  unstressed' words, but does have a regular amount of feet throughout  the poem. The poem seems to be stating to a woman that she should not  wait at all and get married in her youth when she still can, it is  speaking as though the women has no other option than to get married  in her youthful times. The writer, Robert Herrick, is using the sun  also as a use of time saying to hurry before the sun sets and it will  be too late for the sun and the women marrying times are gone.    The poem The Flea is very different to the other two before, it is a  metaphysical poem which is much more interesting, it uses a much more  dialectic view of wooing a women. It uses the fact that as a flea has  bitten both the poet and the women of whom he is in love with, that it  means that there are three lives all together in one and that him and  his love almost 'more than maryed are'.  					    
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