Saturday, March 23, 2019

Essay --

The Flea Rhetoric and Poetry MinglingIn John Donnes poem, The Flea, Donne uses the conceit of the flea to contrast the insignificant size of the flea and the incredibly significant metaphor attached to the flea. The speaker of the poem is talking to a woman, trying to convince her into having conjure up with him outside of marriage. This poem can be broken into three stanzas, of nine lines each, utilizes the image of the flea to convey three master(prenominal) ideas the first as a vessel where their essence mingles, second as the institution of marriage, and finally as an insignificant representation of honor which would affirm no effect on them. Donnes hyperbolic use of the flea extends by means of the poem as a metaphysical conceit to convey a logical parameter out of something seemingly unrelated to the situation at hand. The speaker starts his argument by first mentioning that the woman has denied the speaker something. However, it is ab initio unclear what was denied, all that is known is that by taking note of this flea, and stigma in this,/How little that which she deniest him is, thus paralleling how the flea, just like whatever she denies him, is unimportant (Donne lines 1-2). This idea of insignificant things meaning much more in the soaring scheme of things run lows an underlying thread, which is sewn throughout the poem. The speaker then notes how in this flea their two bloods mingled be, alluding to an erotic mingling of their blood (Donne line 4). This symbolizes the actually essence of these two intertwining and becoming one in a single vessel. The flea is a vessel that symbolizes union, in this fibre the physical union amongst the speaker and the woman through internal intercourse and the exchange of physical fluids. It is impo... ... mean nothing in the end. Essentially his argument boils down to proving that sex with the speaker would not be shameful or sinful, and that all her fears atomic number 18 unfounded. Donne uses th e flea throughout his poem as an essential link between sexual conquest and union. The flea transcends its initial existence as an irritating bug and become an existence essential to their union. It is through this representation of the flea, which allows Donne to draw the reader into an argument of carnal desire trumping propriety. The flea is essential to this argument, without which there is nothing substructure the obvious leaps of logic made by the speaker and Donne. The conceit is a popular literary device Donne uses in his poetry, and in this particular case he uses it masterfully throughout the entire poem to create a love poem that straddles the line between poetry and rhetoric.

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