Friday, October 25, 2019
A Comparison of Andrew Marvells To His Coy Mistress and Thomas Hardys
A Comparison of Andrew Marvell's To His Coy Mistress and Thomas Hardy's The Ruined Maid      In this essay I will look at the two poems, explore what the poems are  about, look at the language and images used in them by the writers and  then compare the two.    "The ruined maid" by Thomas Hardy is a conversation between two women;  "Melia", the ruined maid herself and another lady, her friend of whom  she used to know when she lived in need. Melia's friend brings up all  different points about Melia that have changed, for example the way  she looks, 'now you've gay bracelets' and acts, 'you'd sigh and you'd  sock' but Melia just says a few simple words in reply.    'To his coy mistress' by Andrew Marvell is a one sided argument and is  about a man trying to persuade his mistress to lose her virginity with  him before her looks and beauty start to go, as she gets older. He  tries to persuade her to have sex with him by using flattery, humour  and frightening, almost blackmailing her by describing different  shocking images.    Hardy writes 'The ruined maid' in an unusual way, one of which is not  usually heard of, he writes it as if it was an actual informal  conversation between two women. He creates this by using various  amounts of punctuation; he uses speech marks throughout the poem, uses  dashes to separate the two different people?s speech, and uses  question marks, explanation marks and further speech marks in all the  appropriate places, which all help to give the effect of the  conversation happening, from the first line to the last and encourages  the reader to think of it more as a dialogue when reading it.    'Your talking quite fits 'ee for high compa-ny!'-    ?Some polish is gained with one?s ruin,? said she? is an e...              ...gh it is obvious that she does not want to, as she  would have known that it wasn?t the best thing to do, that her marital  status would have been in ruins, her reputation in tatters. However in  ?The ruined maid? Melia had already have had sex and although her old  life and the only way she knew was gone, she had gained a much better  one, where although she is no longer of any marital value, she appears  (unless it is just a cover) to be more polished and seems happier in  general life.    If you look at it in one way, ?The ruined maid? could be what could  happen to the mistress in ?To his coy mistress?. It could be what  happens to her if she goes through with the man?s proposal so in  conclusion, although the poems tell the tales of two different  stories, they could easily be part of the same one, where ?The ruined  maid? follows on from ?To his coy mistress?.                      A Comparison of Andrew Marvell's To His Coy Mistress and Thomas Hardy's  A Comparison of Andrew Marvell's To His Coy Mistress and Thomas Hardy's The Ruined Maid      In this essay I will look at the two poems, explore what the poems are  about, look at the language and images used in them by the writers and  then compare the two.    "The ruined maid" by Thomas Hardy is a conversation between two women;  "Melia", the ruined maid herself and another lady, her friend of whom  she used to know when she lived in need. Melia's friend brings up all  different points about Melia that have changed, for example the way  she looks, 'now you've gay bracelets' and acts, 'you'd sigh and you'd  sock' but Melia just says a few simple words in reply.    'To his coy mistress' by Andrew Marvell is a one sided argument and is  about a man trying to persuade his mistress to lose her virginity with  him before her looks and beauty start to go, as she gets older. He  tries to persuade her to have sex with him by using flattery, humour  and frightening, almost blackmailing her by describing different  shocking images.    Hardy writes 'The ruined maid' in an unusual way, one of which is not  usually heard of, he writes it as if it was an actual informal  conversation between two women. He creates this by using various  amounts of punctuation; he uses speech marks throughout the poem, uses  dashes to separate the two different people?s speech, and uses  question marks, explanation marks and further speech marks in all the  appropriate places, which all help to give the effect of the  conversation happening, from the first line to the last and encourages  the reader to think of it more as a dialogue when reading it.    'Your talking quite fits 'ee for high compa-ny!'-    ?Some polish is gained with one?s ruin,? said she? is an e...              ...gh it is obvious that she does not want to, as she  would have known that it wasn?t the best thing to do, that her marital  status would have been in ruins, her reputation in tatters. However in  ?The ruined maid? Melia had already have had sex and although her old  life and the only way she knew was gone, she had gained a much better  one, where although she is no longer of any marital value, she appears  (unless it is just a cover) to be more polished and seems happier in  general life.    If you look at it in one way, ?The ruined maid? could be what could  happen to the mistress in ?To his coy mistress?. It could be what  happens to her if she goes through with the man?s proposal so in  conclusion, although the poems tell the tales of two different  stories, they could easily be part of the same one, where ?The ruined  maid? follows on from ?To his coy mistress?.                        
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