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The Use of Irony and Hyperbole in Works by Andrew Marvell and Shakespeare

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This essay discusses the hyperbolic diction and employment of verbal irony in Andrew Marvell's poem "To His Coy Mistress" and Shakespeare's "Sonnet 130" as a means of commentary on the conventions of blazon poetry.

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Hochgeladen auf
23. juli 2021
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Affonso 1


Rayne Affonso

LITS 1001 – Introduction to Poetry

1st March 2021



The Use of Hyperbole and Irony in Marvell’s “To His Coy Mistress” and Shakespeare’s

“Sonnet 130”



The pedestalization of women as a pervasive motif in English literature originated

most notably in the 14th century through the works of Italian poet Francesco Petrarca. The

passionate and aggrandized portrayal of an unattainable woman figure became synonymous

with Petrarchan love, a trope which is characterized by a marked distance between the

admirer and his darling as well as the act of burning adoration. Blazon poetry draws on such

Petrarchan conventions as it demonstrates the use of language to “extol a woman’s physical

beauty in a fevered, religious fashion” (Betik 8). Indubitably the lyric poem “To His Coy

Mistress” by Andrew Marvell and Shakespeare’s “Sonnet 130” both challenge the Petrarchan

idealization of love in their departure from blazon traditions. This is illustrated via Marvell

and Shakespeare’s employment of the poetic devices of hyperbole and irony.

In his lifetime, Andrew Marvell (1621-1678) was chiefly acknowledged for his satirist

political writings and his repute as a Parliamentarian. His lyricism only received major

critical interest and acclaim in the 19 th century, henceforth establishing him as one of the

greatest English Metaphysical poets of his time alongside contemporaries such as Donne,

Herbert, Cowley and others. This group was praised for their semantic ability “to coax new

perspective through paradoxical images, subtle argument, inventive syntax, and imagery from

art, philosophy and religion” (Elahi 47). Marvell’s poetry abounds in this delicate balance

between passion and witty reflection, and his most famous lyric poem “To His Coy Mistress”

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encompasses these metaphysical conceits through a syllogistic formal pattern to convey the

universal concept of carpe diem.

Published in 1681, “To His Coy Mistress” is written in iambic tetrameter utilizing

rhyming couplets and divided into three stanzas which represent the consecutive stages of a

syllogistic argument: ‘if’, ‘but’ and ‘therefore’. The autodiegetic voice of the persona draws

on Horace’s carpe diem philosophy in an effort to convince his beloved to allow him a sexual

union. In the first stanza and the ‘if’ clause of his logical argument, the poet begins with the

metaphysical conceit of time and space imagery to crystallize the ideal but impossible vision

of their relationship as eternal. The following ‘but’ clause juxtaposes this conditional fantasy

with the harsh reality that their human existence is fleeting. In the final stanza the persuasive

tone is best deployed as the ‘therefore’ conclusion draws the logical argument to a close, and

the poet postulates that his beloved should seize the present opportunity to engage in

intercourse with him. The poem explores the ethics of courtship in the 17 th century as

determined by the Church’s doctrines of modesty and reserve. Dubrow (1995) remarks that

such Metaphysical witty variations of the Petrarchan love tradition are “best symbolized by

the oxymoron… the [metaphysical] signature trope” (254). However, it is myopic to assert

that the paradoxical imagery of Marvell’s “To His Coy Mistress” is the central poetic device

which ridicules said conventions. Hyperbole and irony are equally, if not more, fundamental

to Marvell’s intention of diverging from the Petrarchan script of unrequited love.

Yet, Marvell was by no means the first poet to undermine these platitudes of love.

William Shakespeare (1564-1616) is, to this day, universally considered as the greatest writer

of the English literary canon due to his mastery of drama and poetry. In 1609, his collection

of 154 sonnets was published, demonstrating the influence of Petrarch’s sonnet tradition

which was a hallmark of 14th century literature. Sonnets 1-126 explore themes of lust and

homoeroticism in its devoted admiration of a fair young man, whereas the following twenty-
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