Blake & Marvell/ Human Condition

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Blake & Marvell/ Human Condition

...everyone must die. It is a fact of life that makes the ordinary individual shudder for a moment, or turn to prayer, but it is a topic that traditionally fascinated poets. For example, poets Andrew Marvell (1621-1678) and William Blake (1757-1827) addressed this subject in their poems, respectively, "To His Coy Mistress" and "The Sick Rose." These poems are extremely different in form and content. However, they also contain similarities in regards to theme. In both poems, the reader is forced to confront the physical reality of death, and the decay that will inevitably follow the cessation of life. In both poems, the decay of death is contrasted against the beauty and vibrancy of life. Therefore, both poems can be seen has having a similar carpe diem orientation toward the human condition, sending the message to the reader to treasure life and savor it, realizing all the while that it is transitory.
In Marvell's Coy Mistress, the carpe diem is much more frankly expressed...

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