Stanza 1: Lines 1-4
In the first stanza of "The Passionate Shepherd to His Love," Marlowe's speaker, an unidentified shepherd, pleads with an unidentified woman that if she will come and live with him, then all pleasures will be theirs for the taking. The shepherd opens with the invitation: "Come live with me, and be my love." He is not asking her to marry him but only to live with him. The offer is simply put, and his ease in offering it implies that the woman should just as easily agree. However, since the shepherd is forced to continue with a succession of promises, the reader can assume that the shepherd's initial offer was not well received.
The shepherd promises the woman pleasures they will experience in all of the pastoral settings that nature can supply. Since he promises that the couple will experience these pleasures in a variety of locations, it appears his expectation is that the pleasures of the world are principally sexual. He is asking the woman to live with him, and for the Elizabethan poet, "Come live with me, and be my love" has the same connotations it would have for a twenty-first-century reader: the female is being invited to come and make love. "Valleys, groves, hills and fields, / Woods, or steepy mountains" are some of the places the shepherd suggests where the woman might yield to him, and where they might both find pleasure. The overt sexuality of this stanza is a departure from the traditional pastoral writings and romantic love poems of Marlowe's contemporaries, which were not so bold.
Stanza 2: Lines 5-8
The second stanza suggests a time of year for the lovers' activity, which is likely spring or summer, since they would be outdoors and the shepherd imagines it is pleasant enough to sit and watch the flocks being fed. He proposes that other shepherds will feed his flocks, since with his mistress by his side, he will now be an observer. The shepherd mentions listening to the "Melodious birds sing madrigals." The singing of birds is often suggestive of spring, since the return of singing birds signals the advent of the new season. Because the first stanza makes clear that the shepherd wants the woman to become his lover, the shift in the second stanza to sitting upon rocks-"And we will sit upon the rocks"-suggests they might partake of the second stanza's activities after they have made love.
This second stanza, if taken by itself, exemplifies the traditional pastoral theme of the restful shepherd watching his flocks, enjoying in quiet repose the countryside and all it offers. It is the idealization of the pastoral form, in which nature is benign and safe, filled with "shallow rivers" and "melodious birds." In the early pastoral tradition, the shepherd would be alone, daydreaming about the woman he loves and whom he wishes to court. But in Marlowe's poem, the introduction of sexual desire inserts the woman into the scene; she too will witness the flocks feeding and enjoy the peacefulness of country life. The isolation of the shepherd is thus removed in Marlowe's poem.
It is a reply to both "Passionate Shepherd to His Love" by C. Marlowe and Sir Walter Raleigh's "The Nymph's Reply To The Shepherd". It's basically trying to convince someone to come out in the country and live with him and be in love.
"The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd" was a poem written by Walter Raleigh and is believed to have been written in response to a poem titled "The Passionate Shepherd to His Love" written by Christopher Marlowe. Marlowe's poem was written in 1592, and Walter Raleigh's response poem was written in 1596.
The main theme in "The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd" is that one cannot always get what one wants in life. The shepherd wanted to love the nymph, but she could not love him, similar to how flowers cannot survive in winter.
Pastoral plays were plays which idealized the lives of shepherds. Marlowe's famous poem, "The Passionate Shepherd to his love" was a pastoral poem. This was a literary fad in Elizabethan England. The closest Shakespeare came to a pastoral play is As You Like It, with its setting in the forest and characters like Audrey, Corin, Phoebe and Silvius.
The nymph responds to the shepherd's proposal to "come live with me and be my love” by saying all of the things he wants to give her will fade, whither, and be forgotten; therefore, she cannot accept his offer. The nymph presents her rejection of the shepherd as really being a rejection of the world.
rustic pleasures
No. So the answer is false.
"The Passionate Shepherd to His Love" see the link below.
He makes the shepherd's offer seem unrealistic
Alliteration, anastrophe, anaphora, imagery, repetition, and antithesis are the dominant figures of speech in "The Passionate Shepard to His Love."
How do you say The Passionate Shepherd in Turkish?
Alliteration, anastrophe, anaphora, imagery, repetition, and antithesis are the dominant figures of speech in "The Passionate Shepard to His Love."
The poem "The Passionate Shepherd to His Love" by Christopher Marlowe has varying syllables in each line. The lines have between 2 to 8 syllables.
rustic pleasures
"Come live with me and be my love, And we will all the pleasures prove, That Valleys, groves, hills, and fields, Woods, or steepy mountain yields." This excerpt from The Passionate Shepherd to His Love by Christopher Marlowe presents an idealized rural setting by showcasing the beauty and abundance of nature that the speaker offers to his love.
In "The Passionate Shepherd to His Love," the shepherd is seen as an idealized and romantic figure who heavily idealizes nature and simplicity. He presents himself as a caring and devoted lover, promising his beloved a life filled with beauty and rustic charm. However, critics often view his promises as unrealistic and shallow, portraying him as more of a naive dreamer than a practical admirer.
It is a reply to both "Passionate Shepherd to His Love" by C. Marlowe and Sir Walter Raleigh's "The Nymph's Reply To The Shepherd". It's basically trying to convince someone to come out in the country and live with him and be in love.