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Song To: Celia By Ben Jonson
By Leonardo Albertini and Michael Perez. Song To: Celia By Ben Jonson
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“Song: To Celia” By Ben Jonson
Theme: Love, unrequited love, obsession. An obsessive lover, who is not corresponded, admires the beauty of a woman and places her above everything and everyone else, even the Gods. Speaker: An infatuated man who is deeply in love with the physical beauty of this woman and is not corresponded. Subject: A woman that is not aware of this man’s infatuation, therefore not returning his affection and admiration. Length: 4 Quadrants.
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Stylistic Devices: Tone: Enamored, Infatuated, Obsessed.
Example: “I would not change for thine.” The speaker raises this woman above everything and considers her beauty and love to be more powerful than the gods. Effect: The speaker creates this tone to indicate how men are often driven by beauty rather than character and personality. Metaphor: Example -“The thirst that from the soul doth rise”. Effect: Compares his desperation to thirst, as if he was dying because he can’t get the girl’s attention.
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Quotes: “And leave a kiss but in the cup, And I’ll not look for wine.”
“As giving it a hope that there It could not withered be.”
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“Come Live with me, and be my Love.” By Christopher Marlowe
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“Come Live with me, and be my Love.” By Christopher Marlowe
Theme: Love, Enjoy the moment without worrying about the future. A man of prestige and nobility who seeks love in the fields of a hierarchy substantially lower than his own in which a plethora of items are offered to woo his beloved into a marital position. Speaker : A man attempting to gain his significant other’s approval for a future together through his lineage. Subject: A woman bearing the qualities of a poverty – stricken individual declining the mans initial offerings. Length: 6 Quadrants.
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Stylistic Devices: Tone: Enamored, Desperate.
Example: “ Come live with me and be my love”. The speaker skips any formal conformities with a relationship and popped the big question without worry of the future. Effect: The speaker creates this tone to illustrate the desperation presented toward fulfilling the needs of a man seeking a betrothed. Hyperbole: Example – “And I will make thee bed of roses And a thousand fragrant posies”. Effect: Exaggerating the quantity of the speaker’s offering brings into question, to what ends would the speaker travel would travel in order to convince his beloved to accept his initial proposal?
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Quotes: “Fair lined slippers for the cold,
With buckles of the purest gold.” “If these delights thy mind may move, Then live with me, and be my love.”
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