¶ … Flea
This paradoxical and provocative poem by John Donne illustrates a number of the central characteristics of Metaphysical poetry. This paper will attempt to elucidate the paradoxical elements of the poem through a close reading of the text. The poem is essentially argumentative and displays a number of conceits or paradoxical comparisons. The poet uses words and meanings in an unconventional and often startling sense to convince his lover to make love with him.
The poem compares the image of a flea to love and physical union. The entire poem is a sustained argument to convince the protagonist's lover of the validity of this comparison. The image of the flea is used to spur or encourage the loved one into agreeing to the unification of their blood through intercourse. It is also significant to note in this regard that during the Renaissance it was believed that in the act of coition blood was passed between the two people concerned.
The central argument is clearly stated in the first two lines of the poem. This argument will flow throughout the three stanzas. The poet or protagonist states empathically ("Mark") the central conceit of the poem in the comparison of the flea to his intended relationship with his lover.
MARK but this flea, and mark in this,
How little that which thou deniest me is;
Thee second line above points to the intent of the protagonist. He uses the idea of a "flea bite" to suggest that their making love will have little harmful or negative effect on his lover. This is intended to reassure and persuade his intended lover that the intended action of coitus is as natural and inconsequential as a flea bite. He is using the image and the meaning of the word 'flea' to convey another paradoxical...
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