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The Passionate Shepherd to His Love


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Below are the two poems, “The Passionate Shepherd to His Love,” and “Nymph’s Reply”. The first poem is a proposal to an imaginary woman. The second poem is in response to this imaginary poem. See if you can determine from these two poems what the nature of the conversation is.

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To do this assignment you will need to use this vocabulary.

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  • Alliteration: Repetition of consonant sounds. For example, “pleasures prove”
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  • Personification: Giving inhuman objects or animals human characteristics
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  • Assonance: Repetition of vowel sounds. For example, “me and be”
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  • End Rhyme: The rhyming of the end words
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  • Iambic Pentameter: An Iamb is the stressed/ unstressed sound in a word. Pentameter means that there are 5 feet, or 5 iambs in a line of poetry.
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Please do the following:

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  1. Highlight the passages that shows at least 2 or more of the literary devices in each poem. Tell us which device is being used and what it’s affect is.
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  3. Summarize the poem and tell us what the author is suggesting.
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The Passionate Shepherd to His Love

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Oct 10
Kira Crabb Kira Crabb (Oct 10 2016 1:09PM) : Summary more

Come live with me and be my love. This perfectly summarizes the poem. Marlowe is asking the nymph to live with him, and he described all that entails. He is also asking her to be his love. He is wooing her with tempting pleasures, all for one purpose, to persuade her to live with him and be his love.

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Christopher Marlowe

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COME live with me and be my Love,

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Oct 10
Kira Crabb Kira Crabb (Oct 10 2016 12:48PM) : This is an example of assonance because me and be are a repetition of vowels.
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And we will all the pleasures prove

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Oct 7
Ryan Moore Ryan Moore (Oct 07 2016 6:49PM) : The repetition of w in we will and l in will and all are examples of alliteration.
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That hills and valleys, dale and field,

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And all the craggy mountains yield.

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Oct 10
Kira Crabb Kira Crabb (Oct 10 2016 12:42PM) : Lines 15 and 16 are an example of an end rhyme because field and yield rhyme.
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There will we sit upon the rocks

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Oct 6
Austin Keller Austin Keller (Oct 06 2016 3:28PM) : "Will we" is an example of alliteration. The author repeats many 'w' and 'l' sounds throughout the poem.
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5

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And see the shepherds feed their flocks,

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By shallow rivers, to whose falls

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Melodious birds sing madrigals.

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There will I make thee beds of roses

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And a thousand fragrant posies,

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10

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A cap of flowers, and a kirtle

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Embroider'd all with leaves of myrtle.

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A gown made of the finest wool

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Which from our pretty lambs we pull,

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Fair linèd slippers for the cold,

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15

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With buckles of the purest gold.

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A belt of straw and ivy buds

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With coral clasps and amber studs:

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And if these pleasures may thee move,

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Oct 6
Alfredo Cervantes Alfredo Cervantes (Oct 06 2016 1:52PM) : 2 or more literary devices more

I found three literary devices in lines 17-19. The last words in line 17 and 18 rhymed, making the sentences end rhyme. An alliteration was used in line 18 with “coral clasps”. Finally, in line 19, personification was used when the author illustrated pleasures with the ability to move. These devices help in creating a more realistic and rhythmical tale.

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Oct 7
Tanda Call Tanda Call (Oct 07 2016 2:32PM) : Ending Rhyme more

Each line through the sonnet rhymes with the following line. For example, kirtle and myrtle, wool and pull.

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Come live with me and be my Love.

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20

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Thy silver dishes for thy meat

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As precious as the gods do eat,

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Shall on an ivory table be

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Prepared each day for thee and me.

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Oct 7
Tanda Call Tanda Call (Oct 07 2016 2:37PM) : Assonance more

Thee and me are a repetition of the vowel ‘e’.

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The shepherd swains shall dance and sing

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25

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For thy delight each May-morning:

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If these delights thy mind may move,

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Then live with me and be my Love.

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Oct 6
Austin Keller Austin Keller (Oct 06 2016 3:30PM) : End rhyme is used throughout the entire poem in the form of couplets, rather than an a,b,a,b pattern.
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Oct 6
Austin Keller Austin Keller (Oct 06 2016 3:35PM) : This poem in summary is someone's love letter to their significant other. The shepherd is making an invitation for his love to live with him through flattery and unrealistic promises. [Edited]
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Oct 7
Tanda Call Tanda Call (Oct 07 2016 2:59PM) : summary more

In this sonnet is about a shepherd trying to convince his love (whomever it may be) why she should come with him and be his love.

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Oct 7
Ryan Moore Ryan Moore (Oct 07 2016 7:01PM) : The poem is about a shepherd proclaiming his love to someone and lists all the things he would give her. more

I think the author is trying to make a point about how people offer many things in the name of love even when they can’t realistically provide them. Think about what the shepherd is offering, golden buckles and amber studs to name a few, and think about if a shepherd could really offer something like that.

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Oct 8
Alfredo Cervantes Alfredo Cervantes (Oct 08 2016 12:19AM) : Summary more

This poem is based on a proposal to an imaginary woman. Here the man or shepherd explains to her about the great things they will enjoy from, even the impossible ones, if they were together. The author probably suggests that love can become so powerful, even in the sense of controlling the way someone speaks.

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The Nymph’s Reply to the Shepherd

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BY SIR WALTER RALEGH

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If all the world and love were young,

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And truth in every Shepherd’s tongue,

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These pretty pleasures might me move,

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To live with thee, and be thy love.

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Time drives the flocks from field to fold,

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Oct 6
Austin Keller Austin Keller (Oct 06 2016 3:44PM) : "Time drives the flocks" is a personification because 'time' is being given humanistic traits.
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When Rivers rage and Rocks grow cold,

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Oct 7
Ryan Moore Ryan Moore (Oct 07 2016 6:53PM) : River's rage is an example of personification giving a river a human emotion.
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And Philomel becometh dumb,

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The rest complains of cares to come.

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The flowers do fade, and wanton fields,

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Oct 7
Tanda Call Tanda Call (Oct 07 2016 2:56PM) : Alliteration more

The Flowers Fade, and wanton Fields, shows alliteration with the consonant ‘f’.

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To wayward winter reckoning yields,

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A honey tongue, a heart of gall,

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Is fancy’s spring, but sorrow’s fall.

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Thy gowns, thy shoes, thy beds of Roses,

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Thy cap, thy kirtle, and thy posies

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Soon break, soon wither, soon forgotten:

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Oct 7
Tanda Call Tanda Call (Oct 07 2016 2:44PM) : personification more

He goes to say that the gowns, shoes, cap, bed of roses, kirtle and posies will all break and wither. They are all doing something that they are not capable of doing on their own.

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In folly ripe, in reason rotten.

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Thy belt of straw and Ivy buds,

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The Coral clasps and amber studs,

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All these in me no means can move

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To come to thee and be thy love.

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But could youth last, and love still breed,

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Had joys no date, nor age no need,

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Then these delights my mind might move

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To live with thee, and be thy love.

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Oct 6
Austin Keller Austin Keller (Oct 06 2016 3:42PM) : This poem also has an end rhyme in couplet form, similar to the previous poem.
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Oct 7
Tanda Call Tanda Call (Oct 07 2016 3:01PM) : Summary more

Overall, in this sonnet this nymph is telling the shepherd that if all of the things he is saying were true then she would come with him. But she also sits that if they are not true then she will not come to be his love.

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Oct 7
Ryan Moore Ryan Moore (Oct 07 2016 7:04PM) : The poem is about the nymph's answer to the shepherd. more

The author is making a point about how even though the shepherd is offering so much to the nymph now in a short time his love will fade away. It’s probably meant to show how love can feel overwhelming at first but over time it will fade into nothing.

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Oct 7
Alfredo Cervantes Alfredo Cervantes (Oct 07 2016 8:45PM) : Summary more

This poem is a reply to the first poem. In this poem, the imaginary woman explains her reasons as to why she cannot accept the man’s proposal. The author probably suggests that certain men make many promises and talk the good talk to women, but never fulfill them.

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DMU Timestamp: September 28, 2016 13:52

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Oct 6
Austin Keller Austin Keller (Oct 06 2016 3:39PM) : Basically what the 'nymph' is saying, is that all what the shepherd promises sounds delightful, but unrealistic. The nymph says that if these things were real and true that the nymph would live with him.
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Oct 28
Rebekah Hale Rebekah Hale (Oct 28 2016 1:29AM) : Assonance - "Come live with me and be my Love". End rhyme - The shepherd swains shall dance and sing 25 For thy delight each May-morning: If these delights thy mind may move, 5 Then live with me and be my Love.
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