The Passionate Shepherd To His Love
The Passionate Shepherd To His Love
The Passionate Shepherd To His Love
Come live with me and be my love, If all the world and love were young,
And we will all the pleasures prove And truth in every shepherd's tongue,
That valleys, groves, hills, and fields These pretty pleasures might me move
Woods or steepy mountain yields To live with thee and be thy love.
And we will sit upon the rocks, Time drives the flocks from field to fold,
Seeing the shepherds feed their flocks When rivers rage and rocks grow cold;
By shallow rivers to whose falls And Philomel becometh dumb;
Melodious birds sing madrigals. The rest complain of cares to come.
And I will make thee beds of roses The flowers do fade, and wanton fields
And a thousand fragrant posies, To wayward winter reckoning yields;
A cap of flower, and a kirtle A honey tongue, a heart of gall,
Embroidered all with leaves of myrtle; Is fancy's spring, but sorrow's fall.
A gown made of the finest wool Thy gowns, thy shoes, thy bed of roses,
Which from our pretty lambs we pull; Thy cap, thy kirtle, and thy posies,
Fair lined slippers for the cold Soon break, soon wither, soon forgotten,
With buckles of the purest gold; In folly ripe, in reason rotten.
A belt of straw and ivy buds, Thy belt of straw and ivy buds,
With coral clasps and amber studs; Thy coral clasps and amber studs,
And if these pleasures may thee move, All these in me no means can move
Come live with me and be my love. To come to thee and be thy love.
The shepherds' swains shall dance and sing But could youth last and love still breed,
For thy delight each May morning: Had joys no date nor age no need,
If these delights thy mind may move, Then these delights my mind might move
Then live with me and be my love. To live with thee and be thy love.
The themes of the poem - carpe diem and the immediate gratification of their sexual
passions.
Love in the May countryside will be like a return to the Garden of Eden. There is a
tradition that our problems are caused by having too many restrictions, by society. If we
could get away from these rules, we could return to a prisitine condition of happiness.
The "free love" movement of the 1960's was a recent manifestation of this utopian
belief. If the nymph would go a-maying with the shepherd, they would have a perfect
life.
In quatrains (4 line stanzas) of iambic tetrameter (8 syllables per line, 4 measures per
line with 2 syllables in each measure), the shepherd invites his beloved to experience
the joys of nature.
He hopes to return with the nymph to aEdenic life of free love in nature.
The world is NOT young--we are not in Eden, but in this old fallen world - a world in
which shepherds have actually been known to lie to their nymphs.
This poem by Sir Walter Raleigh uses the same meter and references to present "mirror
images" of Marlowe's poem. The feminine persona (the nymph) of the poem sets up a
hypothetical set of questions that undermine the intelligence of the man's offer because
all that he offers is transitory. She reverses his images into negative ones:
rivers rage
birds complain of winter (a reference to the story of Philomela who was raped
and turned into a nightingale).
We live in a fallen world. Free love in the grass in impossible now because the world is
not in some eternal spring. The seasons pass, as does time. Nymphs grow old, and
shepherds grow cold.
The poem is the "passionate" appeal of a young shepherd to his beloved lady love "to come and
live with him." It is not a marriage proposal but an overt appeal by the shepherd requesting her
to spend some time with him so that he can use her as a means of satisfying his desire for
passionate sex with her.
The tone of the poem is both idealistic and idyllic. The shepherd lists out only the pleasures and
not the drawbacks or dangers of a pastoral life to tempt her into accepting his offer. In the first
stanza he describes the places in a very romantic manner where they could make love:
COME live with me and be my Love, /And we will all the pleasures prove /That hills and
valleys, dale and field, /And all the craggy mountains yield.
In the second stanza he tells her how they will happily live while away their time sitting on the
rocks and watching the other shepherds feed their flocks as they listen to the melodious birds:
There will we sit upon the rocks/ And see the shepherds feed their flocks,/ By shallow rivers, to
whose falls /Melodious birds sing madrigals.
In the next three stanzas he tempts her with attractive gifts like, a bed of roses, a cap of flowers, a
flowery skirt, a gown of the finest wool, a beautiful belt with "corals clasps and amber studs" and
slippers with golden buckles and repeats his offer which he made at the beginning of the poem.
He concludes the poem by telling her, in the last two stanzas, that although he is only a shepherd
he will ensure that she enjoys a royal life style with her food being served on silver plates set on
an ivory table and by promising her that every "May-morning" (every day in the month of May)
country youths shall dance and sing and entertain her if she agrees to "live with him and be his
love."
Marlowe's lyric is a universal (all times and all places) example of how young men tempt pretty
girls with fantastic offers - slippers with golden buckles! -to make them yield to fulfill their
sexual desires.
QUESTIONS
Popular Questions
What are 3 literary devices used in "The Passionate Shepherd to His Love" by
Christopher Marlowe?...
What are some comparisons and contrasts between "The Passionate Shepherd to his
Love" by...
What does "a belt of straw and ivy buds, with coral clasps and amber studs" mean in
"The...
What figures of speech are used in the poem "The Passionate Shepherd to His Love"?
Who is the speaker of the poem "The Passionate Shepherd to His Love"?
How is the romantic escape motif in "The Passionate Shepherd to his Love" used in
todays media?
Compare and contrast the subject of love in Marlowe's "The Passionate Shepherd to His
Love" and...
Compare "To His Coy Mistress" and "The Passionate Shepard to His Love." Does
Marvell's poem make...
Heroic couples are pairs of rhyming lines written in iambic pentameter. Shakespeare made these
popular in his sonnets (this is not a sonnet), but they produce a beautifully rhythmic poem.
Notice that the rhyming lines continue throughout the poem. An example from the first stanza
that sometimes the words dont seem to rhyme, but within the rhythm of the poem they do:
Sensory details are also present throughout the poem. The poet carefully chooses his words to
help us create an image with our five senses. Phrases like melodious birds and fragrant
posies help create the sweet, carefree pastoral setting. Consider lines 16 and 17:
Words like this create a picture in our minds. They also help sell the pastoral poem effect,
describing nature in an idealized, inviting way. In this case, the speaker wants the woman to
come and live with him in the beautiful countryside.
Alliteration is a third device poets love to use. It helps words roll of the tongue! Alliteration is
the repetition of initial consonant sounds, and is used throughout the poem. Examples are
pleasures prove in line 2, coral clasps in line 17, shepherds feed their flocks from line 6
and these from the last stanza:
The alliteration adds to the lovely melodious sound of the poem, and is very convincing!
The entire frame of reference spoken throughout the poem is one in which the shepherd speaks to
this particular person. The shepherd wants to convince this person to remain with him in the
countryside. It is evident that with so many promises, it is a difficult proposition. Yet, the
shepherd is convinced of the authenticity of his convictions and promises. This sense of
commitment underscores how he is the speaker in the poem. It is through his voice that the
reader comes to understand Marlowe's depiction of what seems to be an idealized construction of
love in the naturally pastoral setting.
The passionate shepherd is a pastoral poem with a bit of the carpe diem of the age in it. He says
to the young lady, if you like fair weather, simple gifts from nature (beds of flowers, skirts, wool
shoes, coral clasps, etc.), then come live with me and be my love. This is a sieze the moment
poem where he appeals to the girl's sense of living in the present and going for the temporary
pleasures that the scenery, sheep, and his attentions in the spring and summer sun can afford her.
He never mentions marriage or long-term love.
The nypmh's reply capitalizes on this. She says, if you could promise that it would last
forever...if the summer would be here all year around and your love would never die...then I
would be moved. BUT all the things you mention are temporary with no hint of permanent
conviction or commitment. Shepherds have "honey tongues" and none of this will last, so why
should I come be your love? I can get sweet talk right here where I am, thank you very much.
She's not buying what he's trying to sell.
The passionate shepherd is a pastoral poem with a bit of the carpe diem of the age in it.
He says to the young lady, if you like fair weather, simple gifts from nature (beds of flowers,
skirts, wool shoes, coral clasps, etc.), then come live with me and be my love. This is a sieze the
moment poem where he appeals to the girl's sense of living in the present and going for the
temporary pleasures that the scenery, sheep, and his attentions in the spring and summer sun can
afford her. He never mentions marriage or long-term love.
The nypmh's reply capitalizes on this. She says, if you could promise that it would last
forever...if the summer would be here all year around and your love would never die...then I
would be moved. BUT all the things you mention are temporary with no hint of permanent
conviction or commitment. Shepherds have "honey tongues" and none of this will last, so why
should I come be your love? I can get sweet talk right here where I am, thank you very much.
She's not buying what he's trying to sell.
Another obvious point of contrast for these poems is the speaker's tone--as well as the speakers
themselves. Marlowe's speaker is a young shepherd who wants the woman he loves to marry
him; Marlowe's speaker is that young woman who gives the shepherd her answer. The tone of the
"passionate shepherd" is hopeful and romantic; he offers this woman everything he has which is
of value (to him, anyway) and promises her a life of pastoral luxury. The tone of the "reply" is,
well, not as romantic.
The shepherd highlights some things he hopes will move this woman to marry him, including
these:
Unfortunately, the response is not what the shepherd wanted to hear, "Passionate Shepherd" is
full of innocence and delight, while "Reply" is full of skepticism and doubt. It is a contrast
between innocence and experience, and experience wins the day. Perhaps there was a time when
the nymph might have said yes, but she has lived through a few seasons and knows what happens
over time. The nymph points out that everything he offers her is great--until the weather changes,
which of course it will, and unless he is lying. Then things will look a little differently:
Thy gowns, thy shoes, thy beds of Roses,
Thy cap, thy kirtle, and thy posies
Soon break, soon wither, soon forgotten:
In folly ripe, in reason rotten.
Thy belt of straw and Ivy buds,
The Coral clasps and amber studs,
All these in me no means can move
To come to thee and be thy love.
All of those lovely things are only temporal, and when the seasons change, they will no longer be
beautiful or valuable, at least not to her.
On the other hand, the two poems are quite similar because the "reply" is a mirror, or perhaps an
older, wiser echo of the proposal poem. Notice the two quotes from the poem, above, in which
the nymph repeats all of the things he said he will give her. This is true for everything in the
shepherd's poem. If he mentions sitting on a rock, the reply also mentions it; if he mentions
listening to madrigals, so does she. This is really the one thing they have in common, and it is
quite significant. There is no mistaking that "Reply" is connected to and a direct response to
"Passionate Shepherd."
Despite their containing most of the same elements, it is the tone which most sets these two
poems apart. One reflects the innocence and hopefulness of young love while the other expresses
the more cynical view that shepherds do not always tell the truth and that seasons will inevitably
change.
Sir Walter Raleigh wrote this poem as a response to Christopher Marlowe's poem, The
Passionate Shepherd to His Love. In Marlowe's poem, the shepherd woos his love by making
promises of an idyllic pastoral life and all sorts of material benefits if she chooses to be with him.
In The Nymph's reply to the Shepherd, Raleigh's nymph rejects the shepherd's advances since she
finds his promises unsatisfying and hardly commensurate to her expectations of what an ideal
relationship is like. Her comments clearly indicate that she finds the shepherd's promises limited
since they are restricted to material values and do not relate to true commitment and loyalty at
all.
The nymph is critical of the shepherd's honeyed tongue and suggests that it could disguise an
acid and cold heart. The words promise much, but are only that. The shepherd hardly mentions
what he actually feels and he might be devoid of true passion.
A honey tongue, a heart of gall,
Is fancy's spring, but sorrow's fall,
The nymph rejects each of the shepherd's promises and emphasises the transient nature of all that
he mentions. None of the promised delights he mentions are permanent and all are bound to die,
fade away or lose their value over time.
What the nymph needs is something permanent, greater than the transitory, something that
transcends the periodic nature of things. In her reply she states:
The nymph therefore rejects the shepherd's appeal. She desires things which, one may believe,
are impossible to attain: (ever)lasting youth, a regenerative love, permanent, timeless and
inconsequential joy. However, although her request may seem paradoxical, her wish is not an
unrealistic one. She seeks true happiness throughout her lifetime, i.e. her desire is that these
qualities should endure during her stay on earth with the shepherd as her companion, and this is a
promise he does not, or is unwilling, to make.