Find No Peace by Thomas Wyatt
Find No Peace by Thomas Wyatt
Find No Peace by Thomas Wyatt
"And now I follow the coals that be quent, From Dover to Calais against my mind..." These
lines could refer to Anne's trip to France in 1532 right before her marriage to Henry VIII.
This could imply that Thomas followed her to France to try and persuade her otherwise or
merely to be with her. Later in his life, Thomas writes the poem "Whoso List To Hunt",
which refers to a woman, "Graven in diamonds with letters plain, There is written her fair
neck round about, Noli me tangere, Caesar's, I am;"
This shows Wyatt's obvious attraction to a royal lady. According to his grandson George
Wyatt, who wrote a biography of Anne Boleyn many years after her death, the moment
Thomas Wyatt had seen "this new beauty" on her return from France in winter 1522 he had
fallen in love with her. When she attracted King Henry VIII's attentions sometime around
1525, Wyatt was the last of Anne's other suitors to be ousted by the king.
According to Wyatt's grandson, after an argument over her during a game of bowls with the
King, Wyatt was sent on, or himself requested, a diplomatic mission to Italy.
Themes:
1. Unrequited love and its accompanying torments:
This theme is made bare in almost all the lines of the poem. The poet clearly tells us that he is
overtly in love with a mistress or a lady: ‘I love another’. This fact produces in him
uneasiness and violent emotional surge of conflicting passions as his love is unrequited. The
details of this he gives in lines 2- 8.
The poet is overpowered with the intense feeling of love that deeply disturbs his inner world
with contradictory pulls. He bears hope as well as fear. He burns in passion as well as freezes
in apprehension. He feels himself loose yet locked. He can neither ‘live’ nor ‘die’ at his
‘device’ (will). He desires to ‘perish’ yet, asks for ‘health’. He feeds himself ‘in sorrow’ and
laughs at his pain.’
This profound passion of love which is not reciprocated has a paralysing effect on his mind as
it robs him of rest, peace and comfort. His life becomes painfully tragic under this situation,
hence his longing for death, which he believes might make him experience some respite after
all. But then, he sees no basis for this as love prevents him from welcoming untimely death.
In a way, love has taken charge of his life, and regulates his emotions.
He has indeed turned to a puppet in the hands of passion. Even at that he is unwilling to let
go, not even when he realises that it is his delight that has brought him so much pains:
And my delight is causer of this strife.
The experience of Wyatt is similar to that of anyone who is deeply in love, particularly when
the love is not returned.
3. Simile: line 2:
freeze like ice.
4. Epigram: line 14
And my delight is causer of this strife.
NOTE: Epigram: originally a short poem of two or four rhyming lines making a telling, often
humorous statement. Now any brief single line which sums up a poem is referred to as
epigrammatic.