Tuesday, August 27, 2013

The Flea Explication 8/27


            Humor, persuasion, and passion all blend in Jon Donne’s “The Flea”. The Flea is presented as a persuasive speech from one man to his, hopefully, lover. However, it truly describes a different bond, the one between Earth and her creatures.
            The structure with three stanzas lends itself to the idea of the Earth. Terra Firma contains the start, maturity, and fall of creatures. Within the stanzas it takes the reader through the steps of life. The discovery of the flea, the flea’s life being observed by our sharp narrator, and finally the grimly squishy finale.
            The woman being wooed by the speaker is Mother Earth. She provides sustenance for the creature, but she also destroys the Flea in the end due to the inevitability of time wasting all creatures on this planet. Impassive to the pleas of another creature, this human, she ends life, continuing the natural wheel.
            The enticer is but a human man trying to discern meaning in the Earth’s actions. He believes that all life is connected, “It sucked me first, and now sucks thee,/ And in this flea our two bloods mingled be;” but is unsure as to how the Earth is both a giver and taker, “Cruel and sudden, hast thou since/Purpled thy nail in the blood of innocence?”. He comes to the correct conclusion that Eath has no conscience or emotions
 Will waste, as this flea’s death took life from thee.

1 comment: