To His Coy Mistress
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| To His Coy Mistress
Had we but world enough, and time, |
"To His Coy Mistress" is a poem written by the British author and Puritan statesman Andrew Marvell (1621 – 1678) either during or just before the Interregnum. The poem is often considered one of the finest and most concise carpe diem arguments ever put in verse.
Marvell probably wrote the poem prior to serving in Oliver Cromwell's government as a minister, and the poem was not published in his lifetime.
Synopsis
Written in the point of view of a gentleman, presumably older than his mistress, who is trying to persuade her to engage in sexual intercourse with him, although she is coy.
Allusions in other works
Many authors have borrowed the phrase "World enough and time" from the poem's opening line to use in their book titles. The most famous is Robert Penn Warren's 1950 novel World Enough and Time: A Romantic Novel, about murder in early-1800s Kentucky. With variations, it has also been used for books on the history of physics (World Enough and Space-Time: Absolute versus Rational Theories of Space and Time), geopolitics (World Enough and Time: Successful Strategies for Resource Management), a science-fiction collection (Worlds Enough & Time: Five Tales of Speculative Fiction), and, of course, a biography (World Enough and Time: The Life of Andrew Marvell). Also in the field of science fiction, Ursula K. Le Guin wrote a Hugo-nominated short story with the title, "Vaster than Empires and More Slow".
The phrase "there will be time" occurs repeatedly in a section of T. S. Eliot's "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock", and is often said to be an allusion to Marvell's poem.Template:Fact Prufrock says that there will be time "for the yellow smoke that slides along the street", time "to murder and create", and time "for a hundred indecisions ... Before the taking of a toast and tea". As Eliot's hero is, in fact, putting off romance and consummation, he is (falsely) answering Marvell's narrator. Eliot also alludes to the lines near the end of Marvell's poem, "Let us roll all our strength and all / Our sweetness up into one ball," with his lines, "To have squeezed the universe into a ball / To roll it toward some overwhelming question," as Prufrock questions whether or not such an act of daring would have been worth it. Eliot returns to Marvell in The Waste Land with the line "But at my back from time to time I hear / The sound of horns and motors" (Part III, line 196).
Most recently, Audrey Niffenegger's fiction novel The Time Traveler's Wife borrows heavily from Andrew Marvell's poem. The novel focuses on the main character Henry DeTamble, a reluctant time-traveler who often proclaims his love for his lover Clare Abshire through the use of the phrase "World enough and time".[1]
Archibald MacLeish's poem "You, Andrew Marvell", alludes to the passage of time and to the growth and decline of empires. In his poem, the speaker, lying on the ground at sunset, feels "the rising of the night". He visualizes sunset, moving from east to west geographically, overtaking the great civilizations of the past, and feels "how swift how secretly/The shadow of the night comes on."
In the Ernest Hemingway classic A Farewell to Arms, Lt. Henry recites the lines "But at my back I always hear/Time's winged chariot hurrying near" during a scene in chapter 23 where he and Catherine Barkley are eating in a cafe.
Peter S. Beagle has a novel titled A Fine and Private Place. Ellery Queen used Fine and Private Place for one of his novels.
K. Eric Drexler has a book on Molecular Nanotechnology titled Engines of Creation. Drexler uses "Worlds Enough and Time" to entitle the section about life extension.
External links
- To His Coy Mistress: A Study Guide With an Annotated Copy of the Poem
- "His Coy Mistress to Mr. Marvell" by A. D. Hope – The object of Marvell's attentions replies, a breast-and-a-halfsworth later.es:A su esquiva amada (poema)



