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The Passionate Shepherd to His Love
  By … Christopher Marlowe
Background Information of the poet …

- Born : 26 February 1564 Canterbury, England
- Died : 30 May 1593 (aged 29 ) Deptford , England . He was stabbed in a
    barroom fight by a drunken man.
- Occupation: A great Dramatist, playwright, poet and translator of the
    Elizabethan era.
- Literary movement : English Renaissance theatre
                          -    Notable work(s)
Plays: The Jew of Malta, Edward the Second, The Tragical History of Doctor
                                 Faustus .
Poetry : The Passionate Shepherd to His Love ,Hero and Leander
Supplement …

  Marlowe greatly influenced William Shakespeare, who was
  born in the same year as Marlow . Many scholars believe
  that if Christopher Marlowe had lived longer, he might
  have become a greater dramatist than William
  Shakespeare.
  Marlowe was the first one to use blank verse that
  encourage Shakespeare to try it . Blank verse is any verse
  comprised of unrhymed lines all in the same meter,
  usually iambic pentameter .
  Marlowe was also the first to write a tragedy in English,
  again paving the way for Shakespeare. 
“ The Passionate Shepherd to His Love ”
                                by … Christopher Marlowe

  Come live with me and be my love,
   And we will all the pleasures prove,
   That valleys, groves, hills, and fields,
    Woods, or steepy mountain yields.


      And we will sit upon rocks,
   Seeing the shepherds feed their flocks,
      By shallow rivers to whose falls
      Melodious birds sing madrigals.


  And I will make thee beds of roses,
     And a thousand fragrant posies,
      A cap of flowers, and a kirtle
   Embroider'd all with leaves of myrtle:
A gown made of the finest wool,
   Which from our pretty lambs we pull;
      Fair lined slippers for the cold,
     With buckles of the purest gold:


     A belt of straw and ivy buds,
   With coral clasps and amber studs;
  And if these pleasures may thee move,
   Come live with me, and be my love.


The shepherds's swains shall dance and sing
    For thy delight each May morning;
   If these delights thy mind may move,
    Then live with me and be my love.
Vocabulary

Grove (L 3) ~ a group of tree that are closed together
Steepy (L 4) ~ rise at a very sharp angle and is difficult to go
up
Madrigal (L 8) a song sung by several singers without any
musical instruments
Posy (L 10) ~a small bunch of flowers
Kirtle (L 11) ~ gown
Embroider (L 12) ~ is the activity of stitching designs onto
cloth
Gown (L 13) ~ is a dress, usually a long dress
Buckle (L16) ~ is a piece of metal attached to one end of the
belt
Ivy (L 17) ~ an evergreen plant that grows up walls or along
the ground
Coral (L 18) ~ a hard substance formed from the skeletons of
very small sea animals. It is often used to make jewelry
Amber (L 18) ~ is a hard yellowish-brown substance used for
making jeweler
Stud (L 18) ~ earring
Swain (L 20) ~ a young man who is in love
Type of Work and Year of Publication.


 “The Passionate Shepherd to His Love” is a pastoral
 lyric, a poetic form that is used to create an idealized vision of
 rustic life within the context of personal emotion.



 The Passionate Shepherd to His Love was published in 
 1599 (six years after the poet's death).
The Passionate Shepherd to His Love
                 setting

Christopher Marlowe sets the poem in early spring in a
rural locale where shepherds tend their flocks.


That can clearly be seen in the images drown in the poem
“Valleys” “groves” “hills” “fields” “mountain” “rivers”
“flowers”.
The Passionate Shepherd to His Love
              Rhyme, Form & Meter

“The Passionate Shepherd to His Love” has a fairly simple form that fits
its simple theme and language. It consists of six stanzas with four lines
each, for a total of 24 lines.
The predominant meter of the poem is iambic tetrameter. with eight
syllables (four iambic feet) per line .
Ex:          ........1................2...............3...............4
      ..Come LIVE |..with ME..|..and BE |..my LOVE


The rhyme scheme is also simple : In each stanza, the first line rhymes
with the second, and the third rhymes with the fourth. {aabb ccdd eeff
gghh iiaa jjaa }
The Passionate Shepherd to His Love
          summary of the whole poem

It is a pastoral poem as said before which is generally centered on the love
of a shepherd to a certain maiden. The shepherd pledged to do the
impossible only to make the female accept his pleas. The poem displays
sexuality and imposes young love.


The shepherd promises and offers many things to encourage the maiden,
like romantic entertainment and clothing, as if the time will stand still.
The nature seems to be idyllic too, as if the world is too safe and nothing
can go wrong.
The Passionate Shepherd to His Love
                     Analysis
First stanza…
    The shepherd opens with an invitation to his love to come
   and live with him and they shall all the “pleasures prove".
   This immediate reference to pleasure gives a sexual tone to
   this poem , since He is not asking her to marry him but only
   to live with him. Some critics says that this invitation is of
   totally innocent, almost naive kind as the shepherd makes
   gently and directly calls to his love.
   The shepherd implies that the entire geography of the
   countryside of England "Valleys, groves, hills and
   fields/Woods or steepy mountains" will prove to contain
   pleasure for the lovers.
Second stanza…


   The second stanza suggests the perfect places were lovers 
   should enjoy there love as the poet remind . They will watch 
   shepherds feeding their flocks, or listening to waterfalls and 
   the songs of birds “Melodious birds sing madrigals”.


   This second stanza, if taken by itself, exemplifies the 
   traditional pastoral theme of the restful shepherd watching 
   his flocks, enjoying in quiet repose the countryside and all it 
   offers. It is the idealization of the pastoral form, in which 
   nature is safe, filled with "shallow rivers" and "melodious 
   birds." 
The third, fourth, and fifth stanzas…

    These three stanzas are a kind of list of the "delights" that the 
    Shepherd will make for his lady. The list of the things he will 
    make for his lady includes : "beds of roses" "thousand fragrant 
    posies," "cap of flowers," …

    The shepherd is like want to say: I will use roses to make beds 
    decorated with a thousand sweet-smelling posies for you to lie. I 
    will weave a flower cap, and make you kirtle fringed with myrtle 
    leaves. We pull out of the finest wool from our lambs to make a 
    pretty gown. And a pair of high-quality slippers will be made for 
    you, to keep you from being cold. On the slippers I will put 
    buckles, which was made of purest gold. Also, I will make you a 
    belt of straw and ivy buds with coral clasps and amber studs. If 
    these pleasure may touch your heart, come live with me and be 
    my love. 
The last stanza…


     The shepherd asks the lady again to  accept his offer if she 
                                            accept his offer
     finds that all the things he offers worth it . “The young 
     shepherd shall dance and sing in each May morning to delight 
     you, and if you may be touched by these delights, then live with 
     me and be my love”.
The Passionate Shepherd to His Love
                    Theme

Nature Idealization rather than realism : Marlowe paints a 
picture of idyllic nature without any of the real dangers that 
might be present. There are no responsibilities in this imaginary 
life. 

Themes of  youth, innocence, love, and beauty.

Some critics says that the image drawn by the poet is given bad 
tendency toward life. The poet is like saying “enjoy the moment 
without worrying about the future”. The Unrealistic view of 
things may consider one of the themes of this poem . 
The Passionate Shepherd to His Love
       Images, Figures of Speech, Literary Devices

    The poem appeals to the senses of sight, sound, smell, and 
    touch.
      "seeing the shepherds feed their flocks" --- sight 
      "melodious birds sing madrigals" --- sound 
      "a thousand fragrant poises, a cap of flowers"--- smell 
      "sit upon the rocks"--- touch  
    Images of "shallow rivers", "melodious birds", "roses", "pretty 
    lambs", and "ivy buds" evoke a nature that is pure and 
    blooming. Marlowe mixes images of objects made from 
    nature (beds of roses, a cap of flowers, a belt of straw with ivy 
    buds) with images of man-made objects (gold buckles, silver 
    dishes). His beloved thus will receive the best of both worlds. 
 
Supplement…
      Musical devices:

      The poem combines alliteration (The shepherd's swains shall 
      dance and sing), rhythm, and rhyme to create a song-like 
      lyric.  
  the “ I " sound is repeated in the words "live", "love", "all", "hills", 
      "shallow", "flocks", "falls" and "myrtle" 
  the “ M " sound occurs in "mountain", "madrigals", "myrtle", 
      "lambs", and "amber" 

  the “ S " sound appears in the words "seeing", "shepherds", 
      "shallow", "roses", "sing", and "swains" 
  Tone
  Passionate, optimistic .
The Passionate Shepherd to His Love
                  Speaker and Listener


The speaker is a passionate shepherd. He promises to his love a fanciful,
and somehow an unrealistic future. The shepherd does not rank high in
the society; he is probably not wealthy at all. However, he is a very poetic
person, he that imply possible proposal in the poetry. This statement is
seen from words such as bed, slipper, and kirtle. Those daily used subjects
in the family.

The listener in this poem is the shepherd's lover. There are no clues on her
personality or appearance.
Thanks for paying attention

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The passionate shepherd to his love

  • 1. The Passionate Shepherd to His Love By … Christopher Marlowe
  • 2. Background Information of the poet … - Born : 26 February 1564 Canterbury, England - Died : 30 May 1593 (aged 29 ) Deptford , England . He was stabbed in a barroom fight by a drunken man. - Occupation: A great Dramatist, playwright, poet and translator of the Elizabethan era. - Literary movement : English Renaissance theatre - Notable work(s) Plays: The Jew of Malta, Edward the Second, The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus . Poetry : The Passionate Shepherd to His Love ,Hero and Leander
  • 3. Supplement … Marlowe greatly influenced William Shakespeare, who was born in the same year as Marlow . Many scholars believe that if Christopher Marlowe had lived longer, he might have become a greater dramatist than William Shakespeare. Marlowe was the first one to use blank verse that encourage Shakespeare to try it . Blank verse is any verse comprised of unrhymed lines all in the same meter, usually iambic pentameter . Marlowe was also the first to write a tragedy in English, again paving the way for Shakespeare. 
  • 4. “ The Passionate Shepherd to His Love ” by … Christopher Marlowe Come live with me and be my love, And we will all the pleasures prove, That valleys, groves, hills, and fields, Woods, or steepy mountain yields. And we will sit upon rocks, Seeing the shepherds feed their flocks, By shallow rivers to whose falls Melodious birds sing madrigals. And I will make thee beds of roses, And a thousand fragrant posies, A cap of flowers, and a kirtle Embroider'd all with leaves of myrtle:
  • 5. A gown made of the finest wool, Which from our pretty lambs we pull; Fair lined slippers for the cold, With buckles of the purest gold: A belt of straw and ivy buds, With coral clasps and amber studs; And if these pleasures may thee move, Come live with me, and be my love. The shepherds's swains shall dance and sing For thy delight each May morning; If these delights thy mind may move, Then live with me and be my love.
  • 6. Vocabulary Grove (L 3) ~ a group of tree that are closed together Steepy (L 4) ~ rise at a very sharp angle and is difficult to go up Madrigal (L 8) a song sung by several singers without any musical instruments Posy (L 10) ~a small bunch of flowers Kirtle (L 11) ~ gown Embroider (L 12) ~ is the activity of stitching designs onto cloth Gown (L 13) ~ is a dress, usually a long dress
  • 7. Buckle (L16) ~ is a piece of metal attached to one end of the belt Ivy (L 17) ~ an evergreen plant that grows up walls or along the ground Coral (L 18) ~ a hard substance formed from the skeletons of very small sea animals. It is often used to make jewelry Amber (L 18) ~ is a hard yellowish-brown substance used for making jeweler Stud (L 18) ~ earring Swain (L 20) ~ a young man who is in love
  • 8. Type of Work and Year of Publication. “The Passionate Shepherd to His Love” is a pastoral lyric, a poetic form that is used to create an idealized vision of rustic life within the context of personal emotion. The Passionate Shepherd to His Love was published in  1599 (six years after the poet's death).
  • 9. The Passionate Shepherd to His Love setting Christopher Marlowe sets the poem in early spring in a rural locale where shepherds tend their flocks. That can clearly be seen in the images drown in the poem “Valleys” “groves” “hills” “fields” “mountain” “rivers” “flowers”.
  • 10. The Passionate Shepherd to His Love Rhyme, Form & Meter “The Passionate Shepherd to His Love” has a fairly simple form that fits its simple theme and language. It consists of six stanzas with four lines each, for a total of 24 lines. The predominant meter of the poem is iambic tetrameter. with eight syllables (four iambic feet) per line . Ex: ........1................2...............3...............4 ..Come LIVE |..with ME..|..and BE |..my LOVE The rhyme scheme is also simple : In each stanza, the first line rhymes with the second, and the third rhymes with the fourth. {aabb ccdd eeff gghh iiaa jjaa }
  • 11. The Passionate Shepherd to His Love summary of the whole poem It is a pastoral poem as said before which is generally centered on the love of a shepherd to a certain maiden. The shepherd pledged to do the impossible only to make the female accept his pleas. The poem displays sexuality and imposes young love. The shepherd promises and offers many things to encourage the maiden, like romantic entertainment and clothing, as if the time will stand still. The nature seems to be idyllic too, as if the world is too safe and nothing can go wrong.
  • 12. The Passionate Shepherd to His Love Analysis First stanza… The shepherd opens with an invitation to his love to come and live with him and they shall all the “pleasures prove". This immediate reference to pleasure gives a sexual tone to this poem , since He is not asking her to marry him but only to live with him. Some critics says that this invitation is of totally innocent, almost naive kind as the shepherd makes gently and directly calls to his love. The shepherd implies that the entire geography of the countryside of England "Valleys, groves, hills and fields/Woods or steepy mountains" will prove to contain pleasure for the lovers.
  • 13. Second stanza… The second stanza suggests the perfect places were lovers  should enjoy there love as the poet remind . They will watch  shepherds feeding their flocks, or listening to waterfalls and  the songs of birds “Melodious birds sing madrigals”. This second stanza, if taken by itself, exemplifies the  traditional pastoral theme of the restful shepherd watching  his flocks, enjoying in quiet repose the countryside and all it  offers. It is the idealization of the pastoral form, in which  nature is safe, filled with "shallow rivers" and "melodious  birds." 
  • 14. The third, fourth, and fifth stanzas… These three stanzas are a kind of list of the "delights" that the  Shepherd will make for his lady. The list of the things he will  make for his lady includes : "beds of roses" "thousand fragrant  posies," "cap of flowers," … The shepherd is like want to say: I will use roses to make beds  decorated with a thousand sweet-smelling posies for you to lie. I  will weave a flower cap, and make you kirtle fringed with myrtle  leaves. We pull out of the finest wool from our lambs to make a  pretty gown. And a pair of high-quality slippers will be made for  you, to keep you from being cold. On the slippers I will put  buckles, which was made of purest gold. Also, I will make you a  belt of straw and ivy buds with coral clasps and amber studs. If  these pleasure may touch your heart, come live with me and be  my love. 
  • 15. The last stanza… The shepherd asks the lady again to  accept his offer if she  accept his offer finds that all the things he offers worth it . “The young  shepherd shall dance and sing in each May morning to delight  you, and if you may be touched by these delights, then live with  me and be my love”.
  • 16. The Passionate Shepherd to His Love Theme Nature Idealization rather than realism : Marlowe paints a  picture of idyllic nature without any of the real dangers that  might be present. There are no responsibilities in this imaginary  life.  Themes of  youth, innocence, love, and beauty. Some critics says that the image drawn by the poet is given bad  tendency toward life. The poet is like saying “enjoy the moment  without worrying about the future”. The Unrealistic view of  things may consider one of the themes of this poem . 
  • 17. The Passionate Shepherd to His Love Images, Figures of Speech, Literary Devices The poem appeals to the senses of sight, sound, smell, and  touch.       "seeing the shepherds feed their flocks" --- sight  "melodious birds sing madrigals" --- sound  "a thousand fragrant poises, a cap of flowers"--- smell  "sit upon the rocks"--- touch   Images of "shallow rivers", "melodious birds", "roses", "pretty  lambs", and "ivy buds" evoke a nature that is pure and  blooming. Marlowe mixes images of objects made from  nature (beds of roses, a cap of flowers, a belt of straw with ivy  buds) with images of man-made objects (gold buckles, silver  dishes). His beloved thus will receive the best of both worlds.   
  • 18. Supplement… Musical devices: The poem combines alliteration (The shepherd's swains shall  dance and sing), rhythm, and rhyme to create a song-like  lyric.   the “ I " sound is repeated in the words "live", "love", "all", "hills",  "shallow", "flocks", "falls" and "myrtle"  the “ M " sound occurs in "mountain", "madrigals", "myrtle",  "lambs", and "amber"  the “ S " sound appears in the words "seeing", "shepherds",  "shallow", "roses", "sing", and "swains"  Tone Passionate, optimistic .
  • 19. The Passionate Shepherd to His Love Speaker and Listener The speaker is a passionate shepherd. He promises to his love a fanciful, and somehow an unrealistic future. The shepherd does not rank high in the society; he is probably not wealthy at all. However, he is a very poetic person, he that imply possible proposal in the poetry. This statement is seen from words such as bed, slipper, and kirtle. Those daily used subjects in the family. The listener in this poem is the shepherd's lover. There are no clues on her personality or appearance.
  • 20. Thanks for paying attention