I think it's also useful to consider the idea of gender throughout the poem - "A sin, nor shame, nor loss of maidenhead." Shame is linked to gender here because she is a woman and is rejecting his obvious advances for sex. This could therefore be Donne's personal criticism of men's manipulation to women
About the explanation flast lines of the 3rd stanza - considering that at that time the opposite ought to be true - John Donne might be symbolically criticising men's cruelty to women
@@MissHannaLovesGrammar Actually after reading the poem again, there is no way I can tell for sure whether the lover - who killed the flea - is a woman. If so then the woman might be telling the man that: "You killed the flea which is our minor symbol of our combination, what would you do to baby who is the major one?"
Could it be? oh, could it be, a child born of wedlock were the flea and if in doubt lets choose this route oh how medea protects her child's freedom then and freedom now. Not marriage creed a spouse, rather House. a broken house.
i think this poem is regarding abortion. In gist of it -the woman asks for abortion ,we see the man explain her how illicit it is to kill the "flea" inside the womb. In the third stanza we see the aftermath of the abortion. Criticizing the hypocrisy of "abortion". should my interpretation be considered???
You make this poems so accesible and explained them quite good, hope I can do this so good as you in the future :)
I think it's also useful to consider the idea of gender throughout the poem - "A sin, nor shame, nor loss of maidenhead." Shame is linked to gender here because she is a woman and is rejecting his obvious advances for sex. This could therefore be Donne's personal criticism of men's manipulation to women
Great reflection shared here!
the cloistered living walls of jet is the flea, because the walls are living and the blood is so condensed that it appears black as jet.
Awesome. My mom asked me to read the poem. U made me understand it so nicely. Thanks 😊
Thank you for the great clarity in this analysis.
thanks for saving my summer homework
This was actually incredibly helpful! Thank you!
This is so helpful- was really struggling to find any as level resources ❤❤
great video. The audio chips a little too high on the EQ sometimes though
You have made really great videos, thank you very much!
i like this video very much
Thanks miss helped me understand the poem much more !!
I thought it was about pregnancy and the loss of the baby meant the loss of their marriage that there was nothing left… i feel dumb now
I think this alternative reading is still interesting - thanks for sharing it!
I think it is about pregnancy. They believed in the four humors, and they believed that mixing blood would create offspring.
Looooool I’m going to use you as my A05 critic
Loved the analysis
You'll be my life saver in tomorrow's exam. THANK YOU!
Hope it goes well!
About the explanation flast lines of the 3rd stanza - considering that at that time the opposite ought to be true - John Donne might be symbolically criticising men's cruelty to women
Interesting interpretation!
@@MissHannaLovesGrammar Thanks
@@MissHannaLovesGrammar Actually after reading the poem again, there is no way I can tell for sure whether the lover - who killed the flea - is a woman. If so then the woman might be telling the man that: "You killed the flea which is our minor symbol of our combination, what would you do to baby who is the major one?"
@@ramimahmoud385 intriguing interpretation!
@@MissHannaLovesGrammar Thanks
❤️GOOD EXPLANATION!
This was such a good analysis
Thank you!
Thank you so much ❤
LEGEND !!
very nice!
Could it be? oh, could it be,
a child born of wedlock were the flea
and if in doubt lets choose this route
oh how medea protects her child's
freedom then and freedom now.
Not marriage creed a spouse, rather House.
a broken house.
Written by?
Check it out .that was hillarious
nice
ok
Thanks for the video, is this poem a dramatic monologue?
It is a dramatic lyric poem.
@@MissHannaLovesGrammar thanks
B1 under mrs keane
Did Donne really spell "honor" without the "u"?
i think this poem is regarding abortion. In gist of it -the woman asks for abortion ,we see the man explain her how illicit it is to kill the "flea" inside the womb. In the third stanza we see the aftermath of the abortion. Criticizing the hypocrisy of "abortion".
should my interpretation be considered???
I can see this as a modern reimagining of an interpretation
Memento mori. Thanks. Great video.
Thanks so much!
That picture of Flea was very unnecessary
Noted!
Please remove the flea picture 😵😵
Why do certain people get fucking annoyed by this poem? about love? Neruda? Milton?
ok
ok