John Donne: "The Flea"
The speaker uses the
occasion of a flea hopping from himself to a young lady as an excuse
to argue that the two of them should make love. Since in the flea
their blood is mixed together, he says that they have already been
made as one in the body of the flea. Besides, the flea pricked her
and got what it wanted without having to woo her. The flea’s bite
and mingling of their bloods is not considered a sin, so why should
their love-making?
In the second stanza
the speaker attempts to prevent the woman from killing the flea. He
argues that since the flea contains the “life” of both herself
and the speaker, she would be guilty both of suicide and a triple
homicide in killing it.
The woman in
question is obviously not convinced, for in the third stanza she has
killed the flea with a fingernail. The speaker then turns this around
to point out that, although the flea which contained portions of
their lives is dead, neither of them is the weaker for it. If this
commingling of bodily fluids can leave no lasting effect, then why
does she hesitate to join with him in sexual intimacy? After all, her
honor will be equally undiminished.
Critical Analysis:-
Donne here makes use
of the wit for which he eventually became famous—although in his
own day his poetry was often considered too lurid to gain popular
notoriety, and little of it was published during his lifetime. One of
his earlier poems, “The Flea,” demonstrates his ability to take a
controlling metaphor and adapt it to unusual circumstances. “The
Flea” is made up of three nine-line stanzas following an aabbccddd
rhyme scheme.
He begins the poem
by asking the young woman to “Mark this flea” (line 1) which has
bitten and sucked blood from both himself and her. He points out that
she has “denied” him something which the flea has not refrained
from enjoying: the intimate union of their bodily fluids (in this
case, blood). This commonplace occurrence, he argues, “cannot be
said/A sin, nor shame, nor loss of maidenhead” (lines 5-6); if this
tiny commingling of the two people is not wrong, then how can a
greater commingling be considered evil or undesirable? He even points
out that the flea is able to enjoy the woman’s essence “before he
woo” (line 7), the implication being that he need not court the
woman in order to enjoy her sexual favors.
In the second stanza
the poet argues for the life of the flea, as his desired lady has
made a move to kill it. He paints the flea as a holy thing: “This
flea is you and I, and this/Our marriage bed, and marriage temple is”
(lines 12-13). (Note also the reference to the Christian concept of
"three lives in one" (line 10), suggesting that a spiritual
union already exists, although unlike a spiritual marriage in a
"marriage temple," the third being in the trio is not God
but a flea.) Besides arguing for the sanctity of the flea’s life,
the speaker is also arguing that he and the lady have already
bypassed the usual vows of fidelity and ceremony of marriage; thus,
he pushes toward his point that the two of them have already been
joined as one in the flea, so there is no harm in joining their
bodies in sexual love.
There is a hint that
he has already attempted to gain the lady’s favors and failed,
either through her response or that of her parents: “Though parents
grudge, and you,” (line 14) he says, suggesting that even her
opinion does not matter anymore. The flea has already “cloister’d”
them within its body’s “walls of jet” (line 15, possibly also
suggesting that they are alone together in a dark room). The woman’s
disdain for him and his suit becomes more apparent as he claims she
is “apt” to kill him (line 16), following her habit of killing
fleas, but he offers that she should refrain from harming the flea
because in so doing she would add suicide (“Let not to that
self-murder added be” line 17) by destroying the vessel holding her
blood. In fact, he says, she would be guilty of “sacrilege, three
sins in killing three” (line 18) since his own blood is there too.
He fails in his
defense of the flea, for she has “purpled” her finger with the
flea's blood by the opening of the third stanza (line 20). It is a
“sudden” but perhaps inevitable betrayal of an innocent being.
The woman claims triumph over the lover's argument, responding that
neither she nor the man is weaker for her having killed the flea
(lines 23-24). In this way she attempts to unravel the speaker’s
argument that the flea represents a sacred bond between them; the
flea is simple to kill and nothing has been lost, and the single drop
of blood will not be missed. Thus there is no reason to have sex.
The poet, however,
is quick-witted enough to turn her argument back against her: if the
death of the flea, which had partaken of just a tiny amount of their
life-essences, is virtually no problem, despite his pretended fear,
then any fear she might have about her loss of honor is equally a
“false” fear. The act of physical union would cause virtually no
serious harm to her reputation. That is, as much as she lost to the
flea, “Just so much honour, when thou yield'st to me, / Will waste,
as this flea's death took life from thee” (lines 26-27). He thus
returns to his original argument from the first stanza: the flea’s
intimate contact with the woman has caused her no harm, so a physical
encounter with the poet will cause no harm either.
Although the lover
suggests that he is in control and that it is a matter of "when
thou yield'st," some feminist scholars have noted that he is
powerless to do anything until the woman makes her decision. He
merely utters his words of warning, but she can raise her hand and
kill the flea; similarly, she can exercise her power by continuing to
deny the man his desires. The flea could take what it wanted without
stopping to woo, but the lover uses no force beyond the force of
argument. He has not been successful so far, but we do not know what
will happen next.
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