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Provide a 6 pages analysis while answering the following question: The Carpe Diem Prophesy of Herrick. Prepare this assignment according to the guidelines found in the APA Style Guide. An abstract is

Provide a 6 pages analysis while answering the following question: The Carpe Diem Prophesy of Herrick. Prepare this assignment according to the guidelines found in the APA Style Guide. An abstract is required. This is another way of engendering hope and celebrating life even when there are traces of warning and of darkness ahead. Man cannot but lose with death, and yet he can make most of his hay days to die without regret. And that is a cavalier's way of uttering a Donne like conceit with the lines: (from Death be not Proud. Holy Sonnets: X)

"Death be not proud, though some have called thee

Mighty and dreadful, for thou art not so,

One short sleep past, we wake eternally,

And death shall be no more. Death, thou shalt die".

Similar threats have been mellowed down with Shakespeare's sonnets with his optimism to conquer death with truth, love, and beauty. Sometimes to him Death was not physical death but a death in life as in Sonnet 73 where he speculates his coming death and yet feels dead at the same time like "Bare ruined choirs," an escape (Sonnet 66, "Tired with all these, for restful death I cry"), or Sonnet 55 vouching for an undying "living record" of his lover's memory, in the "eyes of all posterity and dwell in lovers' eyes"! This idea of cheating melancholy and an eternal note of human sadness heard from the days of "Sophocles" through what Matthew Arnold hears and concludes in his poem "Dover Beach":

"Ah, love, let us be true

To one another! for the world, which seems

To lie before us like a land of dreams,

Hath really neither joy, nor love, nor light,

Nor certitude, nor peace, nor help for pain.

And we are here as on a darkling plain."

This is Arnold's way of giving his fears and turmoil the only antidote, for he is helpless in a world swept by such helpless inevitable destiny of mankind. While he seeks the answer in true conformity between two lovers, Eliot's poetic trances just reveal a soul damned, "trampled" and impressionistically doomed, where "His soul stretched tight across the skies" and where the only answer to the metaphysical absence of a transcendental root for the man anymore, he/she can only defeat the being with nothingness, for there are no routes to salvation, for God too is Dead.

"You lay upon your back, and waited.

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