To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time (Gather ye rosebuds) Analysis

Form and Meter

Don't worry about the complicated name for this poem's meter; it sounds worse than it really is. "To the Virgins" alternates between two different types of meter. The odd-numbered lines (1, 3, 5, e...

Speaker

As is so often the case, it's really easy to imagine Morgan Freeman speaking these lines, or at least to his character from The Shawshank Redemption. In that movie, he plays a prisoner who made a m...

Setting

Let's suppose you live near a place called the Rose Garden, which is full of (surprise) flowers. You and your best friend spend a lot of time there, especially when you're bored and don't feel like...

Sound Check

There's no getting around the singsong, almost nursery-rhyme quality of this poem. "Gather ye rosebuds…" also sounds moralistic and profound, like something Forrest Gump would say. It's simple, r...

What's Up With the Title?

The poem is called "To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time." The poem is addressed, presumably, to a group of virgins, and it encourages them to make the most of their time… which turns out to mean...

Calling Card

Even if you haven't read our "Sound Check" section for this poem, you can't help noticing that it has a certain singsong, nursery-rhyme quality to it. The short, four-line stanzas rhyming ABAB give...

Tough-o-Meter

"To the Virgins" isn't really a difficult poem, aside from a few strange vocabulary choices like "a-flying," "a-getting," and maybe "tarry" in the last stanza. In fact, unlike the poetry of a numbe...

Trivia

Robert Herrick (1591-1674) lived until he was 83 (source). That's a ripe old age, especially for the 1600s.Herrick's major contribution to English literature, a volume entitled Hesperides (1648), c...

Steaminess Rating

There isn't anything really steamy in this poem. Even though it's an encouragement to get married, it doesn't really seem that sexual – unless you count the possible double meaning of "dying" (se...

Allusions

Horace, Odes (whole poem) – see "Why Should I Care?" for more.Ausonius, Epigrammata 2.49 (1) – see "In A Nutshell" for more.