The Nomadon's poem "flea" seems to be a devotion of love poetry, a male pursuer to an honorable woman, and he refuses to yield to the desire of his desire. In this poem, the speaker tries to seduce a young lady by comparing the result of his love affair with the result of a petty predator. As a similar unification was taking place in the flea, he used fleas to prove that the physical relationship he wanted is not a big event on its own.
John Marne's "The Flea" shows the persistence of each of the three sections, just like Marvell's poem. The first section of Dorn's poem begins with Dorn instructing women to pay attention to fleas. "Mark, but this flea is marked here." "You deny me how tenuous it is, I suck first and then suck you." He points to a bite of fleas. Dawn explained himself and a woman's combination as there is a flea that "Our two bloods are mixed." He told her to "admit" what he felt he knew he ought to be with him now. Then he said that the blood is now mixed, and the flea sucked it from both, it will not be considered disgrace.
Compare John Donne's "The Flea" with Andrew Marvell's "To His Coy Mistress" and decide which is the most attractive thing.
Like his beloved action to kill fleas, he asked her to abandon the flea's three lives: his life, his life and his own life. In his flea, he was blending their blood, they said they were not married. Fleas are a mixture of their "married bed and marriage hall". Their parents "resented" their love, but she does not love him, but they are still united in the flea life's barriers. If she wants to kill fleas, she will bear three sins. She will blaspheme the gods by committing suicide, killing a lover, and symbolically killing a marriage.