Skip to main content

Thomas Wyatt’s “I Find no Peace”

Hello Learners,

Here is the blog on Thomas Wyatt’s “I Find no Peace”.


First let's know something about Thomas Wyatt:-







Thomas Wyatt’s well-known sonnet ‘I Find no Peace’ describes the intense emotions and wavering moods that being in love can cause. Being written during the time of the Renaissance, when people valued love yet condemned the idea of love before marriage or having mistresses, the poet tries to explain the complexities of being in love. This also explains why the majority of Wyatt’s poems deal with love and heartbreak as themes.


Summary of I Find no Peace

Thomas Wyatt‘s ‘I Find no Peace,’  explores the complex nature of love and its effect on the one who loves. The poet’s misery of being in love clear in the contradictory images present.

In the poem ‘I Find no Peace,’ the speaker expresses his misery of being in love through absolutely contradictory ideas. The title which is also the first line begins with his inability to rest despite having no war to fight. His conflicting emotions are present in the way he is optimistic and afraid, ablaze and frozen, soaring yet unable to take off, desires death yet demands strength.  He says he has nothing, yet he holds the whole world. Further, he feels there are no locks strong enough to bind or imprison him, yet bound by love in an inescapable prison. Ultimately, he feels that he has no control over his life or death. Also, in love, he sees without his eyes and complains without a tongue. Towards the end of the poem, the speaker seems to be happy despite the paradoxical elements of love.

Form and Structure

Wyatt, credited with introducing the sonnet to English literature, followed the Petrarchan sonnet form in most of his poems. ‘I Find no Peace’, is also an example of a Petrarchan sonnet in English. The poem is structured in a “single stanza” where the ideas are arranged orderly following the Petrarchan structure. The 14 lines of the poem are divided into two parts: an octave (8 lines) and a sestet (6lines). The rhyme scheme of the poem goes as follows: ABBA ABBA CDE CDE.

Themes in I Find no Peace

Petrarchan sonnets and the poems of Wyatt treat “love” as the major theme. The poem delineates the nature of Love as something that could make a person feel sorrow, pain, joy, and confusion at the same time. Considering the time of the poem the poet could be talking about some forbidden love that makes him feel unease. Though the poem doesn’t specifically reveal the context of these emotional fluctuations, it could easily be associated with a number of situations people in love face. Eventually, in the poem, the narrator expresses the way in which his mind and soul are driven by indecision.

Tone of I Find no Peace

The tone of the poem ‘I Find no Peace’ goes hand in hand with the theme of the poem. It identifies the speaker to be in some sort of mental conflict. The tone pictures the speaker’s emotional imbalance as a result of this unsettled love.  It switches from being ‘sad’ to ‘dark’ and to ‘unsettled’. The words “Death,” “Fear”, “Hope”, “Sorrow”, “Burn”, and “No peace” express the tone and the pain of the speaker. Ultimately, the tone is one of torment and conflict, as he is torn between life and death.

Literary and Poetic Devices

The major poetic devices used are obviously oxymoron and paradox, at the same time the poet has used simile, metaphor, and hyperbole too, in this poem.

The title of the poem itself foreshadows how he does not find peace while he is in love. The speaker uses a lot of contradictory concepts “Fear and hope”, “burn and freeze like ice”, “find no peace, and all my war is done” to express his ambiguous state of mind. Many lines of the poem feature opposing ideas, such as “I desire to perish, and yet I ask health.” The narrator wants to die but also desires health. The word “yet” is in many of these lines, symbolizing the narrator’s torn conscience.

The poet used a series of an oxymoron: love and hate; sorrow and pain; death and life; delight and strife. The first oxymoron in the poem is peace and war. In the second line, the poet used fear and hope; burn and freeze.

The author uses the simile to compare himself to ice, yet uses the opposites “burn and freeze” to highlight the confusion of his love. He also uses metaphors such as “That loseth nor locketh holdeth me in prison,” meaning that he is neither free nor held in prison. This comparison is also a hyperbole used, for the poet exaggerates that nothing could bind him, except his love for his beloved.

The poet uses “Anaphora” in the poem to specifically draw attention to the speaker. “I”, repeated twice in the poem is used as an anaphora. Wyatt begins the poem with “I find no peace/I fear and hope/I burn and freeze like ice”. For the poet wants the readers to take a note of it, and understand his emotions more.

Analysis of I Find no Peace

I find no peace, and all my war is done.

I fear and hope. I burn and freeze like ice.

I fly above the wind, yet can I not arise;

And nought I have, and all the world I season.

That loseth nor locketh holdeth me in prison

And holdeth me not—yet can I scape no wise—

Nor letteth me live nor die at my device,

And yet of death it giveth me occasion.

In the octave of the poem, ‘I Find no Peace’ delineates on the contradictory nature of his love. The poet finds himself wanting peace of mind in the first line for he is extremely confused. Despite the end of his doubts and fears, he still cannot find the opportunity to immerse himself in tranquility. The physical extremes such as burning and freezing connote the psychological consequences of the dramatic emotions involved. Further, he compares love to prison, and in that prison, he stays willingly.

 

Lines 9 – 14

Without eyen I see, and without tongue I plain.

I desire to perish, and yet I ask health.

I love another, and thus I hate myself.

I feed me in sorrow and laugh in all my pain;

Likewise displeaseth me both life and death,

And my delight is causer of this strife.

In the sestet, the poet continues to deliberate on the overpowering contradictions the love has caused. The speaker uses hyperbole to express that he can see without his eyes and speak without his tongue. He wishes to die however he also wishes for strength to live. It becomes interesting in the line 11,  for he says, he loves his beloved therefore he hates himself. He celebrates his sorrow and enjoys his pain. This is very ironic since no one would find joy when hurt or in pain. He compares love to his delight, since that is his greatest pleasure, yet it has become his struggle.

Similar Poetry

“Love” is a universal theme that is found in literature, especially in poetry down the ages. Some of the notable poems that best depict the theme of love as follows: Sonnet 18: ‘Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?’ By William Shakespeare, ‘My Love is like to ice, and I to fire’ by Edmund Spenser, ‘The Good-Morrow’ by John Donne, ‘She Walks in Beauty’ by Lord Byron, ‘Meeting at Night’ by Robert Browning, and ‘The Passionate Shepherd to His Love’ by Christopher Marlowe.

Readers can also read the following poems of Thomas Wyatt: ‘Whoso List to Hunt’, ‘They Flee From Me’, ‘What No, Perdie’,Lux, My Fair Falcon’ and ‘Blame Not My Lute!’.

Happy Learning!!!

Works Cited:-

Alb, Miz. "I Find no Peace by Thomas Wyatt". Poem Analysis, https://poemanalysis.com/sir-thomas-wyatt/i-find-no-peace/. Accessed 24 August 2022.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

"RIP"; Rest in Peace those who are Alive....

Hello Friends, After a long time I am writing here. Hope you all are fine. This time I have come up with a different interpretation of the phrase “RIP”. Mostly this phrase “RIP”; Rest in Peace is used for the people who are no more. We use this phrase to give sympathy towards the departed soul. The soul may get peace wherever it travels. No one exactly knows where the soul travels. Sometimes this phrase is used out of care and sometimes just for show off on social media. While sitting alone near a cemetery, a thought struck in my mind. Why do we use RIP only for dead people????? We can also use it for those who are alive. Many time people use RIP when a person is dead. The same people might have harassed the dead person when he is alive. So what’s the point of “RIP”? Suppose in the day time you behave very badly with someone. Is he/she going to get sound and peaceful sleep at night? The dead person will never come back so we just say “RIP”. Of course ever

“My friend, the things that do attain” - Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey.

Hello friends, I would like to share a poem which I studied during my graduation. The title of the poem is “My friend, the things that do attain”. It is written by Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey. Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey (1516/1517 – 19 January 1547), was an English aristocrat, and one of the founders of English Renaissance poetry. MY friend, the things that do attain The happy life be these, I find: The riches left, not got with pain; The fruitful ground; the quiet mind; The equal friend; no grudge; no strife; No charge of rule, nor governance; Without disease, the healthy life; The household of continuance; The mean diet, no dainty fare; Wisdom joined with simpleness; The night discharged of all care, Where wine the wit may not oppress: The faithful wife, without debate; Such sleeps as may beguile the night; Content thyself with thine estate, Neither wish death, nor fear his might. In the above mentioned poem, there is a list

" The Winged Word"- David Green

In my Graduation syllabus, I had a book named “ The Winged word”. This anthology is edited by David Green. It is anthology of poems compiled for the students of English literature in the B.A courses of Indian Universities. The chronological order, in which the poets are arranged in this book, helps the students to note the development of English poetry from one age to another. Referring to this book after a long time span, gives me a immense joy. There are many poems in this book. We were given some selected poems to study during three years of graduation. The poems which were in my syllabus are as follow:-    1.)   I Find No Peace – Sir Thomas Wyatt (1503-42)    2.) My Friend, the Things That Do Attain –Henry Howard (1517- 47)    3.) The Nymph’s Reply to the Shepherd –Sir Walter Ralegh (1552-1618)    4.) The Nightingale – Sir Philip Sidney (1554- 86)    5.) Since There’s No Help – Michael Drayton (1563- 1613)    6.) Sonnet No.116 – Willi