Conceit
Conceit
Conceit Definition
Conceit is a figure of speech in which two vastly different objects are likened together with the help of similes or metaphors.For example, it will not surprise us to hear someone saying, “You are a snail,” or “You are as slow as a snail,” as we understand that the similarity is drawn on a common quality of slowness. However, we will definitely be surprised to hear someone comparing “two lovers with the legs of a draftsman’s compass.” Thus, conceit examples have a surprising or shocking effect on the readers because they are novel comparisons, unlike the conventional comparisons made in similes and metaphors.
Conceits in Everyday Life
In everyday life, we can surprise and amuse others by using conceits like “Love is like an oil change,” or “The broken heart is a damaged china pot.” In these examples, the attempt to compare two noticeably unrelated objects makes the comparisons conceits. Conceits in real life may give complex ideas and emotions an air of simplicity, by comparing them to simple day-to-day objects, as in “My life is like a free online game, people seem to be playing with it.”Examples of Conceit in Literature
Let us analyze a few examples of conceit in literature:Example #1: Romeo and Juliet (By William Shakespeare)
William Shakespeare makes use of a conceit in Act 3, Scene 5 of his play Romeo and Juliet. Here, Capulet comes to Juliet’s room after Romeo has left. He finds her weeping and says:“Thou counterfeit’st a bark, a sea, a wind;He compares Juliet to a boat in a storm. The comparison is an extended metaphor in which he compares her eyes to a sea, her tears to a storm, her sighs to the stormy winds, and her body to a boat in a storm.
For still thy eyes, which I may call the sea,
Do ebb and flow with tears; the bark thy body is,
Sailing in this salt flood; the winds, thy sighs;
Who, raging with thy tears, and they with them,
Without a sudden calm, will overset
Thy tempest-tossed body.”
Example #2: A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning (By John Donne)
The term conceit usually brings to mind certain examples from metaphysical poets of the 17th century. Of these, John Donne stands out as the best exponent of the use of metaphysical conceits. John Donne, in his poem A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning, says:“If they be two, they are two so As stiffThis is one of Donne’s most ingenious conceits. He compares his and his beloved’s souls with the two legs of a drafting compass. He compares her soul to the fixed foot, and his to the other foot. He says the bodies of lovers may be separate like the two legs of a compass, but are always joined at the top that reminds us of the spiritual union of the two lovers.
Twin compasses are two;
Thy soul, the fix’d foot, makes no show
To move, but doth, if th’ other do.
And though it in the center sit,
Yet, when the other far doth roam,
It leans, and hearkens after it,
And grows erect, as that comes home.”
Example #3: The Flea (By John Donne)
We find another striking example of conceit in John Donne’s poem, The Flea:“Oh stay! three lives in one flea spareIn the above lines, the poet tells his darling that she has no reason to deny him sexually, as the flea has sucked blood from both of them, and their blood has mingled in its gut, so the flea has become their “marriage bed,” though they are not married yet.
Where we almost, yea more than married are.
This flea is you and I, and this
Our marriage-bed and marriage-temple is…”
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